THE MUSIC BLOGGING HIVE MIND

Robert Anton Wilson has gone

Posted over 2 years ago
  • Artist:
    Robert Anton Wilson
  • Album:
    secrets of power
  • Track:
    the chocolate biscuit conspiracy
I know this is not strictly music but this is someone who influeneced many bands artists writers and others in the music world. And if you didn't know all ready, he's gone....A FULL RICH DEATH'Various medical authorities swarm in and out of here predicting I have between two days and two months to live. I think they are guessing. I remain cheerful and unimpressed. I look forward without dogmatic optimism but without dread. I love you all and I deeply implore you to keep the lasagne flying.Please pardon my levity, I don't see how to take death seriously. It seems absurd.'- the last blog post of American author, philosopher, psychologist, visionary, anarchist, and conspiracy theory researcher Robert Anton Wilson, who died four days laterBlog: http://tinyurl.com/yxelc4RAW homepage: http://hostgator.rawilson.com/More: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Anton_Wilsonheres some info I've cut and paste from wikipedia.org:Robert Anton Wilson or RAW (January 18, 1932 – January 11, 2007) was a prolific American novelist, fnord, essayist, philosopher, psychologist, futurologist, anarchist, and conspiracy theory researcher.His writing, which often shows a sense of humor and optimism, is described by him as an "attempt to break down conditioned associations--to look at the world in a new way, with many models recognized as models (maps) and no one model elevated to the Truth."[1] And: "My goal is to try to get people into a state of generalized agnosticism, not agnosticism about God alone, but agnosticism about everything."Wilson was born in Methodist Hospital, downtown Brooklyn, New York, and spent his first years in Flatbush, moving with his family to Gerritsen Beach around the age of 4 or 5, where they stayed until he turned 13. He suffered from polio as a child, the effects of which remained with him throughout his life.He attended Brooklyn Polytechnical College and New York University, studying engineering and mathematics. He worked as engineering aide, salesman, and copywriter and was associate editor for Playboy magazine from 1965 to 1971. In 1979 he received a Ph.D. in psychology from Paidea University in California[3], an unaccredited institution that has since closed[4]. The reworked dissertation was published in 1983 as Prometheus Rising.He married the freelance writer Arlen Riley in 1958; they had four children. Their daughter Luna, then fifteen years old, was beaten to death in an apparent robbery in 1976. Her brain was preserved by the Bay Area Cryonics Society.[5] Arlen suffered a stroke and died after long illness in 1999.On June 22, 2006, Huffington Post blogger Paul Krassner reported that Robert A. Wilson was under hospice care at home with friends and family[6]. On 2 October 2006 Douglas Rushkoff reported that Wilson was in severe financial trouble[7]. Slashdot, Boing Boing, and the Church of the Subgenius also picked up on the story, linking to Rushkoff's appeal[8][9]. As his webpage reported on 10 October, these efforts succeeded beyond expectation and raised a sum which would have supported him for at least 6 months.On the 6th of January, he wrote on his blog that according to several medical authorities, he was likely to have only between two days and two months left to live[10], closing his message with "Please pardon my levity, I don't see how to take death seriously. It seems absurd." He died five days later, a week before his 75th birthday, at 4:50 AM[11].His best-known work, The Illuminatus! Trilogy (1975), co-authored with Robert Shea and advertised as "a fairy tale for paranoids," humorously examined American paranoia about conspiracies. Much of the odder material derived from letters sent to Playboy magazine while Shea and Wilson worked as editors of the Playboy Forum.[12] The books mixed true information with imaginative fiction to engage the reader in what Wilson called "Operation Mindfuck"; the trilogy also outlined a set of libertarian and anarchist axioms known as Celine's Laws, concepts Wilson has revisited several times in other writings. Although Shea and Wilson never partnered on such a scale again, Wilson continued to expand upon the themes of the Illuminatus! books throughout his writing career. All of his later fiction contains cross-over characters from the Illuminatus! Trilogy, which won the Prometheus Hall of Fame award for science fiction in 1986, has been reprinted in many countries, and was adapted by Ken Campbell into a ten-hour epic drama. It has been adapted into a Steven Jackson role-playing card game and a trading-card game, both called Illuminati, and a comic book version was produced first by "Eye N Apple Productions" (headed by Mark Philip Steele), then by Rip Off Press.Wilson also wrote a play called Wilhelm Reich in Hell, which has been performed at the Edmund Burke Theatre in Dublin, and an illustrated screenplay called Reality is What You Can Get Away With.In Cosmic Trigger I: Final Secret of the Illuminati (1977) and other works, he examined Discordianism, Sufism, Futurology, Zen Buddhism, Dennis and Terence McKenna, the occult practices of Aleister Crowley and G.I. Gurdjieff, the Illuminati and Freemasons, Yoga, and other esoteric or counterculture philosophies. He advocated Timothy Leary's eight circuit model of consciousness and neurosomatic/linguistic engineering, which he also wrote about in Prometheus Rising (1983, revised 1997) and Quantum Psychology (1990), books containing practical techniques for breaking free of one's "reality tunnels".[citation needed] With Leary, he helped promote the futurist ideas of space migration, intelligence increase, and life extension (SMI2LE).Wilson also supported many of the utopian theories of Buckminster Fuller and the theories of Charles Fort (he was a friend of Loren Coleman)[13], as well as those of media theorist Marshall McLuhan and Neuro Linguistic Programming co-founder Richard Bandler, with whom he had taught workshops. He also admired James Joyce, and had written commentary on Finnegans Wake and Ulysses.[14]Ironically, considering Wilson long lampooned and criticized new age beliefs, his books can often be found in bookstores specializing in new age material. He claimed to have perceived encounters with magical "entities", and when asked whether these entities were "real", he answered they were "real enough", although "not as real as the IRS" since they were "easier to get rid of". He warned against beginners using occult practice, since to rush into such practices and the resulting "energies" they unleash can lead people to go "quite nuts". Instead, he recommends beginners start with NLP, Zen Buddhism, basic meditation, etc., before progressing to more potentially disturbing activities.[citation needed]In a 2003 interview with High Times magazine, RAW described himself as a "Model Agnostic" which he says "consists of never regarding any model or map of the universe with total 100% belief or total 100% denial. Following Korzybski, I put things in probabilities, not absolutes... My only originality lies in applying this zetetic attitude outside the hardest of the hard sciences, physics, to softer sciences and then to non-sciences like politics, ideology, jury verdicts and, of course, conspiracy theory."[15] More simply, he claims "not to believe anything," since "belief is the death of intelligence."[citation needed] He has described his approach as "Maybe Logic." Wilson wrote articles for seminal cyberpunk magazine Mondo 2000.[16]While he had primarily published material under the name Robert Anton Wilson, he had also used the pen names Mordecai Malignatus, Mordecai the Foul, Reverend Loveshade [citation needed], and other names associated with the Bavarian Illuminati, which he allegedly revived in the 1960s.Wilson's writings connect to the madcap satirical fiction of Flann O'Brien in a several ways, including his free use of O'Brien's character De Selby. The views of De Selby, an obscure intellectual, are the subject of long pseudo-scholarly footnotes in Wilson's novels as well as O'Brien's. This is entirely fitting, because O'Brien himself made free use of characters invented by other writers, allegedly because there are already too many fictional characters as is. O'Brien was also known for pulling the reader's leg by concocting elaborate conspiracy theories, and for publishing under several pen names.[citation needed]Wilson had a long-standing relationship with the Association for Consciousness Exploration, beginning in 1982. He was the keynote speaker for their center's open house in 1984, and appeared at many Starwood Festivals. Both Illuminatus! co-author Robert Shea and Wilson's wife Arlen Riley Wilson have appeared with him at the WinterStar Symposium.[17] They served as his American lecture agency while he lived in Ireland, and hosted his first on-stage dialog with his life-long friend Timothy Leary in 1989 in Cleveland, OH, entitled The Inner Frontier.Wilson was also a member of the Church of the SubGenius, who refered to him as Pope Bob[1]. He was a contributor to their literature, and shared a stage with Rev. Ivan Stang on several occasions.He and his wife Arlen Riley Wilson founded the Institute for the Study of the Human Future.As a member of the Board of Advisors of the Fully Informed Jury Association, he worked to inform the public about jury nullification, the right of jurors to nullify a law they deem unjust.[18]RAW held the post of American director of the Committee for Surrealist Investigation of Claims of the Normal (CSICON) and appeared at Disinformation events.[citation needed]He was a supporter of E-Prime, the elimination of the verb "to be" from the English language, preferring instead a "maybe logic".[19]A lifelong experimenter with drugs and strong opponent against the war on drugs, he participated in the weeklong 1999 Annual Cannabis Cup in Amsterdam[20]. He was photographed receiving medical marijuana at a 2002 demonstration in Santa Clara to curb his chronic pain from post-polio syndrome.[21]Wilson was a founder and primary instructor of the Maybe Logic Academy, named for his agnostic approach to all knowledge. Fellow instructors include Patricia Monaghan, Rev. Ivan Stang, Philip H. Farber, Antero Alli, Peter J. Carroll, Starhawk, R. U. Sirius, Douglas Rushkoff and David Jay Brown.Maybe Logic: The Lives and Loves of Robert Anton Wilson, a documentary featuring selections from over twenty-five years of Wilson footage, was released on DVD in North America on May 30, 2006.Playboy's Book of Forbidden Words (1972)Sex and Drugs: A Journey Beyond Limits (1973)The Sex Magicians (1973)The Book of the Breast (1974)The Illuminatus! Trilogy (1975) (with Robert Shea) The Eye in the PyramidThe Golden AppleLeviathanCosmic Trigger I: Final Secret of the Illuminati (1977)Neuropolitics (1978) (with Timothy Leary and George Koopman)The Game of Life (1979) (with Timothy Leary)The Illuminati Papers (1980)Schrödinger's Cat trilogy (1980-1981) The Universe Next DoorThe Trick Top HatThe Homing PigeonMasks of the Illuminati (1981)The Historical Illuminatus Chronicles The Earth Will Shake (1982)The Widow's Son (1985)Nature's God (1991)Right Where You Are Sitting Now (1983)Prometheus Rising (1983)The New Inquisition (1986)Wilhelm Reich in Hell (1987)Natural Law, or Don't Put a Rubber on Your Willy (1987)Coincidance (1988)Neuropolitique (1988) (with Leary & Koopman) [[revision of Neuropolitics]]Ishtar Rising (1989) [[revision of The Book of the Breast]]Semiotext(e) SF (1989) (editor, with Rudy Rucker and Peter Lamborn Wilson)Quantum Psychology (1990)Cosmic Trigger II: Down to Earth (1991)Reality Is What You Can Get Away With: An Illustrated Screenplay (1992)Chaos and Beyond (1994) (editor and primary author)Cosmic Trigger III: My Life After Death (1995)The Walls Came Tumbling Down (1997)Everything Is Under Control (1998)TSOG: The Thing That Ate the Constitution (2002)Email to the Universe (2005)A Meeting with Robert Anton WilsonReligion for the Hell of ItH.O.M.E.s on LaGrangeThe New InquisitionThe H.E.A.D. RevolutionPrometheus RisingThe Inner Frontier (with Timothy Leary)The Magickal Movement: Present & Future (with Margot Adler, Isaac Bonewits & Selena Fox)Magick Changing the World, the World Changing Magick (with AmyLee, Isaac Bonewits, Selena Fox & Jeff Rosenbaum)The Once & Future Legend (with Ariana Lightningstorm, Patricia Monaghan, Jeff Rosenbaum, Rev. Ivan Stang & Robert Shea)What IS the Conspiracy, Anyway? (with Anodea Judith, Jeff Rosenbaum, Rev. Ivan Stang & Robert Shea)The Chocolate-Biscuit Conspiracy with The Golden Horde (1984)Twelve Eggs in a BasketRobert Anton Wilson On Finnegans Wake and Joseph Campbell (interview by Faustin Bray and Brian Wallace) 1988

Comments (2)

  1. Universalis says Sad day today... RAW and Alice went on thru to the other side, the world's allround light is a bit fainter now...
    Permalink posted 01/13/2007
  2. doombilly says fnordThat's awfulfnord.
    Permalink posted 01/16/2007

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