Introducing a New Circle - Spirituality, Magic and Religion in Green Wizardry
With the closing of the Archdruid Report and the opening of Greer's new blog Ecosophia.net, it seems he is getting back to some of his spiritual roots. While discussing religion and spirituality can be a touchy subject for people, I have faith everyone here can act and post like adults. Greer has written several times, that during a Collapse, religion often experiences a resurgence and sometimes even the birth of new religions. I expect that future Green Wizards will keep 9 fingers dipped in the mundane world but one pinkie in what's out there beyond the Dark.
You can visit the new Circle HERE
David Trammel
Fri, 06/02/2017 - 17:51
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Yah!
Sounds good. I too go to the recent post section. Maybe it'll liven up some old threads.
I don't know about that finger-ratio-breakdown, though. I was thinking recently after I'd read some descriptions of tribal shamans from about a century ago who were absolutely excellent at magic, but were still unable to protect their cultures from industrialized invaders. Magic being my main interest in life, the decline of industrial society doesn't really bother me too much since it won't hurt the things I'm really interested in*. It occurred to me, thinking about those recently-ancient shamans, that I would have hated to be alive then because no matter how good you are or what you tried to do to preserve your traditions, magic became less and less important on the upslope of industrial society because no matter how much of an advantage your magic gave you, the industrial invaders could always just burn more fossil fuels and make up the difference.
This implies, though, that the opposite will be true on the downslope, and I'm really quite glad to have been born on this side of the peak of industrial socitey.
I'm not suggesting, of course, that the focus of this forum ought to shift--I appreciate the new topic and I've enjoyed the recent discussions, but there are plenty of other JMG-approved spaces that focus on magical practice--just that the Green Wizards of the future might be able to spare more fingers for the mysteries than just a little pinkie.
*: Although I don't take the real cost in human suffering lightly, and I'm not "looking forward" to decline in any sense other than knowing that the sooner we stop the industrial game, the more resources will be left to rebuild. Notice that I said it wouldn't hurt the things I'm interested in, not that it wouldn't hurt the things I care about--I'm under no illusions that decline will be easy or somehow leave me "unscathed."