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Re: desire in hermeticism


Message 03583 of 3835


Serpentis Satori,

Thank you for your reply. I understood what you said. From my 
understanding Hermeticism doesn't espouse Buddhism's goal of non-
existence and non-involvement which I ultimately see as also serving 
the purpose of the cessationg of suffering though through a 
different outlook or goal.

Thank you again for your reply.

beginner

--- In BardonPraxis@yahoogroups.com, Serpentis Satori 
<serpentsatori@y...> wrote:
> LVX
> Hermeticism is focused on purifying ourselves, so we may rejoin 
our divinity while training our Will in many sub-sytems. Buddhism is 
focused upon releasing us from the chains & imprisonment of 
Ignorance so we will cease incarnation. These goals only 
supperficially contradict each other.
> Hermeticism often sees The Will, as the only other Absolute 
after The Creator/The Divine, and so it is spoken of in similar 
reverance. This is the Arete of Homer, The True Will of Crowley (of 
similar thought by Bardon check the list archives!), and the Purpose 
of Matrix:Reloaded. The entire Path of Hermeticism serves this end, 
every Grade Initiation or Exercise strengthen that, from Banishing 
Circle to Bornless One & Beyond.
> Buddhism is as Evens-Wynz put it " the ethical system for the 
science of yoga", and is not so much about Refusing Desire, as it is 
about Release from Attachments, though Lust/Hunger is an Attachment. 
This is the Path to Enlightenment, the gradual freedom from 
attachment until one is Enlightened and no longer imprisoned by 
Ignorance.
> These goals, though stated as different, can be complimentary 
and eventually I believe their will come greater synthesis between 
the Great Systems of the East and West. But to do that Hermeticism 
must be founded on truth, with Will and Evolution as its pillars. 
The complementary Buddhism is often Zen or Dzogchan, both focusing 
upon the Inherent Purity of all, but giving techniques to remember 
our perfection, much like Hermeticism.
> Feel free to post me privately if you need further 
clarification in this,
> Frater Serpentis Satori
> 
> hermetics10 <hermetics10@y...> wrote:
> 
> Buddhism views desire as a bad thing? What is Hermeticism's view 
on 
> desire? Does desire impede becoming pure which is a main goal of 
> Hermeticism?
> 
> beginner
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
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