(A/V logo runs in flash player: install now)

ACTUAL VIRTUAL - #07
ISSN 1752-5624

To Survive Da'ath

In the 'Western Kabbalah' – that version of the Judaic tradition which underlies large portions of the work of Western Hermetic magicians – one of the central concepts is that of 'da'ath', a non-existent 'sephiroth' encountered in the experience known as 'Crossing the Abyss'.  This experience constitutes one of the central initiatory experiences of the various traditions of Western Hermetic magic.  It can be understood as the point at which the practitioner succeeds in their aim but in doing so find themselves caught within a paranoiac machine.  The 'abyss' is the point at which everything in the universe is to be understood as directly speaking to the individual – it is an exercise in constituting a paranoiac machine of intense and immense over-determination.
 
The core practice of magic, as a 'body-spirituality', involves a continual process of learning, the aim of which is 'knowledge'.  The particular understanding of knowledge, however, is transformed from a possessive content or object (a 'know-that') into a transformative apprenticeship – but an apprenticeship to what?  It is, I will argue, an apprenticeship to the event and the experience of the 'abyss' is a salutary lesson or warning in the power and anger involved in such an apprenticeship.  Deleuze warns that the task with regard the event is to be worthy of it, to be able to sustain it or bear it, a theme that directly relates to the encounter with the demon of the eternal return in Nietzsche's most important presentation of that concept. 
 
In Nietzsche's eternal return, Deleuze's call to be worthy of the event and Western magical practice of 'crossing the abyss' this underlying theme of danger, of death, abounds.  Is the event, then, always an event of death, rebirth, loss?  Is this the central aspect of what it means to encounter the event – to lose something, to lose our selves, to die in some way or another?  Does this suggest that perhaps the event is a hidden encoding of the transcendent?  Is the purity of the event, the cry of affirmation, merely another way to regain what is lost with the death of god.

Matt Lee , Greenwich University, U.K.

Dr Lee’s first encounter with Deleuze, through ‘What is Philosophy?', brought to life a form of philosophy I had been struggling to find, a philosophy that was directed at life, which was unafraid of leaving the confines of the academy and which spoke as though the force of thought was a living impulse within it.

His research focuses on developing a materialism that isn't reductive or naïve and I concentrate currently on transcendental arguments and structures, in particular trying to understand and articulate the concept of a ‘transcendental empiricism'. He currently works as a lecturer at Greenwich University as well as being an independent film-maker. Dr Lee also experiments with modern day shamanic and magical practices and am working on an account of such practices from the standpoint of a ‘practical metaphysics' derived from Deleuze's account of ‘becoming'

 

David Deamer CLICK TO PLAY

To Survive Da'ath
click on image to view

Alternative formats available:
Transcripts of video material are available on request for MMU studentsin receipt of support. Copies of the recorded papers can be lent on DVD to institutions outside the University, to their Learning Support Teams for Transcription

Contacts:
for MMU staff or students please contact
N.Ho@mmu.ac.uk (Learning Support Advisor)
for outside institutions please contact
A.Powell@mmu.ac.uk (Website Director)