The Scientific Solution of the Problem of Government
The Scientific Solution of the Problem of Government by Comte de Fenix (Aleister Crowley)
Publication history
- Privately published, London, folded sheet, brown wrapper, 1936
- Kaaba newsletter Vol.1 No.5, NY pg.3, 1980
- Universal Life Church, Ithaca, NY, pamphlet, ND
- In the Continuum Vol.IV:1 pg.3, 1987
- Baphomet Breeze Vol.III No.2 CA, 1988
- Pangenetor Lodge, OTO, pamphlet, 1994
- The Revival of Magick and Other Essays, Oriflamme No. 2 - OTO/New Falcon AZ pg.208 PB, 1998
Search
References
External references
- https://doi.org/10.1525/california/9780520247765.003.0006 — “The Scientific Solution to the Problem of Government (1937), Crowley argued.” See also Magia Sexualis: Sex, Magic, and Liberation in Modern Western Esotericism 0520247760 “As he wrote in 1937 in his Scientific Solution to the Problem of Government, the true ruler has no use for absurdities such as liberté, egalité, fraternité, the idea that all men are equal or that woman is equal to man”
- https://reason.com/2001/02/01/do-what-i-wilt-2/ — “Hence, the ostensible individualist once wrote that governments ought to appoint “experts to work out, when need arises, the details of the True Will of every individual, and even that of every corporate body whether social or commercial, while a judiciary will arise to determine the equity in the case of apparently conflicting claims.” (This berserk, self-parodying vision of bureaucrats weighing and balancing spiritual fates in a Ministry of True Will is from Crowley's 1937 essay, 'The Scientific Solution of the Problem of Government.')”
- Sabazius, NOTOCON X: 15 Aug 2015 e.v. -- Austin, Texas. “In his essay The Scientific Solution to the Problem of Government, Crowley emphasizes that '[t]he absolute rule of the state shall be a function of the absolute liberty of each individual will.'”
Do you want to help build the Hermeneuticon wiki? Apply to become an editor, and help contribute your knowledge toward increasing the shared wisdom of this resource for the wider community.
Send an email to the librarian via