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ARTICLES RELATED TO Terence Mckenna | |
 |  |  | Terence Mckenna: Encyclopedia II - Terence McKenna - Biography
Terence McKenna received a B.S. in Ecology and Conservation from the Tussman Experimental College, a short-lived outgrowth of UC Berkeley, in 1969. He spent the months after his graduation traveling through India and other Asian countries, alternately smuggling hashish and collecting butterflies for biological supply companies.
In 1971 Terence McKenna, his brother Dennis, and three others traveled to the Colombian Amazon in search of oo-koo-hé, a plant preparation containing DMT. At La Chorrera, at the urging of his brother, he allow ...
See also:Terence McKenna, Terence McKenna - Biography, Terence McKenna - The Stoned Ape theory of human evolution, Terence McKenna - Books, Terence McKenna - Spoken word Read more here: » Terence McKenna: Encyclopedia II - Terence McKenna - Biography |
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 |  |  | Terence Mckenna: Why the Creation Cycles do not end December 21, 2012, but October 28, 2011Over the decades much discussion has focussed on finding the exact correlation between the Mayan Long Count and the Gregorian calendar. Most researchers in the field have now come to agree that the so-called GMT correlation, placing the beginning of the Long Count 4 Ahau 8 Cumku on the Julian day 584 283, August 11, 3114 BC, is correct. This means by consequence that it will end on December 21, 2012 and most, such as Jose Arguelles, John Jenkins and Terence McKenna, who have taken an interest in the calendar of the Maya, have endorsed this date as the end of the current cycle. Read more here: » Mayan Calendar: Why the Creation Cycles do not end December 21, 2012, but October 28, 2011 |
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 |  |  | Terence Mckenna: Encyclopedia II - Neo-Tribalism - Sociological implicationsThe French Sociologist Michel Maffesoli was perhaps the first to use the term neo-Tribalism in a scholarly context. Maffesoli predicted that as the culture and institutions of modernism declined, societies would look to the organizational priciples of the distant past for guidance, and that therefore the post-modern era would be the era of neo-Tribalism.
Commentators such as Ethan Watters have credited, or blamed, growing neo-Tribalist dynamics for contributing to the decline in marriage in the developed world, as "modern trib ...
See also:Neo-Tribalism, Neo-Tribalism - General ideology, Neo-Tribalism - Sociological implications, Neo-Tribalism - Moderate tendency, Neo-Tribalism - Radical tendency, Neo-Tribalism - Criticism Read more here: » Neo-Tribalism: Encyclopedia II - Neo-Tribalism - Sociological implications |
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 |  |  | Terence Mckenna: Encyclopedia II - Neo-Tribalism - Moderate tendencyModerate neo-Tribalists believe that a tribal social structure can co-exist with a modern technological infrastructure. This is sometimes referred to as Urban Tribalism. For example, under this scenario, people might reside in a large house or other building with a communal group of 12-20 individuals all abiding by a defined set of rules, cultural rituals and intimate relationships, but otherwise leading modern lives, going to a job, driving a car, etc. In that it attempts to harmonize two seemingly contradictory cultures, namely modern existence and tribalism, the moderate tendency can be consider ...
See also:Neo-Tribalism, Neo-Tribalism - General ideology, Neo-Tribalism - Sociological implications, Neo-Tribalism - Moderate tendency, Neo-Tribalism - Radical tendency, Neo-Tribalism - Criticism Read more here: » Neo-Tribalism: Encyclopedia II - Neo-Tribalism - Moderate tendency |
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 |  |  | Terence Mckenna: Encyclopedia II - Neo-Tribalism - Radical tendencyRadical neo-Tribalists, such as John Zerzan, Daniel Quinn and others associated with the New tribalists, believe that healthy tribal life can only thrive after technological civilzation has either been destroyed or severely reduced in scope. Quinn formulated the concept of "walking away," abandoning civilization as a whole and constructing a new, tribal culture on its periphery. Others, such as Derrick Jensen, tend to call for more violent action, as they believe that it is appropriate and necessary to actively accelerate or cause a collapse ...
See also:Neo-Tribalism, Neo-Tribalism - General ideology, Neo-Tribalism - Sociological implications, Neo-Tribalism - Moderate tendency, Neo-Tribalism - Radical tendency, Neo-Tribalism - Criticism Read more here: » Neo-Tribalism: Encyclopedia II - Neo-Tribalism - Radical tendency |
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 |  |  | Terence Mckenna: Encyclopedia II - The Invisibles - IntroductionThe "Invisibles" of the title are individuals who battle against physical and psychic oppression using time travel, magic, martial arts, meditation and guns.
The comic focuses on one cell of Invisibles. At the beginning of the series, the leader of the cell is King Mob, a character based on author Grant Morrison. The rest of the team consists of Lord Fanny, a Brazilian shaman and transvestite; Boy, a former member of the New York Police Department; Ragged Robin, a telepathic time-traveller, and Jack Frost, a young hooligan from Liverp ...
See also:The Invisibles, The Invisibles - Introduction, The Invisibles - About the series, The Invisibles - Publishing history, The Invisibles - Characters, The Invisibles - Plot summaries, The Invisibles - Say You Want a Revolution, The Invisibles - Apocalipstick, The Invisibles - Entropy in the U.K., The Invisibles - Bloody Hell in America, The Invisibles - Counting to None, The Invisibles - Kissing Mister Quimper, The Invisibles - The Invisible Kingdom, The Invisibles - Analysis Read more here: » The Invisibles: Encyclopedia II - The Invisibles - Introduction |
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 |  |  | Terence Mckenna: Encyclopedia II - The Invisibles - About the seriesThe Invisibles was Morrison's first major creator-owned title for DC Comics and it drew from his Zenith strip as well as 1990s conspiracy culture and just about every fringe notion he could find into the book, whether or not he believed in it. His intent was to create a hypersigil with the intention of jump-starting the culture in a more positive direction. Morrison predicts that the comic book will, in the long run, be as influential as the Sex Pistols, though it is too early to say whether this prediction will prove true. How ...
See also:The Invisibles, The Invisibles - Introduction, The Invisibles - About the series, The Invisibles - Publishing history, The Invisibles - Characters, The Invisibles - Plot summaries, The Invisibles - Say You Want a Revolution, The Invisibles - Apocalipstick, The Invisibles - Entropy in the U.K., The Invisibles - Bloody Hell in America, The Invisibles - Counting to None, The Invisibles - Kissing Mister Quimper, The Invisibles - The Invisible Kingdom, The Invisibles - Analysis Read more here: » The Invisibles: Encyclopedia II - The Invisibles - About the series |
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 |  |  | Terence Mckenna: Encyclopedia II - The Invisibles - Publishing historyThe Invisibles was originally published as three separate comic book series as well as occasional one-off stories in various Vertigo titles. The third and final series was meant to be a countdown to the new millennium but shipping delays meant the final issue never appeared till April 2000.
All of the series have been collected in a set of trade paperbacks:
Say You Want a Revolution (vol 1, #1-8; featuring the artwork of Steve Yeowell and Jill Thompson)
Apocalipstick (vol 1, #9-16; featuring ...
See also:The Invisibles, The Invisibles - Introduction, The Invisibles - About the series, The Invisibles - Publishing history, The Invisibles - Characters, The Invisibles - Plot summaries, The Invisibles - Say You Want a Revolution, The Invisibles - Apocalipstick, The Invisibles - Entropy in the U.K., The Invisibles - Bloody Hell in America, The Invisibles - Counting to None, The Invisibles - Kissing Mister Quimper, The Invisibles - The Invisible Kingdom, The Invisibles - Analysis Read more here: » The Invisibles: Encyclopedia II - The Invisibles - Publishing history |
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 |  |  | Terence Mckenna: Encyclopedia II - The Invisibles - Plot summaries
The Invisibles - Say You Want a Revolution.
This first collection of The Invisibles is divided into three parts: a one issue prologue and two multi-issue story arcs.
The first issue “Dead Beatles” has the deputy leader of the Invisibles, King Mob, summoning the spirit of John Lennon to help find a new member of the Invisibles to replace a recently killed teammate John-A-Dreams. King Mob is led to a Liverpool hooligan named Dane McGowan who, after burning down his school library and assaulting a ...
See also:The Invisibles, The Invisibles - Introduction, The Invisibles - About the series, The Invisibles - Publishing history, The Invisibles - Characters, The Invisibles - Plot summaries, The Invisibles - Say You Want a Revolution, The Invisibles - Apocalipstick, The Invisibles - Entropy in the U.K., The Invisibles - Bloody Hell in America, The Invisibles - Counting to None, The Invisibles - Kissing Mister Quimper, The Invisibles - The Invisible Kingdom, The Invisibles - Analysis Read more here: » The Invisibles: Encyclopedia II - The Invisibles - Plot summaries |
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 |  |  | Terence Mckenna: Encyclopedia II - The Invisibles - AnalysisLike many of Grant Morrison's works, The Invisibles brings up various questions about the nature of reality. When Ragged Robin writes her own version of "The Invisibles" in the future, it is an implied possibility that through fiction, writers can influence the course of history and even create histories of their own. Also, the Invisibles game that King Mob creates in volume three has led many readers to believe that the Invisibles is in fact a game (combined with numerous references throughout that series to the Invisibles' struggle being "just a game"), played by Jack Frost as he sits in King Mob's lounge. Neither theor ...
See also:The Invisibles, The Invisibles - Introduction, The Invisibles - About the series, The Invisibles - Publishing history, The Invisibles - Characters, The Invisibles - Plot summaries, The Invisibles - Say You Want a Revolution, The Invisibles - Apocalipstick, The Invisibles - Entropy in the U.K., The Invisibles - Bloody Hell in America, The Invisibles - Counting to None, The Invisibles - Kissing Mister Quimper, The Invisibles - The Invisible Kingdom, The Invisibles - Analysis Read more here: » The Invisibles: Encyclopedia II - The Invisibles - Analysis |
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 |  |  | Terence Mckenna:
Mysticism
Magick Dictionary
on
TIMESCAPE ZERO TIMESCAPE ZERO Terence McKenna's software plotting the fractals of "novelty" over many thousands of years of earth's history, up to 2012 C.E., at which point novelty will reach the state of infinite fulmination. He defines novelty, of course, as "the density of connectedness" or the "degree of complexity." The I Ching says that Time is a series of identifiable elements in flux. There are 64 of these "elements." He also believes that what we today call the I Ching is but a tiny fragment of a once immense device, now forever lost. (See also: TIMESCAPE ZERO, Magick, Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Body Mind and Soul, )
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 |  |  | Terence Mckenna:
Mysticism
Magick Dictionary
on
FRACTALS FRACTALS One's life, the history of the world, everything moves towards deeper complexity, to an endpoint of total complexification, in fact. And yet this same complexification is merely the result of an endless repetition of an individual pattern -- unique but infinitely regressing. "The creation of extremely complex structures from simple, similar operations is the essence of fractal progressions," explains Terence McKenna. "Time also has this fractal quality -- self-similar processes are imbedded in similar natural fractal processes at higher and higher levels of expression in space and time -- the larger implication of this fractal perspective is that the whole history if humanity is moving towards an endpoint -- an apocalypse, a momentous event which will cast everything that preceded it in some kind of new light, make everything new and morally exonerate the historical horror that is necessary to reach that moment." (See TIMESCAPE.) (See also: FRACTALS, Magick, Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Body Mind and Soul, )
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Mysticism
Magick Dictionary
on
AUTOPOETIC LAPIS AUTOPOETIC LAPIS Terence McKenna's psilocybic revelation from "Magical Blend," April, 1989: "The 'autopoetic lapis' is the ingression of novelty to concrescence, a 'tightening gyre'. Everything flows together and coalesces in the alchemical stone at the end of time ... when the laws of physics are obviated, the universe disappears and what is left is the tightly bound plenum, the monad, able to express itself, rather than only able to cast a shadow into physis as its reflection. In 2012 our species enters hyperspace, but it will appear to be the collapse of the state vector, the end of physical laws and the release of the mind itself. "All these other images - the starship, the space colony, the lapis - these are precursory images. They follow naturally from the idea that history is the shock wave of eschatology. As one closes distance with the eschatological object, the reflections it is throwing off resemble more and more the thing itself. In the final moment the Unspeakable stands revealed. There are no more reflections of the Mystery. The Mystery in all its nakedness is seen, and nothing else exists. But what it is, decency can safely scarcely hint at; nevertheless, it is the crowning joy of futurism to seek anticipation of it." (See also: AUTOPOETIC LAPIS, Magick, Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Body Mind and Soul, )
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 |  |  | Terence Mckenna:
Mysticism
Magick Dictionary
on
APO PANTAS KAKODAIMONES! APO PANTAS KAKODAIMONES! False banishing mantram ("Away all evil demons!") APOCALYPSE We are aware that the muslims insist that there can be no Universal Eschatonic Implosion until the world has endured "40 years of rain." We would remind them that we have endured *more* than forty years of the "rain" of nuclear radiation and pollution. Aztec prophesies place the end of the world in the 20th Century (who can doubt it?). The Great Pyramid is said to contain, in its mystical measurements, similar predictions in stone of which the last is Sept. 17, 2001 A.D. Two thousand is commonly believed by western civilization to be the year of the Eschaton. The date given by Nostradamus, on the other hand, is slightly pre-millennial: 1999. This is just 13 years prior to the end of the great 160,000-year Mayan Cycle and Terence McKenna's Timescape Zero (based on Ancient Chinese cycles), both at 2012 C.E. And although many others cite 2020, there are interesting reasons for seizing on 1999. First of all, there is a scientific reason. As meteorologists have noted, the 11-year sunspot cycles which serve to heat the earth, have not only been increasing in severity, they have progressively exacerbated the greenhouse effect. This resulted, during the drought of 1988, in the first of the summer-long record-breaking temperatures that continue to plague us. In '99 the sunspot activity could well have a cataclysmic effect. Metaphysically, however, there are more compelling reasons. Since the exact interface betweeen the end of the Christian Aeon of Pisces and the beginning of the Humanist Aeon of Aquarius is impossible to pipoint, we are thrown back on sheer numerology. 1+9+9+9 = 28 = 2+8 = 10; numerologically and Pythagoras-wise ten is the number of perfect completion. In other words 1999 is the natural culmination of the Aeon, whereas 2000 is simply a thousandfold manifestation of the Duality: Two - that epitome of evil amongst numbers (from the cosmic point of view, the end of the world isn't necessarily evil). The date, January 16, 1999 adds up to 9. That date is also Julian Day number 2,451,195, which adds up to 9 as well. Ironically enough, most computer projections of disaster, based on current ecological trends, ozone depletion, demographic patterns, etc. predict the peak somewhere between January, 1999 and September, 2013 - by which time the population of the earth will be nine billion and the "end" of the human yardstick on this planet will have come. And although the Bible stipulates that "no man knoweth the day or the hour" of the last day, I do not hesitate to name the 9th second of the 9th minute of the 9th hour of January 16, 1999 as the eschaton (or the 9th day of the 9th month September). As one of the Archons of the Ending Aeon, however, I have chosen 999 as my personal sigil, not 1999, because I want to ally myself with the spirit of the ending process, rather than with the End itself. Moreover, from an opitimistic point of view, 999 is qabalistically virginal - it has nothing written on it. Yet I see no reason to dispute '99 as the Climax of the Apocalypse, and I take that most useful point of the Eschaton as the date of my own eschaton-count. My Newtime (13 month) calendar begins approximately on the winter solstice of 2000 (Newtime Year Zero), displacing Gregorian time forever. Hence I count forward from 1999, calling 1997 "Year Minus 3", etc. It should be noted that "end of the world" predictions are always cropping up. For instance, there was Rev. Whisenant's eschatonic prediction that September 13, 1988 would be the Great Day. Newspapers were gleeful in reporting that the date came and went. What they failed to realize was that 1988, in fact, the beginning of the end - since it was in that year that the greenhouse effect was finally accepted by the planetary powers and acknowledged as the harbinger of the end. If nothing else, 1988 was the year in which the Shroud of Turin was finally pronounced an error by the Vatican. At any rate, the good Rev's numerology may have been naive and the particular fate he chose may have had little synchronistic sparkle, but his prediction wasn't entirely off the wall. Isn't it always the 11th hour? At least sub specie aeternitatis? But with the 20th Century we leave eternity behind and enter the dimensional worlds. The date Whisenant gave has another meaning. As you know, we stand in the slough of time and at the perimeters of various magico/religious aeons - including the multitudinous segments of the Galilean era - all of which end at different points. The prophecies are fulfilled at different velocities in different ways. The world "ends" perennially because "World" derives from Anglo-Saxon wer-µld ("Man's Era" or "human time.") Part of our confusion has to do with the fact that we tend to use "the world" and "the earth" as though they were synonyms. The earth is merely one of the stages on which the drama of the world is enacted. From the Olympian point of view, the end of a world isn't a tragedy. Everything has its ?ld. Even the gods have their time. Even the dinosaurs had an "Age" so the toymakers tell us. The word for "world", in every language, is invariably linked to the notion of time. Arabic duniya, "the present (world)", Hebrew olam "eternity", Latin mundus, originally a division into sections (of time), like the Greek kosmos. Religion is always, sooner or later, part of that chronometry. It amazes me that people, especially gullible Xtians, can be so blind as to expect everything to go on as it has done for millions of years when the end has, in fact, arrived. By now it should be clear even to rotting elephants and establishment flakes that the fulfillment of the prophesies is at hand. Even technocratic corporationism concedes that any time between now and the early 21st Century pollution, population, drought, disease and famine will have hit their strides (the "four horsemen" as the four elements: polluted air, sewage-laden water, barren earth, radiocative fire). Therefore 2000 also marks the beginning of the Age of Aquarius and the official end of the Piscean "Age of Jesus". After that date the Christians (all of whom by then will have been swept up into the arms of their Redeemer) will find themselves, or so asserts self-styled Neo-Xtian, Constance Cumbey, "preserved in their own bubble of spiritual sterility on the dimensional shelf of an alternate reality," where they may eternally contemplate the wonder of their salvation. Meanwhile, mankind's post-holocaustic, enlightened remnant (should such a remnant, by any miracle, remain) will be free to move ahead...to? Incidentally, by the word "holocaust" I do not refer to war but to the destruction of the biosphere by the ravages of unchecked human growth. For remarks on the return of Christ or "Second Coming" (see PAROUSIA). Meanwhile, the elect, who are still being sacrificed, already inhabit the New Jerusalem. The safe and sound remainder are not saved at all, despite their belief. They call themselves Xtians, but they are Philistines. The zealous guardians of the faith are precisely those about whom Matthew was shouting: "Not everyone who saith unto me, Lord, Lord shall enter into the Kingdom of Heaven!", and of whom Mark said, "But woe to them that are with child, and to them that give suck in those days." Those who remain are increasingly damned to the hell that earth is henceforth becoming. September 13, 1988 was the last day before it would be too late to begin the task of repairing the biosphere and reversing daily descent to terracide. So the jubilant laughter of Whisenant's scoffers begins to sound increasingly hollow, doesn't it? Obviously, there are many of us who, though raised in the Xtian tradition, can view the Apocalyptic experience which the world is undergoing even now, without falling gibbering to our knees in a final paroxysm of millennial conversion. . . No matter what happens henceforth, will retain our Neo-Gnostic and Neo-Pagan allegiances and avoid the horror of "Salvation." Other cultures are more confrontational. Coinciding with the Xtian Apocalypse is the Hopi ending of the "Fourth World". In their system, evolution produces new strengths but also creates new bad habits which must periodically be burned away. Those who have not been corrupted will become the seed people of the next world. Hindus and Yogis (q.v.) rather than living in the world, tend to think of themselves as living in an "age" - at present, that age is the evil "Kali Yuga" (quite similar, in fact, to our own "apocalyptic era" and not necessarily lengthier). The Chinese also live in an older world. As of this writing (1988), this is the year 4686 for them. And for the Jews it's 5748. But the Mayans (q.v.) dwell in almost inconceivably vast ages, called baktuns and the current one ends in 2012, our time. The "Harmonic Convergence" of July, 1987, marked the entry, for the Mayans, into the final lustrum of the penultimate 20-year period, before the "hotting up" time of 1992, which is the beginning of the final 20 years of a 160,000 year cycle! The "world" is, in a very real sense, however, the creation of those who inhabit it. Thus, when our forefathers created the United States, they quite deliberately and correctly referred to this as a "new world" and gave the Great Seal the designation NOVUS ORDO SECLORUM ("New Order of the Ages"), which you can still read on every dollar bill. But every maker of a "new" world, whether secular or religious, brings in his own "Age." The makers of the R_publique Fran_aise, after the Revolution of 1789, even came up with a brand new calendar to mark their "new age," complete with new names for the months. Anton LaVey, high priest of the "San Francisco Church of Satan", proclaimed 1966 as the beginning of the "New Satanic Age". Jesus Christ, arriving at the beginning of the Piscean Age, brought with him an automatic 2000-year non-renewable lease on time, which runs out in this century, the beginning of the Aquarian Age. Magicians also fabricate their own elaborate times - Aleister Crowley, for instance, began his "Age of Horus" in 1904. Moreover, although it might be expected to have ended at his death in 1947, his followers, seeing him as an immortal, still maintain Crowley's "Thelemic" calendar in that system, 1996 C.E. would be AN 72. Crowley's aeon was itself superseded in 1947 (the year of the saucers) when the doorway to the Hell of Universe B was opened by Jack Parsons and L. Ron Hubbard, whence the "Forgotten Ones" are now penetrating this world. In 1980 Mickey Mouse and Jesus joined forces to end personal liberty in the United States (the end of the Democratic Party forever). In 1983 the Hopis announced the end of the 5th World - henceforth man would be obliged to boost his own stock, somehow. In July of 1987, the world entered the final lustrum of the penultimate katun of the Mayan aeon - another time of tribulation. 1992 was the beginning of yet another 20-year battle of armageddon. On January 6, 1999 Julian Day 2,415,195, the world will end by Nostradamus's calculation. Few will notice, perhaps, sind the "end" refers merely to the official passing of the Galilean Age and the world will be so desperately struggling to survive that there will be little time for outmoded messiahs. Zoroaster, who died in 1000 B.C., will be reborn and complete the end of futility and Ahriman's rule. His seed at the bottom of a lake, it was prophesied, would thrice conceive maidens at three millennial points. The final chapter in the Zoroastrian cycle and yet another eschaton in our time. Finally, it should be noted, in 2012, Terence McKenna's Timescape reaches Absolute Zero, the point of infinite novelty (See AUTOPOETIC LAPIS). And, interestingly, Jung also predicted the outer limit as occurring approximately fifty years after his death, which was in 1961. You will understand that these 'end of the world' dates constitute a map of reality, but are obviously not Reality itself (apart from the fact that there is no "reality", as such). One doesn't necessarily visit every town on the map. We can choose to live out our allotted span to 1999 or 2012, and perhaps save the world, after all, or we can commit mass suicide beforehand in any of a hundred different ways, thus escaping the horror that is building up. The date of the Apocalypse isn't important. What matters is its immediacy. We have to understand that we've reached the outer limit of our dimension - THERE IS NO FUTURE - or at least very little. Like the amoeba in his drop of water it's time to turn away from the edge and move back to the center. At any rate, by now it should be clear that we're moving quickly, not only metaphysically and synchronistically, but literally into the charged nexus of all the "ending aeons", into a kind of central transformer which is approaching its limit like an overworked fuse. The task of the archons of the ending aeons is to guide the confused through the wreckage of our disintegrating society. (See also: APO PANTAS KAKODAIMONES!, Magick, Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Body Mind and Soul, )
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 |  |  | Terence Mckenna: Encyclopedia II - List of philosophy anniversaries - April
List of philosophy anniversaries - 3.
1880: Otto Weininger born.
2000: Terence McKenna dies.
List of philosophy anniversaries - 4.
397: Ambrose dies.
List of philosophy anniversaries - 5.
1588: Thomas Hobbes born.
List of philosophy anniversaries - 6.
1773: Ja ...
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1, List of philosophy anniversaries - 2, List of philosophy anniversaries - 3, List of philosophy anniversaries - 4, List of philosophy anniversaries - 8, List of philosophy anniversaries - 10, List of philosophy anniversaries - 11, List of philosophy anniversaries - 12, List of philosophy anniversaries - 14, List of philosophy anniversaries - 15, List of philosophy anniversaries - 16, List of philosophy anniversaries - 17, List of philosophy anniversaries - 18, List of philosophy anniversaries - 19, List of philosophy anniversaries - 20, List of philosophy anniversaries - 21, List of philosophy anniversaries - 22, List of philosophy anniversaries - 23, List of philosophy anniversaries - 26, List of philosophy anniversaries - 27, List of philosophy anniversaries - 28, List of philosophy anniversaries - March, List of philosophy anniversaries - 1, List of philosophy anniversaries - 2, List of philosophy anniversaries - 3, List of philosophy anniversaries - 4, List of philosophy anniversaries - 6, List of philosophy anniversaries - 7, List of philosophy anniversaries - 9, List of philosophy anniversaries - 10, List of philosophy anniversaries - 11, List of philosophy anniversaries - 12, List of philosophy anniversaries - 13, List of philosophy anniversaries - 14, List of philosophy anniversaries - 17, List of philosophy anniversaries - 18, List of philosophy anniversaries - 19, List of philosophy anniversaries - 20, List of philosophy anniversaries - 21, List of philosophy anniversaries - 22, List of philosophy anniversaries - 23, List of philosophy anniversaries - 25, List of philosophy anniversaries - 26, List of philosophy anniversaries - 27, List of philosophy anniversaries - 28, List of philosophy anniversaries - 29, List of philosophy anniversaries - 30, List of philosophy anniversaries - 31, List of philosophy anniversaries - April, List of philosophy anniversaries - 3, List of philosophy anniversaries - 4, List of philosophy anniversaries - 5, List of philosophy anniversaries - 6, List of philosophy anniversaries - 7, List of philosophy anniversaries - 8, List of philosophy anniversaries - 9, List of philosophy anniversaries - 10, List of philosophy anniversaries - 12, List of philosophy anniversaries - 13, List of philosophy anniversaries - 14, List of philosophy anniversaries - 15, List of philosophy anniversaries - 17, List of philosophy anniversaries - 18, List of philosophy anniversaries - 19, List of philosophy anniversaries - 20, List of philosophy anniversaries - 21, List of philosophy anniversaries - 22, List of philosophy anniversaries - 25, List of philosophy anniversaries - 26, List of philosophy anniversaries - 27, List of philosophy anniversaries - 28, List of philosophy anniversaries - 30, List of philosophy anniversaries - May, List of philosophy anniversaries - 1, List of philosophy anniversaries - 3, List of philosophy anniversaries - 4, List of philosophy anniversaries - 5, List of philosophy anniversaries - 6, List of philosophy anniversaries - 7, List of philosophy anniversaries - 8, List of philosophy anniversaries - 9, List of philosophy anniversaries - 10, List of philosophy anniversaries - 11, List of philosophy anniversaries - 12, List of philosophy anniversaries - 16, List of philosophy anniversaries - 17, List of philosophy anniversaries - 18, List of philosophy anniversaries - 19, List of philosophy anniversaries - 20, List of philosophy anniversaries - 21, List of philosophy anniversaries - 23, List of philosophy anniversaries - 24, List of philosophy anniversaries - 25, List of philosophy anniversaries - 26, List of philosophy anniversaries - 27, List of philosophy anniversaries - 28, List of philosophy anniversaries - 29, List of philosophy anniversaries - 30, List of philosophy anniversaries - 31, List of philosophy anniversaries - June, List of philosophy anniversaries - 1, List of philosophy anniversaries - 2, List of philosophy anniversaries - 4, List of philosophy anniversaries - 5, List of philosophy anniversaries - 6, List of philosophy anniversaries - 8, List of philosophy anniversaries - 10, List of philosophy anniversaries - 11, List of philosophy anniversaries - 13, List of philosophy anniversaries - 14, List of philosophy anniversaries - 16, List of philosophy anniversaries - 17, List of philosophy anniversaries - 18, List of philosophy anniversaries - 19, List of philosophy anniversaries - 20, List of philosophy anniversaries - 21, List of philosophy anniversaries - 22, List of philosophy anniversaries - 23, List of philosophy anniversaries - 24, List of philosophy anniversaries - 25, List of philosophy anniversaries - 26, List of philosophy anniversaries - 27, List of philosophy anniversaries - 28, List of philosophy anniversaries - 29, List of philosophy anniversaries - July, List of philosophy anniversaries - 1, List of philosophy anniversaries - 2, List of philosophy anniversaries - 3, List of philosophy anniversaries - 4, List of philosophy anniversaries - 5, List of philosophy anniversaries - 6, List of philosophy anniversaries - 7, List of philosophy anniversaries - 8, List of philosophy anniversaries - 9, List of philosophy anniversaries - 11, List of philosophy anniversaries - 12, List of philosophy anniversaries - 13, List of philosophy anniversaries - 14, List of philosophy anniversaries - 15, List of philosophy anniversaries - 17, List of philosophy anniversaries - 18, List of philosophy anniversaries - 20, List of philosophy anniversaries - 21, List of philosophy anniversaries - 23, List of philosophy anniversaries - 24, List of philosophy anniversaries - 25, List of philosophy anniversaries - 26, List of philosophy anniversaries - 27, List of philosophy anniversaries - 28, List of philosophy anniversaries - 29, List of philosophy anniversaries - 31, List of philosophy anniversaries - August, List of philosophy anniversaries - 1, List of philosophy anniversaries - 3, List of philosophy anniversaries - 4, List of philosophy anniversaries - 5, List of philosophy anniversaries - 6, List of philosophy anniversaries - 7, List of philosophy anniversaries - 8, List of philosophy anniversaries - 10, List of philosophy anniversaries - 12, List of philosophy anniversaries - 15, List of philosophy anniversaries - 18, List of philosophy anniversaries - 19, List of philosophy anniversaries - 20, List of philosophy anniversaries - 21, List of philosophy anniversaries - 23, List of philosophy anniversaries - 24, List of philosophy anniversaries - 25, List of philosophy anniversaries - 26, List of philosophy anniversaries - 27, List of philosophy anniversaries - 28, List of philosophy anniversaries - 29, List of philosophy anniversaries - 30, List of philosophy anniversaries - September, List of philosophy anniversaries - 1, List of philosophy anniversaries - 2, List of philosophy anniversaries - 3, List of philosophy anniversaries - 4, List of philosophy anniversaries - 5, List of philosophy anniversaries - 6, List of philosophy anniversaries - 7, List of philosophy anniversaries - 8, List of philosophy anniversaries - 9, List of philosophy anniversaries - 10, List of philosophy anniversaries - 11, List of philosophy anniversaries - 13, List of philosophy anniversaries - 14, List of philosophy anniversaries - 15, List of philosophy anniversaries - 16, List of philosophy anniversaries - 17, List of philosophy anniversaries - 18, List of philosophy anniversaries - 19, List of philosophy anniversaries - 20, List of philosophy anniversaries - 21, List of philosophy anniversaries - 22, List of philosophy anniversaries - 25, List of philosophy anniversaries - 26, List of philosophy anniversaries - 27, List of philosophy anniversaries - 28, List of philosophy anniversaries - 29, List of philosophy anniversaries - 30, List of philosophy anniversaries - October, List of philosophy anniversaries - 2, List of philosophy anniversaries - 4, List of philosophy anniversaries - 5, List of philosophy anniversaries - 6, List of philosophy anniversaries - 7, List of philosophy anniversaries - 8, List of philosophy anniversaries - 10, List of philosophy anniversaries - 11, List of philosophy anniversaries - 12, List of philosophy anniversaries - 13, List of philosophy anniversaries - 14, List of philosophy anniversaries - 15, List of philosophy anniversaries - 16, List of philosophy anniversaries - 17, List of philosophy anniversaries - 18, List of philosophy anniversaries - 20, List of philosophy anniversaries - 21, List of philosophy anniversaries - 22, List of philosophy anniversaries - 23, List of philosophy anniversaries - 24, List of philosophy anniversaries - 25, List of philosophy anniversaries - 26, List of philosophy anniversaries - 27, List of philosophy anniversaries - 28, List of philosophy anniversaries - 29, List of philosophy anniversaries - 30, List of philosophy anniversaries - 31, List of philosophy anniversaries - November, List of philosophy anniversaries - 2, List of philosophy anniversaries - 3, List of philosophy anniversaries - 4, List of philosophy anniversaries - 5, List of philosophy anniversaries - 7, List of philosophy anniversaries - 8, List of philosophy anniversaries - 9, List of philosophy anniversaries - 10, List of philosophy anniversaries - 11, List of philosophy anniversaries - 12, List of philosophy anniversaries - 13, List of philosophy anniversaries - 14, List of philosophy anniversaries - 15, List of philosophy anniversaries - 16, List of philosophy anniversaries - 19, List of philosophy anniversaries - 20, List of philosophy anniversaries - 21, List of philosophy anniversaries - 22, List of philosophy anniversaries - 24, List of philosophy anniversaries - 25, List of philosophy anniversaries - 27, List of philosophy anniversaries - 28, List of philosophy anniversaries - 29, List of philosophy anniversaries - December, List of philosophy anniversaries - 2, List of philosophy anniversaries - 4, List of philosophy anniversaries - 5, List of philosophy anniversaries - 6, List of philosophy anniversaries - 7, List of philosophy anniversaries - 8, List of philosophy anniversaries - 9, List of philosophy anniversaries - 10, List of philosophy anniversaries - 11, List of philosophy anniversaries - 12, List of philosophy anniversaries - 13, List of philosophy anniversaries - 14, List of philosophy anniversaries - 15, List of philosophy anniversaries - 16, List of philosophy anniversaries - 17, List of philosophy anniversaries - 18, List of philosophy anniversaries - 19, List of philosophy anniversaries - 20, List of philosophy anniversaries - 21, List of philosophy anniversaries - 22, List of philosophy anniversaries - 23, List of philosophy anniversaries - 24, List of philosophy anniversaries - 25, List of philosophy anniversaries - 26, List of philosophy anniversaries - 27, List of philosophy anniversaries - 28, List of philosophy anniversaries - 30, List of philosophy anniversaries - 31 Read more here: » List of philosophy anniversaries: Encyclopedia II - List of philosophy anniversaries - April |
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