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Frater Achad

    Charles Stansfeld Jones, également connu sous le nom de Frater Achad, fut une figure marquante de l'occultisme et de la magie cérémonielle. Son implication précoce dans des ordres ésotériques et ses affirmations ambitieuses d'atteindre des grades spirituels supérieurs soulignent son profond engagement dans l'exploration mystique. Il a publié des ouvrages sous divers pseudonymes, mais est surtout devenu connu sous le nom d'Achad, qui reflète sa philosophie de l'unité. Ses écrits exploraient des voies spirituelles avancées et des efforts organisationnels au sein de sociétés magiques.

    Q.B.L.
    • Q.B.L.

      • 155pages
      • 6 heures de lecture

      Q.B.L. is a masterpiece of Qabalah and controversy. Its importance to the world of modern occult literature can be measured not only by its value as a remarkably understandable textbook of the fundamental Qabalistic principles, but also because it offers us a rare glimpse into the heart and mind of a brilliant, sincere seeker of wisdom and truth.This book was controversial in 1922 when it was written and it continues to provoke passionate debate among 21st-century magicians, mystics, and Qabalists—some consider it an inspired advance in the evolution of Qabalistic though, others a damnable heresy.Charles Robert John Stansfeld Jones (1886-1950), known by his magical name, Frater Achad, was the prize student of Aleister Crowley (1875-1947) the most famous magician of the 20th century. Indeed, for several years Crowley considered Achad his Magical Son, a shining example of the efficacy of his program of Scientific Illuminism.Achad's revolutionary ideas concerning the basic structure of the venerable Qabalistic diagram, the Tree of Life, which he published in Q.B.L., however, drove a bitter wedge between the two men and sparked an ongoing controversy that to this day raises the blood pressure of otherwise mild-mannered mystics.

      Q.B.L.2005
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