Chaos Magic & Postmodern Occultism

Chaos Magic & Postmodern Occultism

BY NICOLE

Nothing is True, Everything is Permitted

Chaos magic (1970s-present) is the punk rock of occultismβ€”irreverent, DIY, and radically pragmatic. It stripped away the Golden Dawn's elaborate hierarchies, rejected tradition, and asked one question: Does it work?

If it works, it's valid. If it doesn't, discard it. No dogma, no lineage, no robes required.

Chaos magic is postmodern occultismβ€”deconstructing magical systems, treating belief as a tool, and using whatever produces results (including pop culture, technology, and irony).

The Origins: England, 1970s

The Founders:

  • Peter Carroll: Wrote Liber Null & Psychonaut (1987), the chaos magic bible
  • Ray Sherwin: Co-founded the Illuminates of Thanateros (IOT), the first chaos magic order
  • Phil Hine: Wrote Condensed Chaos (1995), making chaos magic accessible

The context:

  • Punk rock's DIY ethos
  • Postmodern philosophy (Derrida, Foucault)
  • Rejection of the Golden Dawn's pomposity
  • Influence of Austin Osman Spare (1886-1956), who pioneered sigil magic

Core Principles

1. "Nothing is true, everything is permitted"

  • Borrowed from Hassan-i Sabbah (via William S. Burroughs)
  • No absolute truthβ€”all belief systems are provisional
  • You can use any system that works
  • Freedom from dogma

2. Belief as a Tool

  • Beliefs are not truths but tools
  • Adopt a belief system, use it, then discard it
  • "Paradigm shifting"β€”moving between systems fluidly
  • Example: Practice Thelema on Monday, Wicca on Tuesday, atheism on Wednesday

3. Results Over Theory

  • Magic is judged by results, not tradition or aesthetics
  • If a technique works, use itβ€”regardless of source
  • Experimentation over orthodoxy

4. Gnosis (Altered States)

  • Magic works through altered consciousness
  • Any method that produces gnosis is valid: meditation, sex, pain, exhaustion, laughter, drugs, video games
  • No "right" wayβ€”find what works for you

Sigil Magic: The Core Technique

Sigils are the most famous chaos magic technique, developed by Austin Osman Spare:

The method:

  1. State your intent: "I will get the job" (present tense, positive)
  2. Remove duplicate letters: IWLGETHJOB
  3. Create a symbol: Combine the letters into an abstract design
  4. Charge the sigil: Enter gnosis (orgasm, meditation, etc.), focus on the sigil
  5. Forget it: Destroy or hide the sigil, forget the intent consciously
  6. Let it work: The unconscious manifests the intent

Why it works (chaos magic theory):

  • The sigil bypasses the conscious mind's doubt
  • The unconscious is the real magician
  • Forgetting prevents interference

Servitors: DIY Spirits

Servitors are thought-form entities created for specific tasks:

The process:

  1. Define the servitor's purpose (e.g., "find parking spaces")
  2. Give it a name, appearance, and personality
  3. Charge it with energy (ritual, visualization, gnosis)
  4. Set a lifespan or destruction condition
  5. Release it to do its work
  6. Destroy it when done (to prevent it becoming autonomous)

This is practical magicβ€”creating tools, not worshipping gods.

Pop Culture Magic

Chaos magicians use pop culture as magical systems:

  • Invoke superheroes (Spider-Man for agility, Batman for strategy)
  • Use corporate logos as sigils (Nike swoosh for victory)
  • Create servitors based on fictional characters
  • Treat movies, games, and comics as grimoires

The logic:

  • Pop culture has more emotional charge than ancient gods (for modern people)
  • Archetypes work regardless of source
  • If Superman inspires you more than Horus, use Superman

The Chaos Star

The eight-pointed star (arrows radiating from a center) is chaos magic's symbol:

  • Represents infinite possibilities
  • No fixed directionβ€”all paths are valid
  • Borrowed from Michael Moorcock's fantasy novels

Postmodern Occultism

Chaos magic is explicitly postmodern:

Deconstruction:

  • Magical systems are social constructs, not eternal truths
  • Dismantle them, see how they work, rebuild as needed

Relativism:

  • No system is superiorβ€”all are equally valid (or invalid)
  • Choose based on effectiveness, not tradition

Irony and Play:

  • Magic doesn't require solemnity
  • Humor and irony can be magical tools
  • Don't take yourself too seriously

The Critique

Lack of depth:

  • Superficialβ€”using systems without understanding them
  • No lineage, no transmission, no depth

Cultural appropriation:

  • Treating sacred traditions as tools to be used and discarded
  • Disrespectful to indigenous and traditional practitioners

Narcissism:

  • "Whatever works for me" can become solipsistic
  • No community, no accountability

Defense:

  • Honesty about what magic isβ€”psychological technology
  • Accessibilityβ€”anyone can practice, no gatekeeping
  • Effectivenessβ€”stripped-down techniques that work

The Legacy

Influence on modern occultism:

  • Sigil magic is ubiquitous (apps, Instagram, TikTok)
  • Pop culture magic is mainstream
  • The pragmatic, results-based approach spread widely

Meme magic:

  • Internet memes as sigils
  • Viral spread as magical charging
  • "Meme magic is real" (2016 election, Pepe the Frog)

Influence on technology:

  • Technopaganism, cyberpunk magic
  • AI and algorithms as servitors
  • Digital sigils and virtual rituals

Chaos Magic in Constant Unification Framework

From the Constant Unification perspective (Part 44):

  • The pragmatic test: Chaos magic's "does it work?" is the ultimate validationβ€”if different systems produce results, they're tapping into real patterns
  • Belief as variable: Chaos magic discovered that belief itself is a parameterβ€”the same technique works with different belief frameworks because the underlying mechanism is psychological/energetic, not theological
  • Pop culture as archetypal: Superman and Horus both work because they're expressions of the same archetypeβ€”the source doesn't matter, the pattern does

Chaos magic's insight: strip away the cultural packaging, and all magical systems are doing the same thingβ€”manipulating consciousness to influence reality.


This article is Part 37 of the History of Mysticism series. It explores chaos magic (1970s-present)β€”the postmodern, pragmatic approach to occultism. Chaos magic concepts (belief as tool, sigil magic, servitors, pop culture magic, paradigm shifting) deconstructed traditional occultism and created a DIY, results-based practice. Understanding chaos magic reveals how mysticism adapts to postmodern cultureβ€”irreverent, eclectic, and radically simplified.

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About Nicole's Ritual Universe

"Nicole Lau is a UK certified Advanced Angel Healing Practitioner, PhD in Management, and published author specializing in mysticism, magic systems, and esoteric traditions.

With a unique blend of academic rigor and spiritual practice, Nicole bridges the worlds of structured thinking and mystical wisdom.

Through her books and ritual tools, she invites you to co-create a complete universe of mystical knowledgeβ€”not just to practice magic, but to become the architect of your own reality."