The Gagarin Index

About
Sketches and Marginal Notes on Imagined and Self-Realised Worlds, including:

—> Imaginary and semi-imaginary people, places & objects;
—> Plastic perspectives, histories and narratives;
—> Simultaneous, parallel, alternate and meta-realities;
—> False documents, equivocal identities
Trust in God, but tie up your camel.

Old Turkish proverb

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There is no warmth, charm or humanity in perfection. Only in imperfection. We struggled for two months with the Matewan logo to make it look undesigned in its weight, proportions and letter spacing. We wanted it to look like it was drawn in 1911 by someone without skill or knowledge but with an enormous desire to do it well.

Tibor Kalman
From Tibor’s Typo Tips, Baseline 11

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ALAN MOORE: WRITING IS MAGIC
In 1993, on his fortieth birthday, Moore openly declared his dedication to being a ceremonial magician, something he saw as “a logical end step to my career as a writer”.
According to a 2001 interview, his inspiration for doing this came when he was writing From Hell in the early 1990s, a book containing much Freemasonic and occult symbolism: “One word balloon in From Hell completely hijacked my life… A character says something like, ‘The one place gods inarguably exist is in the human mind’. After I wrote that, I realised I’d accidentally made a true statement, and now I’d have to rearrange my entire life around it. The only thing that seemed to really be appropriate was to become a magician.”
Moore associates magic very much with writing; “I believe that magic is art, and that art, whether that be music, writing, sculpture, or any other form, is literally magic. Art is, like magic, the science of manipulating symbols, words or images, to achieve changes in consciousness… Indeed to cast a spell is simply to spell, to manipulate words, to change people’s consciousness, and this is why I believe that an artist or writer is the closest thing in the contemporary world to a shaman.”
“Monotheism is, to me, a great simplification. I mean the Qabalah has a great multiplicity of gods, but at the very top of the Qabalic Tree of Life, you have this one sphere that is absolute God, the Monad, something which is indivisible. All of the other gods, and indeed everything else in the universe, is a kind of emanation of that God. Now, that’s fine, but it’s when you suggest that there is only that one God, at this kind of unreachable height above humanity, and there is nothing in between, you’re limiting and simplifying the thing. I tend to think of paganism as a kind of alphabet, as a language, it’s like all of the gods are letters in that language. They express nuances, shades of meaning or certain subtleties of ideas, whereas monotheism tends to just be one vowel and it’s just something like ‘oooooooo’. It’s a monkey sound.”
Connecting his esoteric beliefs with his career in writing, he conceptualised a hypothetical area known as the “Idea Space”, describing it as “…a space in which mental events can be said to occur, an idea space which is perhaps universal. Our individual consciousnesses have access to this vast universal space, just as we have individual houses, but the street outside the front door belongs to everybody. It’s almost as if ideas are pre-existing forms within this space… The landmasses that might exist in this mind space would be composed entirely of ideas, of concepts, that instead of continents and islands you might have large belief systems, philosophies, Marxism might be one, Judeo-Christian religions might make up another.” He subsequently believed that to navigate this space, magical systems like the tarot and the Qabalah would have to be used.
Moore took as his primary deity the ancient Roman snake god Glycon, who was the centre of a cult founded by a prophet known as Alexander of Abonoteichus, and according to Alexander’s critic Lucian, the god itself was merely a puppet, something Moore accepts, considering him to be a “complete hoax”, but dismisses as irrelevant. According to Pagan Studies scholar Ethan Doyle-White, “The very fact that Glycon was probably one big hoax was enough to convince Moore to devote himself to the scaly lord, for, as Moore maintains, the imagination is just as real as reality.”
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Moore

ALAN MOORE: WRITING IS MAGIC

In 1993, on his fortieth birthday, Moore openly declared his dedication to being a ceremonial magician, something he saw as “a logical end step to my career as a writer”.

According to a 2001 interview, his inspiration for doing this came when he was writing From Hell in the early 1990s, a book containing much Freemasonic and occult symbolism: “One word balloon in From Hell completely hijacked my life… A character says something like, ‘The one place gods inarguably exist is in the human mind’. After I wrote that, I realised I’d accidentally made a true statement, and now I’d have to rearrange my entire life around it. The only thing that seemed to really be appropriate was to become a magician.”

Moore associates magic very much with writing; “I believe that magic is art, and that art, whether that be music, writing, sculpture, or any other form, is literally magic. Art is, like magic, the science of manipulating symbols, words or images, to achieve changes in consciousness… Indeed to cast a spell is simply to spell, to manipulate words, to change people’s consciousness, and this is why I believe that an artist or writer is the closest thing in the contemporary world to a shaman.”

“Monotheism is, to me, a great simplification. I mean the Qabalah has a great multiplicity of gods, but at the very top of the Qabalic Tree of Life, you have this one sphere that is absolute God, the Monad, something which is indivisible. All of the other gods, and indeed everything else in the universe, is a kind of emanation of that God. Now, that’s fine, but it’s when you suggest that there is only that one God, at this kind of unreachable height above humanity, and there is nothing in between, you’re limiting and simplifying the thing. I tend to think of paganism as a kind of alphabet, as a language, it’s like all of the gods are letters in that language. They express nuances, shades of meaning or certain subtleties of ideas, whereas monotheism tends to just be one vowel and it’s just something like ‘oooooooo’. It’s a monkey sound.”

Connecting his esoteric beliefs with his career in writing, he conceptualised a hypothetical area known as the “Idea Space”, describing it as “…a space in which mental events can be said to occur, an idea space which is perhaps universal. Our individual consciousnesses have access to this vast universal space, just as we have individual houses, but the street outside the front door belongs to everybody. It’s almost as if ideas are pre-existing forms within this space… The landmasses that might exist in this mind space would be composed entirely of ideas, of concepts, that instead of continents and islands you might have large belief systems, philosophies, Marxism might be one, Judeo-Christian religions might make up another.” He subsequently believed that to navigate this space, magical systems like the tarot and the Qabalah would have to be used.

Moore took as his primary deity the ancient Roman snake god Glycon, who was the centre of a cult founded by a prophet known as Alexander of Abonoteichus, and according to Alexander’s critic Lucian, the god itself was merely a puppet, something Moore accepts, considering him to be a “complete hoax”, but dismisses as irrelevant. According to Pagan Studies scholar Ethan Doyle-White, “The very fact that Glycon was probably one big hoax was enough to convince Moore to devote himself to the scaly lord, for, as Moore maintains, the imagination is just as real as reality.”

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A bell is a cup until it is struck.

Wire album
1988

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The search for knowledge and the discovery of a great weapon are virtually one and the same.

THE LAST FOUR THINGS
Paul Hoffman
Guido Hooke to Thomas Cale
p.161 

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In religious terms the notion of grey areas is something of a grey area.

THE LAST FOUR THINGS
Paul Hoffman
Guido Hooke to Thomas Cale
p.160 

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For one thing I could enjoy a cigar again. I only smoked cigarettes in my other personality and never violated that personality, even in strictest privacy… I could never make up my mind which period I enjoyed more – I guess they are both right at the time.

— Slippery Jim
From THE STAINLESS STEEL RAT
Harry Harrison 1961

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…Still dressed, I went downstairs
And took a long cool look. The truth was dawning.
Someone had just exchanged my life for theirs.
Poor fool, I thought - I should have left a warning.

— From THE SKIP
James Fenton 

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Fantomas.”
“What did you say?”
“I said: Fantomas.”
“And what does it mean?”
“Nothing… Everything!”
“But what is it?”
“Nobody… And yet, yes, it is somebody!

FANTOMAS
Marcel Allain and Pierre Souvestre, 1915 
(President Bonnet, Chapter One: The Genius of Crime.)

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It is impossible to say exactly what or to know precisely who Fantomas is. He often assumes the form and personality of some particular and even well-known individual; sometimes he assumes the forms of two human beings at the same time. Sometimes he works alone, sometimes with accomplices; sometimes he can be identified as such and such a person, but no one has ever gotten to know Fantomas himself. That he is a living person is certain and cannot be denied, yet he is impossible to catch or to identify. He is nowhere and everywhere at once, his shadow hovers above the strangest mysteries, and his traces are found near the most inexplicable crimes…

FANTOMAS
Marcel Allain and Pierre Souvestre, 1915 
(President Bonnet, Chapter One: The Genius of Crime.)

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