”I Do Not Believe Anything.”
”It seems to be a hangover of the medieval Catholic era that causes most people, even the educated, to think that everybody must believe something or other, that if one is not a theist, one must be a dogmatic atheist, and if one does not think capitalism is perfect one must believe fervently in socialism, and if one does not have blind faith in X, one must alternatively have blind faith in Not X or the reverse of X.
My own opinion is that belief is the death of intelligence . As soon as one believe a doctrine of any sort or assumes certitude, one stops thinking about that aspect of existence. The more certitude one assumes the less there is left to think about, and a person sure of everything would never have any need to think about anything, and might be considered clinically dead under current medical standards where the absence of brain activity is taken to mean that life has ended.”
The above quotes are the essence of Cosmic Trigger. They are what I remembered and retained across the thirty plus years since I last read this book. These quotes, that appear in the very first pages, tell you the book’s true theme and purpose: to break your rigidity of thought, to divorce you from the the disease of dogma, cure you from the curse of certitude.
Wilson front loaded his book with his intent, knowing that many would become lost in the flash bang whizz of the frankly fringe ideas that he goes on to explore. This is high octane weirdness and crackpot crazy, investigated and considered seriously. The Illuminati, UFOLOGISTS, dancing peyote nature spirits, astral pancakes from space, Wilhelm Reich’s Orgone, Alister Crowley Sex Magick, interstellar messages from the Dog Star Sirius — these and so many more ideas our consensus reality considers insane and not worth serious study — Wilson studied them, experimented with them, and presents them here for our examination. He writes:
”What my experiments demonstrate, what all such experiments throughout history have demonstrated, is simply that our models of reality are very small and tidy, universe of experience is huge and untidy, and no model of reality can ever include all the huge untidiness perceived by uncensored consciousness.”
This book blew my mind when I first read it over 30 years ago. Wilson became my guide through “Chapel Perilous” (that place from which you emerge either a stone cold paranoid or an agnostic) and forever changed the way I would perceive consensus reality. It was from Cosmic Trigger that I first discovered the Copenhagen Interpretation which Niels Bohr proposed to explain quantum mechanics, and which can be expanded into a general view of reality as Model Agnosticism. (Alan W. Watts popularized Model Agnosticism with his phrase “The Menu is not the Meal.”) This book profoundly changed the way I went on to view the world and reality.
Reading it now, after decades of practicing the no belief necessary model of looking at the world, it didn’t pack the same punch. Radical revelations are only fresh when they are new. So this time I noticed the scatter shot structure of the book, picked out how some parts were far less effective than others. But Wilson’s trickster wink and a grin humor was still sharp, and I still heard the echo of the thunder that so resonated in my younger mind.
Cosmic Trigger is a book that will be most effective for the young. Past a certain age it’s likely that a rigidity of mind has set in that will make you incapable of appreciating it. Yet, if you are honestly struggling to keep your mind open to possibilities, if you are actively resisting become that old, “Stay off my lawn!” guy, you could do worse that expose yourself to the shenanigans that Wilson here presents.