Cosmic Trigger II: Down to Earth is the second book in the Cosmic Trigger trilogy, an autobiographical and philosophical work by Robert Anton Wilson. The book is broken down into ninety-four short chapters that focus on conspiracies, a cultural history of the Irish, the potential future in cyberspace, political injustices, his upbringing in the Catholic Church and more. The main themes of the book are presented in a nonlinear fashion; most of the chapters do not lead directly into each other.
Unsurprisingly, Wilson writes this book with a lot of humor, although it is usually a dark humor that attempts to throw the reader a logistical curveball. Wilson was a proponent of listening to everything and believing nothing, so he tends to contradict himself multiple times in this book as he puts forth multiple perspectives on each issue. However, it is always interesting to ponder which of his crazy ideas makes the most sense.
I really enjoyed the autobiographical nature of this book, because it is the deepest insight into Wilson’s mind that I have read thus far. He works in a bunch of other topics of interest, but the honesty of his personal life was my favorite part. He writes of his early religious education with the “sadistic” nuns at Catholic school, his atheistic standpoint as an engineering student and his development of “model agnosticism” that shows up in the majority of his works. The understanding that I have obtained about “model agnosticism” is that Wilson thought that we should never have unshakable beliefs about anything.
Wilson also brings up the exponential growth of global information quite a few times in this book. This is an area of interest for those who have read Terence McKenna, because McKenna believed that information would continue to double at faster and faster rates until December 21, 2012, when the last sets of doubling would occur every nanosecond. This is his Timewave Zero hypothesis, and is worth researching if you are interested in this concept.
Next to The Illuminatus! Trilogy, this book has become one of my favorite Robert Anton Wilson works. It is a great improvement over the first volume in the Cosmic Trigger Trilogy.
5/5 Stars. 288 pages. Published 1991.