

#22503
Mentioned in 2 episodes
The Black Pilgrimage
The Black Pilgrimage
Book • 2026
David Beth's The Black Pilgrimage outlines a living initiatic current termed cosmic gnosis, blending philosophical reflections (influenced by thinkers like Ludwig Klages and Heidegger) with practical rites, hymns, and offerings.
The first half offers interlocking essays that present a relational, vitalist grammar—focusing on concepts like pandemonic images, chaos, mater, eros, and the counter-cosmos of Geist.
The second half provides practices intended to enthuse and re-ignite the inner fire (silenlukt), rather than offering graded attainment systems.
Beth frames the 'black pilgrimage' as a point of admission where modern abstractions fail and one returns to communion with daemonic presences, ancestors, and the living world.
The book resists conceptual capture and proposes methods for dissolving the detached, conceptual 'spirit' that fractures body and soul.
Its edition is published by Theion/Thayon and was recommended to the host by a listener who sent a copy.
The first half offers interlocking essays that present a relational, vitalist grammar—focusing on concepts like pandemonic images, chaos, mater, eros, and the counter-cosmos of Geist.
The second half provides practices intended to enthuse and re-ignite the inner fire (silenlukt), rather than offering graded attainment systems.
Beth frames the 'black pilgrimage' as a point of admission where modern abstractions fail and one returns to communion with daemonic presences, ancestors, and the living world.
The book resists conceptual capture and proposes methods for dissolving the detached, conceptual 'spirit' that fractures body and soul.
Its edition is published by Theion/Thayon and was recommended to the host by a listener who sent a copy.
Mentioned by
Mentioned in 2 episodes
Mentioned in episode shownotes via a Hermitix podcast review as related reading.

20 snips
Reason is a lie; for there is a factor infinte
Mentioned by Hermitix as the central subject of the episode and reviewed as a grammar and practical manual for cosmic gnosis.

The Black Pilgrimage by David Beth (Book Review)


