
Ultraculture With Jason Louv Ep. 236: Alan Chapman on the OTO Lawsuit, the Book of the Law & Whether This World Is a Bardo
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Apr 7, 2026 Alan Chapman, author and practitioner of contemporary occultism, discusses Crowley scholarship, a copyright fight over his edition of Magick Without Tears, and the true story behind the Book of the Law. He explores Crowley’s trance reception, underworld motifs in the text, the nature of lineage and the Great Work, and whether this life resembles a bardo. Short, sharp, and provocative.
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Mathers' Formula Shaped Crowley's Practice
- Crowley's practical method borrowed an Abramelin-style formula: unite with a supreme god/angel then command lower spirits, taught by Mathers/Westcott.
- He used a short preliminary invocation (the Bornless/Headless spell) before other workings.
Rose Kelly Led The Working That Overturned Crowley's Identity
- At the Book of the Law working Rose Kelly (the oracle) led the ritual and dictated material Crowley initially resisted, undermining his identity as expert practical magician.
- Crowley asked explicitly for samadhi; he later experienced a trance-like union mid-text and struggled to integrate it for 20 years.
Samadhi Interrupted The Writing And Shaped Crowley's Reception
- During the Book of the Law Crowley experiences a samadhi with 13 lines he doesn't recall writing, then later repeatedly 're-crosses the abyss' to accept responsibility.
- He represses and delays honoring the book's demands for decades.






