Demonic Tech
Active member
After the wonderful post about Tartarus, moving along on the topic of understanding our allegories, I'd like to talk about Ouroboros.
In the very much thought inspiring 2nd issue of the Donations PDF, one of the topics discussed was indeed Ouroboros.
If, somehow, you don't know what it is, Ouroboros is the figure of the Serpent (or sometimes Dragon) eating its tail, usually in a circle, but I've seen what I guess are modern versions that depict the Serpent forming the ∞ infinite symbol.
The symbol was originally Egyptian, but then appeared in ancient Greece, and it has been extensively used in alchemy.
We are indeed going to talk about alchemy.
Ouroboros represents eternal creation, it's the Serpent that while it devours itself, it also regenerates, in an infinite cycle.
Its ultimate meaning is the goal every alchemist, the goal at the end of the Magnum Opus: immortality.
(Other meanings too were given to Ouroboros, but they are off-topic, one of them would be "what goes around comes around", as in there are consequences to actions)
The allegory is explained more thoroughly in the 2nd issue of the Donations PDF, along with other points around it.
As HPHC told me, these articles' purpose is to dwell in the mind, to get you thinking and realizing.
It did indeed dwell long enough in mine, enough that I developed a connection between the allegory of the Serpent destroying and recreating itself, and the actual science of how I understand immortality works.
This post is to discuss my conclusion, hopefully help someone in their Satanic studies, and stimulate clever conversation that might even benefit myself if anyone found any errors in my reasoning so that I could fix them and let everyone who reads this be a little more knowledgeable.
I suspect that for many advanced members this won't exactly be breaking news, but I was still happy when I made my realization.
Anyway, here we go.
We know that the act of the Serpent eating itself stands for the destruction (death) of itself.
In a more scientific POV, a snake, like us, like dogs and cats, is made of cells.
To destroy a snake boils down to destroying its cells.
Cells do actually die. While you're reading this, countless of cells that make up your body are dying.
Particularly, every cell that has touched the keyboard and mouse you're using right now, is already dead, as our most outer layer of skin and our nails are entirely composed of old dead cells.
But we are not crumbling away, not we are dying by the minute, because of course, while many cell die, many others are born.
The Serpent destroys itself (cells die) and at the same time, it regenerates (cells are born).
This is all very beautiful, as we can gladly already find similarities between our bodies and Ouroboros. We already go through some kind of physical rebirth in many (if not all, but I can't vow for it) parts of our body through the replacement of dead cells with new ones.
There is one issue though. Ouroboros is a circle, a loop, and a perfect one too.
We, right now, are not a circle. We are probably more like a finite spiral. The line that draws it, thinning away, until it's gone.
Our loop of cell rebirth decays with time.
At a certain age, we can't create as many cells as they die.
And even when we do birth new cells, they become more and more unreliable as time goes, they could be born with damaged DNA, and the chances of them becoming tumors, then cancer, grows.
My, probably over-hyped, conclusion, thus is: to be successful alchemists, to have completed the Magnum Opus, to have reached the state of Ouroboros, means to have reached a physical and medical point in which perfect and auto-sustainable cell rebirth is happening at all times and never decays.
Pretty much like in one's twenties. It's said that the twenties are the pinnacle of one's body.
Of course, I can't claim to know how to halt the decay of the cell rebirth progress, nor to exactly know why it decays in the first place, but it's not an unexplored topic by science and there have been studies, I remember someone here quoting a book titled something in the lines of "Why we age and why we shouldn't".
So, if it's to someone's interest to delve into why our rebirth cycle isn't perfect, they should be able to do it pretty easily.
This is one random article I've just found through a quick research which sheds some light on the topic. Mainstream science has a lot of different theories on aging, and not all of them revolve around the cell rebirth cycle I've talked about, but cells and DNA are always present.
To everyone, thanks for reading this, and don't hesitate to let me know if you think I said something wrong in your opinion, or if you agree with everything. Either way, clever discussion will happen, and everyone will benefit.
Always Hail Father Satan, our fantastic Gods and these beautiful and powerful symbols like Ouroboros, that help us in our eternal journey.
In the very much thought inspiring 2nd issue of the Donations PDF, one of the topics discussed was indeed Ouroboros.
If, somehow, you don't know what it is, Ouroboros is the figure of the Serpent (or sometimes Dragon) eating its tail, usually in a circle, but I've seen what I guess are modern versions that depict the Serpent forming the ∞ infinite symbol.
The symbol was originally Egyptian, but then appeared in ancient Greece, and it has been extensively used in alchemy.
We are indeed going to talk about alchemy.
Ouroboros represents eternal creation, it's the Serpent that while it devours itself, it also regenerates, in an infinite cycle.
Its ultimate meaning is the goal every alchemist, the goal at the end of the Magnum Opus: immortality.
(Other meanings too were given to Ouroboros, but they are off-topic, one of them would be "what goes around comes around", as in there are consequences to actions)
The allegory is explained more thoroughly in the 2nd issue of the Donations PDF, along with other points around it.
As HPHC told me, these articles' purpose is to dwell in the mind, to get you thinking and realizing.
It did indeed dwell long enough in mine, enough that I developed a connection between the allegory of the Serpent destroying and recreating itself, and the actual science of how I understand immortality works.
This post is to discuss my conclusion, hopefully help someone in their Satanic studies, and stimulate clever conversation that might even benefit myself if anyone found any errors in my reasoning so that I could fix them and let everyone who reads this be a little more knowledgeable.
I suspect that for many advanced members this won't exactly be breaking news, but I was still happy when I made my realization.
Anyway, here we go.
We know that the act of the Serpent eating itself stands for the destruction (death) of itself.
In a more scientific POV, a snake, like us, like dogs and cats, is made of cells.
To destroy a snake boils down to destroying its cells.
Cells do actually die. While you're reading this, countless of cells that make up your body are dying.
Particularly, every cell that has touched the keyboard and mouse you're using right now, is already dead, as our most outer layer of skin and our nails are entirely composed of old dead cells.
But we are not crumbling away, not we are dying by the minute, because of course, while many cell die, many others are born.
The Serpent destroys itself (cells die) and at the same time, it regenerates (cells are born).
This is all very beautiful, as we can gladly already find similarities between our bodies and Ouroboros. We already go through some kind of physical rebirth in many (if not all, but I can't vow for it) parts of our body through the replacement of dead cells with new ones.
There is one issue though. Ouroboros is a circle, a loop, and a perfect one too.
We, right now, are not a circle. We are probably more like a finite spiral. The line that draws it, thinning away, until it's gone.
Our loop of cell rebirth decays with time.
At a certain age, we can't create as many cells as they die.
And even when we do birth new cells, they become more and more unreliable as time goes, they could be born with damaged DNA, and the chances of them becoming tumors, then cancer, grows.
My, probably over-hyped, conclusion, thus is: to be successful alchemists, to have completed the Magnum Opus, to have reached the state of Ouroboros, means to have reached a physical and medical point in which perfect and auto-sustainable cell rebirth is happening at all times and never decays.
Pretty much like in one's twenties. It's said that the twenties are the pinnacle of one's body.
Of course, I can't claim to know how to halt the decay of the cell rebirth progress, nor to exactly know why it decays in the first place, but it's not an unexplored topic by science and there have been studies, I remember someone here quoting a book titled something in the lines of "Why we age and why we shouldn't".
So, if it's to someone's interest to delve into why our rebirth cycle isn't perfect, they should be able to do it pretty easily.
This is one random article I've just found through a quick research which sheds some light on the topic. Mainstream science has a lot of different theories on aging, and not all of them revolve around the cell rebirth cycle I've talked about, but cells and DNA are always present.
To everyone, thanks for reading this, and don't hesitate to let me know if you think I said something wrong in your opinion, or if you agree with everything. Either way, clever discussion will happen, and everyone will benefit.
Always Hail Father Satan, our fantastic Gods and these beautiful and powerful symbols like Ouroboros, that help us in our eternal journey.