Christopher S. Hyatt (1943–2008)
Author of Undoing Yourself With Energized Meditation and Other Devices
About the Author
Works by Christopher S. Hyatt
Pacts With the Devil: A Chronicle of Sex, Blasphemy and Liberation (1993) — Author — 118 copies, 1 review
The Psychopath's Lullaby DVD 1 copy
Psychopath's Bible, The 1 copy
Rebels & Devils 1 copy
Taboo: 'The Ecstasy of Evil' 1 copy
The Toxick Magician 1 copy
Associated Works
The Eye in the Triangle: An Interpretation of Aleister Crowley (1970) — Preface, some editions — 284 copies, 3 reviews
Enochian World of Aleister Crowley: Enochian Sex Magick (1991) — Foreword, some editions — 250 copies
Aleister Crowley's Illustrated Goetia: Sexual Evocation (1992) — Contributor — 230 copies, 5 reviews
Info-Psychology: A Revision of Exo-Psychology (1987) — Foreword, some editions — 119 copies, 1 review
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Other names
- Miller, Alan Ronald
- Birthdate
- 1943-07-12
- Date of death
- 2008-02-09
- Gender
- male
- Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Chicago, Illinois, USA
- Place of death
- Scottsdale, Arizona, USA
- Education
- Los Angeles City College
- Occupations
- occultist
author
psychotherapist - Organizations
- Ordo Templi Orientis
New Falcon Publications
Members
Reviews
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 43
- Also by
- 8
- Members
- 1,303
- Popularity
- #19,700
- Rating
- 3.8
- Reviews
- 9
- ISBNs
- 64
- Languages
- 1
- Favorited
- 7
Regardie's "four great loves" are said to be H. P. Blavatsky, Aleister Crowley, the Golden Dawn, and Wilhelm Reich (52), and he offers insights on each, along with some other figures and movements that he didn't prize quite as highly, such as Mary Baker Eddy, the drug counterculture, and "Rajneesh" (later, Osho).
One of Regardie's distinctive contributions to the culture of ceremonial magic and occultism, beginning with the books he wrote in the 1930s, was an advocacy for the use of secular psychotherapy as a preparation for and aid to magical practice. He was usually not prescriptive about particular schools of therapy, although he eventually centered his own practice in the Reichian mode. In this case, though, he was specifically dismissive of Jungian therapy. Having undergone a year of Jungian treatment, he said, "It gave me a philosophy which still has its place in my life, but as a therapy I think it's utterly useless" (24).
The introduction for the book is supplied by J. Marvin Spiegelman, a friend and sometime neighbor of Regardie's. (Both Spiegelman and Hyatt mention having received Reichian therapy from Regardie.) Speigelman was another advocate of synthesizing esoteric philosophy with psychological practices, and was himself a Jungian analyst. The first part of the introduction focuses on some of the additional Regardie essays appended to the interview, and then it offers five pages of detailed notes on particular passages from the interview itself.
The appended essays include "Selected Introductions" for works by four other authors and Regardie's own biography of Crowley, along with "Selected Articles" mostly on therapeutic topics, and one about contemporary alchemy. Between the time of the interview itself and its publication in this book, Regardie died. The book accordingly contains an "In Memoriam" page announcing ambitions to establish a library, meditation room, and memorial in Regardie's honor, and to organize a connected "elitist Golden Dawn group" under Hyatt's direction.… (more)