Interview:
Robert Anton Wilson
The Author of The Illuminatus Trilogy
Expounds on Multiple
Realities,
Guerrilla
Ontology, LSD, Life Extension and
Things that Go Bump
in the Night
By Michael Hollingshead
On
the back of every U.S.
one-dollar bill sits the Great Pyramid, eye blazing omnidirectionally
from its apex, all a part of the Great Seal of the United States of America. Though
this symbol is usually traced back to the myths and legends of the Masons, the
full story of the Great Pyramid was finally revealed with the publication of
the Illuminatus trilogy.
Written
during 1968-69 by Robert Shea and Robert Anton Wilson, at that time both
editors at Playboy, the Illuminatus trilogy
has gone on to become one of the great classics of the last decade. A science-fiction
epic, a detective story, a weaving together of most of the known conspiracy
theories of the past five millennia, the Illuminatus
trilogy is an inkblot of modern times: funny, wild, scary, sexy, political,
philosophical, mystical-in short, modern moksha
medicine.
Illuminatus captivates
the reader with its incredibly complex plots, subplots, over and underplots, its madcap humor, its yellow submarine, its
explanation for the Jack Kennedy assassination, its armies of revivified Nazi
soldiers marching up from the depths of a Swiss lake in the middle of a rock
concert, as well as its anarcholibertarian political
philosophy. The trilogy has already been published in English (Dell), German,
French, Japanese and Swedish.
It
has also been adapted for the stage and performed in a nine-hour version by the
National Theatre Company of London.
Over the past three years other presentations of the stage version have been
seen in Liverpool and Cambridge, England, and in Amsterdam,
Frankfurt and Seattle.
The film version of the Illuminatus is
currently in preproduction.
Robert
Anton Wilson has been bringing back communication from the farthest reaches of
the mind and culture for more & than a decade. Described by anthropologist
Roger Wescott as a polymath, Wilson sees his role as artist-psychologist
(Ph.D.) enabling him to plumb the collective genetic archives for the myths
that will determine our future.
Born in Brooklyn on the 18th of January, 1932, Wilson says: "I
share most of the traits associated with all the great Capricorns: Jesus, Cary
Grant, Joseph Stalin and Georges Gurdjieff." His
interests range far and wide over modern times: life extension, new theories
of physics, intelligence increase, space travel and settlements (he is an
active member of the L-5 Society and often lectures on topics concerned with
the future move into space).
His
interests in life-extension research were put to a supreme test with the
violent death of his teenage daughter, the victim of a robbery. Wilson and his
wife made arrangements for the brain of their deceased child to be preserved
in cryogenic suspension; awaiting medical and brain-computer advances that
might enable identity reconstruction at some future time.
Wilson's involvement with the Physics Consciousness Research
Group in the San Francisco
Bay Area (they have made him chief literary spokesman for their more far-out
ideas) may well yield the results necessary for such things as brain-to-brain
communication and identity reconstruction. His other interests and activities
touch on topics as varied as astronomy, sex, magic, psychopharmacology and conspiratorial
history.
In
order that his readers might better follow Bob Wilson as he charts the unknown,
he published a "neurological autobiography" entitled Cosmic
Trigger (Pocket Books) in 1978. He has also written Sex and Drugs
(Playboy Press) and coauthored, with Timothy Leary, Neuropolitics
(Peace Press). His latest work of fiction, The Universe Next Door
(published earlier this year by Pocket Books), is the first volume of a tetralogy called Schrodinger's Cat. The three
volumes of Illuminatus and the four volumes of
Schrodinger's Cat are part of a series of 12 novels Wilson intends to
complete that will cover the entire scope of mystical, conspiratorial and scientific
history from 1776 through the 21st century.
Robert Anton Wilson, epistemologist, magician,
psychedelic pioneer and master wordsmith, is one of the most exciting and
imaginative talkers of the late 20th century. Michael Hollingshead talked with Bob
high above the hills of Berkeley,
California.
High
Times: One critic has described Illuminatus
as a "psychedelic novel." What is a psychedelic novel?
Wilson: Illuminatus is a psychedelic novel in the
sense that it is a novel of initiation and revelation in which the characters
go through various forms of brain-change. Robert Shea and I were generally dismayed
and pissed off by the stupidities of American politics in the late '60s, when
we began it. We had this strong drive to write a satire on all political
movements, all the way across the spectrum.
High
Times: The book that followed, Cosmic Trigger, was that also in the psychedelic
mode?
Wilson: Well, I regard it
more as "guerrilla ontology." The reader is challenged to decide
what's real and what's fantasy. My books are the
literary equivalent of magical initiation. That's the sort of thing you face
when you get involved in consciousness games.
Hiigh Times: In other words, your books are intended to
turn readers on?
Wilson: Yes. They're
intended to provide the literary equivalent of LSD or of magical initiation. I
want the reader to ask the hardest question in philosophy: What's real? Most
people think they know what's real, but they don't at all.
High Times: Really?
Wilson: People just know what they were
conditioned to think of as real.
High
Times: The Illuminati themselves are members of a mystical, secret brotherhood
whose origins go back a very long time indeed but whose membership has had an
upsurge since the so-called modern phase began in the Bavaria of the late 18th century. Have you
ever met any of the Illuminati yourself?
Wilson: I've met quite a
few people who claim to be part of the Illumininati.
Like I say somewhere in Cosmic Trigger, the final secret may be that you
don't know you're a member until it's too late to get out.
High
Times: You said just now that you' were pissed off with the stupidities of
American politics in the late '60s. We are now starting on the '80s. Are we
less or more free today than we were ten years ago?
Wilson: Oh, I think we
are a much freer country today than we were back in 1960, in many dimensions.
Of course, there's a bit of a backlash building up against the new freedom, but
that was only to be expected. By and large, I think the drug revolution had a
good effect on America,
despite individual casualties. I wish it could have been handled more
intelligently, but I guess you don't have major social changes without a
certain amount of upheaval. So it was perhaps only natural that there would be
a certain number of bad trips, and a lot of people getting thrown into jail,
and scientific research stopped, and so on. You've got to go through these
upheavals before a new stage of evolution is stabilized.
High
Times: Is there still a future in drugs? What about the year 2000? Will we be
turning on then?
Wilson: Well, long before
the year 2000 we're going to have a much bigger drug revolution than we had in
the '60s.
High
Times: What sort of drugs?
Wilson: I think
psychiatrists, clinical psychologists, and so on, will have more and more
specific drugs for every type of emotional problem. I agree with Nathan Klein
and the recent McGraw-Hill poll of scientists that the majority of the
scientific Community predicts that we’ll soon have drugs to permanently raise
your intelligence, for example. I've seen this coming for a long time.
High
Times: You seem to be talking only of the therapeutic application of drugs.
What about drugs for recreational purposes?
Wilson: Oh, sure, there
will be many more of them. To mention Nathan Klein again, he thinks we'll have
perfectly safe intoxicant drugs in the year 2000. I think that marijuana and
LSD and everything that has caused so much controversy will be phased out by a
much more precise, specific prescription type of approach. People will be able
to find out just what they need, just the right thing for their mental state at
a given time, and they will up-level them to a higher mental state. A friend of
mine who is a psychiatrist has predicted, for instance, that within 15 years
people will be able to go to a psychiatrist and he'll have a standard set of
tests and about 30 different drugs. After giving you the battery of tests, he
will prescribe a drug that's just right for what's bothering you. I think that
is definitely the direction we're moving in – control of the nervous system by
the nervous system. We should be free to choose the circuits in the brain we
want to use and not be robots subject to others' imprints and conditioning.
High Times: You mean
people ought to have the freedom to deprogram and reprogram their nervous
systems?
Wilson: That's right.
High Times: But
doesn't LSD do that now to some extent?
Wilson: Oh, yes, to a
very great extent. But I don't think LSD is specific enough. I think in some
ways it's a little bit freaky and unpredictable. It needs a very good therapist
indeed to get the best results out of it. Its use as a recreational drug has
been a mixed blessing. It has done a lot of good for some people, and some
people have gone completely ape under it. I think
we'll have much more specific forms of brain-change drugs in the next 10 to 15
years.
High
Times: How did you first get interested in psychedelic drugs? Was it as a
result of meeting Dr. Timothy Leary?
Wilson: It had nothing to
do with Tim. I didn't hear of Tim until about one year after my first peyote
trip. I was turned on first by a Quaker who had discovered peyote through Aldous Huxley's books and was convinced that it was an aid
to religious awareness. And he became such an enthusiast of peyote that he
went around turning on all his friends. You know, the picture painted by the
mass media was entirely false. Many people were turned on originally by
religious people.
High Times: And many
by psychiatrists.
Wilson: Yes. Cary Grant, for example, was
turned on by a psychiatrist in Los
Angeles.
High
Times: Why did a lot of people suddenly start taking LSD and other psychedelic
drugs in the early '60s and, indeed, throughout that decade?
Wilson: Most people were
seeking to expand their consciousness in order to become freer, higher human
beings. Everyone was fantastically idealistic in those days. And at that time
there was no criminal element at all. That came later when some people saw that
they could make. a profit out of psychedelics, when
the government stupidly made the whole thing illegal, thereby shooting the
profits sky-high.
High
Times: You have pointed out that the religious component was always very strong
in the psychedelic sphere. I agree that many people who have used these drugs
in this way do obtain a sense of what religious life is really all about, even
that the mystical, revelatory experience, via drugs or not, is also a means of
expanding one's consciousness. Do you think that religion could ever become a
true science?
Wilson: (Laughing) I
really should be eloquent on that subject and not be sloppy. I feel that
through the work of Leary and John Lilly and Stanislav
Grof and Stan Krippner and
others that we are starting to learn precise, operational, scientific
procedures for altering human consciousness, or "brain-change" as
Tim likes to say. It's a good word, brain-change. I think, though, we have
always had a science of brain-change. After all, shamans all over the world
have known techniques, including drugs and various types of ritual initiation, that cause rapid brain-change and the imprinting
of new circuits. Even though these techniques have been used and acknowledged
over many thousands of years, it is only in very recent times that we are
getting a much more precise, scientific slant on how they work. And I think
this is something completely new in history. Science – in the modern Western
sense – when it appeared 300 years ago, was something completely new and it
totally revolutionized the world. It's still revolutionizing the world: It's
the most revolutionary force on this planet. But the sudden joining of the
scientific revolution with the revolution of sensibility, or mysticism, that
occurred in the '60s, and chiefly via the new range of
psychedelic drugs by modern synthetic chemistry, is something even newer.
We've
got a completely new kind of scientist these days. I know quite a few physicists,
for example, who've used LSD, and I think it has definitely mutated them to a
state where they understand physics in a completely new way. They have a kind
of emotional and existential relationship with the subatomic world,
which-before LSD-was only a theoretical one. There are sociologists whose work
shows the influence of LSD. And there are modern psychologists who were once
involved in LSD research who believe that people can learn how to change their
reality. Modern thinking is getting a whole new view of the fact that there is
no given reality. Reality is simply something created by our nervous systems
and our experiences as we go along. And I think this insight is completely
revolutionizing all the sciences. We I have produced an entirely new mentality
I that has never existed in history before, I yet one that is both scientific
and mystical.
High
Times: You seem to attach a lot of significance to the religious component
of the psychedelic experience. I'm sure you don't mean the sort of religion you
get in church each Sunday. On the other hand, can you envisage LSD, or any
psychedelic for that matter, ever being used in a sacramental way in a church
kind of structure?
Wilson: I think the ideal
way to do psychedelics is in a group. I don't think our society is ready
yet for taking psychedelics in a religious context, but I believe that was the
way these hallucinogenic substances were used in Vedic times in India and also in ancient Greece. From
surviving references it seems to me that they were using a drug plus a ritual
to get the person to a specific state of consciousness, what Stan Grof calls the "phylogenetic
unconscious," and Tim Leary the "neurogenetic
circuits." It is the stage where you remember all the genetic archives
and the fact that you've lived hundreds of thousands of lives before, animal as
well as human.
High
Times: This brings us naturally to a topic of great interest: life extension.
Is it possible that modern science will some day come up with an answer to the
problem of dying?
Wilson:
I think the breakthrough is definitely coming in the next five years. Some
people say it won't occur for the next 10 to 15 years, but I think they are being
unduly pessimistic. I see the momentum of the research accelerating. I have
absolute confidence that by 1990 I'm going to be younger than I am today. This
is the first generation in history where you could say something like that with
some degree of sanity. (Laughs.) I really do think
that in 1990 I will be younger and more vigorous than I am at this present
moment!
High
Times: Some scientists have predicted that they will be able to increase the
human life span to 800 years. Is that a more or less accurate figure?
Wilson: There are various
estimates right now. A very good friend of mine, Dr. Paul Segal, has been doing
life-extension research for 17 years and he prefers the figure 400 to 500
years. Others put it much higher. However, once you've succeeded in extending
the life span, even if only by 50 years, you could expect that during those 50
years there will be further jumps-say, being able to extend life for 100 years
or 200 years – and it could go on forever. It's a thinkable thought. Alan Harrington,
an extremist who calls himself an immoralist, thinks that we can go on making
these jumps in life extension and some of us will never have to die at all. It
is something so new that it is a difficult concept to grapple with.
High
Times: Isn't this something many of the new gurus are also saying? And even
though they may refer to eternal life in some other, more cosmic dimension,
they do seem to be saying that the "particular Me"
can live on in some form forever and forever. What do you think about gurus?
Ram Dass [Dr. Richard Alpert], Swami Prem Dharmo and Dr. George Litwin come to mind.
Wilson:
Well, I leave it to Tim Leary to criticize those people. I prefer to think
well of my fellow humans and to be as charitable as possible in my judgments. I
am reminded of something Bucky Fuller said when he
was asked what he thought about the Hancock
Building in Chicago: "I can't think of anything good
to say about it so I'd rather not say anything." (Laughs.)
High
Times: How do you feel, then, about traditional religion?
Wilson: I don't think
it's a big advance to go back to the metaphysics and philosophy of 2,000 or
3,000 years ago. To the extent that gurus tell you to abolish mind and just go
with the flow-I think that's fine for a holiday. I don't see it as a way of
life. I think it gets pretty boring after a while. I want to know more and more
precise things. However, I think you can learn a great deal from Tibetan
Buddhism, from Zen, from the Hindus. My own preference, amongst all these
movements, is Sufism, because Sufism seems to be more dynamic and more of a
confrontation with the real world. I can also agree with the Sufis that mere
ecstasy is not the goal of life. But all these trips are interesting if you
learn something from them, and I think the more you know about everything the
better.
High
Times: Have you yourself ever duplicated the LSD experience without using
drugs?
Wilson: (Laughs.) I've done it through
Cabalistic magic.
High Times: How did
you do that?
Wilson: Well, I think I
sort of explained that in Cosmic Trigger. Basically, Cabalistic magic is a
complicated way of brainwashing yourself so you can find reality in a variety
of entirely different ways. I also think that Cabalistic magic is much easier
to do after you've done some psychedelics, when you're used to going through
brain-changes. At least, I have found it easier than it is traditionally supposed
to be, and I attribute this to the fact that I had been experimenting on myself
with psychedelics before I got into magic.
High
Times: Cabalistic magic, as far as I am able to understand it, makes use of an
elaborate symbol system, as indeed does the modern physicist, to tell something
about the nature of reality or realities.
Wilson: Cabalistic magic is a way of relating
to symbols that turn everything into a joke, eventually, but a joke with a lot
of poignant point to it, with lots of astonishing surprises on the way.
High Times: Do you
know of any ongoing LSD research in this country at the moment?
Wilson: The only research I know anything
about is all illegal. I don't know of any legal research.
High Times: It is quite
possible that the CIA is still using psychedelics as tools for brainwashing.
Wilson: Well, how are you
going to stop the CIA from abusing any technology? As a libertarian, I feel
that eternal vigilance is the price of liberty. I think it was, has been, and
always will be a continuous struggle against the tendency of power groups to
use any new technology, or any old technology, for that matter. Yet I think
there is an innately self-defeating quality in the power game as it's played by
politicians on this planet, especially in the way they use secrecy. I believe
the more secretive a government, the more it destroys its own effectiveness in
the long run. My long range hope is based on the notion that eventually power
groups will corne to realize this fact themselves, as
they will also come to realize that in order to function more intelligently
they will need to get more accurate feedback. This means that they have to stop
the whole mania of making things secret and conspiring against their own
people, and so on. As Bert Brecht once said, if the government doesn't trust
the people, why doesn't it dissolve and elect a new people?
I really do think that secrecy is the main cause of most
of the problems of the modern world. Any society with a secret police (such as
Soviet Russia or Nazi Germany or even the United States today) is playing russian roulette with itself.
Secrecy breeds paranoia. It creates problems more than it solves problems.
Even the people who employ the secret police eventually get paranoid of the
monster they helped to create. Nixon was paranoid about his own secret police.
Stalin executed three chiefs of the Soviet secret police in a row. You see,
the secret police always have the capacity to get more power than any other
branch of government. They can blackmail everybody. Even if they don't do it,
those employing them always worry that they might.
The
more authoritarian a society becomes, the less feedback there is. The more
communication jamming there is, the more inaccurate a picture people have of
everybody else, which is why you get these wild, crazy, fear syndromes that
have swept across America periodically ever since the National Security Act of
1947. I think at this point in our nation's history the most constructive
things that can be done are essentially nonpolitical, like advancing space
industrialization and the human life span, and raising human intelligence.
High Times: Should
anything be banned? Should anything be made illegal in a democratic society? I
think it was Truman Capote who said nothing should be banned, except murder.
What do you think?
Wilson: I would add that people committing
acts of fraud and force against us I should be legislated against. None of us
want to be defrauded. And any laws going beyond that point are just
impertinences. (Laughs.)
High Times: One last
question: Dr, Wilson,
what is your business?
Wilson: My business is making people see that
there’s more than one reality.
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