Quote by: Aleister Crowley

There is great danger in this Golden Mean, one of whose main objects is to steer clear of shipwreck, Scylla being as fatal as Charybdis. No, this lofty and equable attitude is worse than wrong unless it derives from striking the balance between two very distant opposites. One of the worst perils of the present time is that, in the reaction against ignorant bigotry, people no longer dare to make up their minds about anything. The very practice, which the A∴A∴ so strongly and persistently advocates, tends to make people feel that any positive attitude or gesture is certainly wrong, whatever may be right. They forget that the opposite may, , amount to nothing. [....] Of course, in no case does the Golden Mean advise hesitating, trimming, hedging, compromising; the very object of ensuring an exact balance in your weapon is that its blow may be clean and certain.


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Author Bio


  • NameAleister Crowley
  • Descriptionpoet, mountaineer, occultist
  • BornOctober 12, 1875
  • DiedDecember 1, 1947
  • CountryUnited Kingdom
  • ProfessionPlaywright; Novelist; Artist; Poet; Autobiographer; Writer; Mountaineer
  • WorksThe Book Of The Law