I will never get the time that it took to watch this video back...nor will anybody else who watches this. Congratulations for wasting everybody's time.
I actually liked the part where Dunlap mocks our obsession with "Do what thou wilt" versus "Do what thou want". It's like actually he knows us.
The best thing I ever heard Jim Eshelman say was that "Do what thou want" is a great start. I agree. Why do we get so hung up on that? What are we afraid of?
Gee, wonder where that comes from...thiebesNovember 16 2010, 21:01:05 UTC
"From these considerations it should be clear that 'Do what thou wilt' does not mean 'Do what you like.' It is the apotheosis of Freedom; but it is also the strictest possible bond." -- Liber II
"I thought that you might find it useful to quote St. August to the common blatant guffaw of the omnipresent blackguard ‘Do wot yer loike, eh? What ho!’" -- letter to Germer
"Do what thou wilt does not mean Do as you please, although it implies this degree of emancipation, that it is no longer possible to say à priori that a given action is 'wrong.'"
"All questions of the Law are to be decided only by appeal to my writings, each for himself." -- Tunis Comment
Is their time-shifted take on QeSheTh part of NAEQ? It seemed very avant-garde to pull the focus up to the archer and his companions and away from the arrow itself. Not sure how they turned NOS into 120 though ... maybe they owe a refund.
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The best thing I ever heard Jim Eshelman say was that "Do what thou want" is a great start. I agree. Why do we get so hung up on that? What are we afraid of?
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"I thought that you might find it useful to quote St. August to the common blatant guffaw of the omnipresent blackguard ‘Do wot yer loike, eh? What ho!’" -- letter to Germer
"Do what thou wilt does not mean Do as you please, although it implies this degree of emancipation, that it is no longer possible to say à priori that a given action is 'wrong.'"
"All questions of the Law are to be decided only by appeal to my writings, each for himself." -- Tunis Comment
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