Pete Carroll, 1953-2026

By Dave Lee

Peter J. Carroll left us on Wednesday 22nd April as the result of a sudden illness.

He was a remarkable individual who created the concept of Chaos Magic, founded the Illuminates of Thanateros and wrote Liber Null & Psychonaut, Liber Kaos and other books. 

His greatest insight, which gave a new, simple centre to effective magical practice, was that magic is dependent on two things: an extraordinary state of consciousness or ‘gnosis’, and a shift in the way the practitioner sees the world, usually coded as ‘belief’. First we assemble the symbolic vehicles – sigils, rituals, songs and so forth. Then we get into an extraordinary state, maybe with something as simple as gazing or gentle breathwork, or something as intense as drugs or sex. Then we are able to leave behind the inertia of our mundane worlds, shift our beliefs about what the world is, and launch ourselves into a different world where our magic succeeds. The idea of belief itself as a magical technique is the core of Chaos Magic’s technical innovation, and is one of the most important conceptions of magic of the last century.

This model was presented in 1978, in the first edition of Liber Null. Before that publication Carroll had already conceived the idea of a magical order that would reflect these ideas – the Illuminates of Thanateros. At first, this was a loose network of no more than a dozen people, but in 1980 it spawned a group in West Yorkshire, in the village Ray Sherwin was living in and in which Carroll stayed. I was one of the founder members of that group. Those were exciting times; I remember thinking that we were responding to what Robert Anton Wilson had portrayed with his cartoon which depicted two characters, a scientist in a lab coat and a stoned hippie-type, with the caption, ‘Hey Man, Are You Only Using Half Your Brain?’. I’d finally found a magical current that worked for people like myself who didn’t do religious faith and weren’t interested in doing so, acidhead science kids who wanted to live weird lives.

The group ran for two years, closed down and then another group was formed, the group that became known as the ‘Circle of Chaos’, because it was an experiment in ostensibly non-hierarchical group structure. As a result of those group experiences, Carroll went on to write Psychonaut, a manual of experimental collective magics.

In 1986-87 Carroll revised the structure of the IOT into something like the hierarchy originally promised in the first edition of Liber Null, but never previously practiced. This gave rise to better-organized collective events and thereby opened up the IOT, now the ‘Pact of the IOT’, to more participants. The tiny network was expanding into a fully-fledged international order. In 1991 he wrote Liber Kaos, which contained the idea of the ‘Eight Colours of Chaos’, a simplification of traditional Planetary magic which was very helpful for creative group work. Magic was emerging from the straitjacket of over-complexity that the Victorian Order of the Golden Dawn had clothed it in.

Peter Carroll had founded the world’s foremost experimental magical organization, the IOT, but it only really came into its own when he stepped back from his leadership role. When he resigned as 0* in 1991 for personal reasons the IOT started to become what it is today. From the start, our magic was diverging a lot from his own style. We emphasised a third principle for chaos magic: If it works, use it. Carroll on the other hand had strong personal opinions about what was good magic and what wasn’t, whether it worked or not. For instance, he rejected all exploration of ecstatic states, was distrustful of energy magic, because it didn’t fit into his theoretical framework, and would not hear of anyone using astrology. His was a classic case of Founder Syndrome, creating a great organization of which he could not be a part because of his deep distrust of everyone else’s magical styles. Even now, people still make the mistake of thinking Chaos Magic = Pete Carroll’s magic, and we are still disentangling his more limiting influences from what chaos magic has become.

Another big post-Carroll shift was the development of collective creativity. He once commented to me that his Temple in Bristol was a burden because he had to constantly create new rituals for them. I asked why he didn’t design rituals collectively with them, and he seemed to think that was a really novel and rather odd idea. 

Chaos magic is still developing as a cultural influence. Its philosophy is sometimes dismissed as postmodern relativism, but a closer examination shows us that it is much more than that. It’s true that one of its philosophical origins in Robert Anton Wilson’s ‘Multi-Model Agnosticism’ emphasises the idea that there are many different models, or ‘reality tunnels’ that enable us to to apprehend and make sense of any situation we find ourselves in. But this is taken not as a nihilistic flatland relativism but an active response to a world grown much more complex in its layers. Chaos magic implies a value scheme in which our mind’s capacities for higher consciousness, for gnosis, enable us to go way beyond the merely verbal levels of consciousness and tweak our worlds from those higher perspectives. This in turn points to collective experimentation in altered states and magical goals. That’s what chaos magic is becoming in the 21st Century.

Peter J Carroll and the Illuminates of Thanateros

By Soror Brigantia

I was 8 years old in 1977, yet I remember it well. It was the Year of the Queen’s Silver Jubilee, and in the weeks leading up to the celebration, the entire valley was filled with decorations. The valley was a riot of red, white and blue with Welsh dragons adorning the streets. Neighbours collaborated to hang colourful bunting from house to house. Every neighbourhood held its own street party. I was particularly impressed by the pretty homemade fairy cakes with colourful balls on them. This was the last time I truly saw strong community spirit in the Welsh valleys. As we moved through the 1980s, the old community spirit was systemically broken, and something new took its place.  

While I have painted an idealized picture of community life here, there was also a degree of unhappiness, despair and anger. While the Jubilee celebrations reached their peak, The Sex Pistols released “God Save the Queen” in the spirit of raw rebellion against the many economic and social injustices existing in Britain at that time. Some people reacted to this band with a sense of outraged horror; others applauded them, and people took sides. By 1978 the discontent was reaching a crescendo with the Winter of Discontent, the winter where we always kept a number of torches and candles in the house due to the electricity strikes. The Sex Pistols had broken up by early 1978, but many punk bands continued and the spirit of “if you want something done, then do it yourself” central to the punk philosophy prevailed. The punk attitude led to a period of intense creativity among the young people. If you wanted good music, good fashion and good magick, it was time to pick up an instrument yourself and get it done. This instrument may have been a guitar, a sewing machine or your own handmade wand. There was an attitude of not needing to wait for perfection before making a start; if you only learned a few chords, then that was enough to get the ball rolling. The establishment could not be relied upon to look after the people; the people had to look after themselves.

In this atmosphere of creativity and rebellion, a number of magicians, tired of the established way of doing things, mirroring the punk rock attitude of “do it yourself”, planted a seed. One of these magicians was Peter J Carroll, and as he planted the seed of chaos magick the face of occultism changed forever. It was no longer necessary to follow a teacher or a Priest or Priestess to learn and practice magick. Like punk rock, chaos magicians were doing it for themselves. Giving things a go and seeing what worked and what didn’t in the spirit of anarchic rebellion against established norms.  The new magical order, the Illuminates of Thanateros, was announced. Pete stepped back from the IOT in the 1990s, and the IOT continued down its own pathways.

This seed of chaos magick developed in a myriad of ways. It became a strong tree with many branches, and then it began to develop fruit. From these fruits seeds came, and many new trees took root. Suddenly, the one seed planted by Carroll and others turned into a forest. A forest of chaos magicians that grew in unpredictable chaotic ways, all inspired by Carroll’s book “Liber Null” and Sherwin’s “Book of Results”, both published in 1978. These new chaos magicians, embracing the “do it yourself” attitude of bold experimentation and paradigm shifting laid down by its founders, took chaos magick in different directions. 

Fiercely independent, the average chaos magician does not sit around in apathetic slumber waiting for someone else to show them the way. Inspired by the founders of chaos magick, they embrace life and their magick with strength, determination and joy, forging their own magical paths.  As Sid Vicious sang “My Way”, the new generation of chaos magicians took the principles laid down by the founders and,  like the chaos star, expanded those principles  in every direction. This happened with the setting up of other chaos magick groups, with solo practitioners, and within the IOT itself. With Pete stepping back from the IOT, the young organization began experimenting with forms of magick quite different from those that Carroll had initially envisaged. 

The IOT is in constant evolution, and it eventually became something very different from its original form , with each individual magician being encouraged to find their own magical style.  I think I can say with some confidence that my chaos magick bears little resemblance to Peter J Carroll’s chaos magick, yet the paradigm shifting spirit of experimentation he inspired still prevails.

I rocked up to the chaos magick scene in 2005, some ten years after Peter J Carroll’s departure, but I was fortunate enough to have met him on several occasions. He did not wish his photo to circulate in the public domain, so when I first met him, I did not know who he was.  I assumed he must be a new novice. In fact, it was on the tip of my tongue to ask him how his MMM was going until I was introduced to him as “Pete”, accompanied by a strong, meaningful expression from the then Section Head – and the penny dropped. I was pleased to have been saved from making that particular faux pas. I also fondly recall a time when I had just gotten out of bed and was making my breakfast, and I suddenly saw Peter J Carroll sitting at the table, reading his own book. I did a double-take and rubbed my eyes.  I had been doing some heavy magick all day the day before, and I wondered if I was hallucinating, but no, here was Peter J Carroll at the breakfast table, reading his own book. It turned out he was going over one of his rituals in preparation for delivering it later that day, and I was honoured to be asked to invoke the Goddess Apophenia for the ritual that he was running.

Having left the IOT, Pete continued his work of inspiring others by founding the successful Arcanorium College, continuing to write and create and establishing his Specularium website. He became one of the most influential magicians of our time to whom all chaos magicians owe a debt.  As Pete was going in his own direction, the IOT went in another: travelling from one incarnation into another, never standing still, always looking for creative expression, always evolving. Yet, owing its very existence to the group of young occultists along with Peter J Carroll, who planted that first seed of chaos magick in the late 1970’s and inspired generations of chaos magicians to do it their way. 

May he rest in chaotic power.