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{{Short description|1963 Discordian religious text}} {{Short description|1963 Discordian religious text}}
{{Infobox book {{Infobox book
| name = Principia Discordia | name = Principia Discordia
| image = Principia Discordia (1970).djvu | image = Principayellow.jpg
| image_size = | image_size = 200px
| caption = The ] "Yellow Cover" combined 4th and 5th Edition ''Principia Discordia'', (1979). In print until the company went out of business in 2006.
| caption = Title page of the 1970 edition
| author = ] and ] | author = ] and ]
}} }}
The '''''Principia Discordia''''' is the first published ] ]. It was written by Greg Hill (]) with ] (Lord ] Ravenhurst) and others.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.kerrythornley.com/publications/reviews/principia_discordia_review.html/ |title=Principia Discordia |accessdate=2022-06-24 |archive-date=2021-10-25 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211025154332/http://kerrythornley.com/publications/reviews/principia_discordia_review.html |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.sjgames.com/principia/ |title=Principia Discordia |accessdate=2022-06-24}}</ref> The '''''Principia Discordia''''' is the first published ] ]. It was written by Greg Hill (]) with ] (Lord ] Ravenhurst) and others.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.kerrythornley.com/publications/reviews/principia_discordia_review.html/ |title=Principia Discordia |accessdate=2022-06-24 |archive-date=2021-10-25 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211025154332/http://kerrythornley.com/publications/reviews/principia_discordia_review.html |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.sjgames.com/principia/ |title=Principia Discordia |accessdate=2022-06-24}}</ref> The first edition was printed allegedly using ]'s ] printer in 1963.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Wilson|first1=Robert Anton|title=Cosmic Trigger I: Final Secret of the Illuminati|date=1992|publisher=New Falcon Publications|location=Scottsdale, AZ|isbn=978-1561840038|page=65}}</ref> The second edition was published under the title '''''Principia Discordia or How The West Was Lost''''' in a limited edition of five copies in 1965. The phrase ''Principia Discordia'', reminiscent of ]'s 1687 '']'', is presumably intended to mean ''Discordant Principles'', or ''Principles of Discordance''.


It features typewritten and handwritten text intermixed with ], stamps, and seals appropriated from other sources. The ''Principia'' describes the Discordian Society and its Goddess ], as well as the basics of the ] ] of Discordianism. It features typewritten and handwritten text intermixed with ], stamps, and seals appropriated from other sources.


While the ''Principia'' is full of literal contradictions and ], it contains several passages which propose that there is serious intent behind the work, for example a message scrawled on page 00075: "If you think the PRINCIPIA is just a ha-ha, then go read it again." While the ''Principia'' is full of literal contradictions and unusual ], it contains several passages which propose that there is serious intent behind the work, for example a message scrawled on page 00075: "If you think the PRINCIPIA is just a ha-ha, then go read it again."


The ''Principia'' is quoted extensively in and shares many themes with the satirical 1975 ] book '']'' by ] and ]. Wilson was not directly involved in writing the Principia. The ''Principia'' is quoted extensively in and shares many themes with the satirical 1975 ] book '']'' by ] and ]. Wilson was not directly involved in writing the Principia.
] ]
Notable symbols in the book include the ], the ], and the "Sacred Chao" whose two principles are depicted are "Hodge" and "Podge" and are represented by the apple and the pentagon. Saints identified include ], ], ], and ]. The ''Principia'' also introduces the word "]", later popularized in '']''. Notable symbols in the book include the ], the ], and the "Sacred Chao", which resembles the ] of ], but the two principles depicted are "Hodge" and "Podge" rather than ], and they are represented by the apple and the pentagon, and not by dots. Saints identified include ], ], ], and ]. The ''Principia'' also introduces the mysterious word "]", later popularized in '']''; the trilogy itself is mentioned in the afterword to the ] edition, and in the various introductions to the fifth editions.


==Overview== ==Overview==


The ''Principia Discordia'' holds three core principles: the Aneristic Principle (order), the Eristic Principle (disorder) and the notion that both are mere illusions. The ''Principia Discordia'' holds three core principles: the Aneristic Principle (order), the Eristic Principle (disorder) and the notion that both are mere illusions. The following excerpt summarizes these principles:{{blockquote|The Aneristic Principle is that of apparent order; the Eristic Principle is that of apparent disorder. Both order and disorder are man made concepts and are artificial divisions of pure chaos, which is a level deeper than is the level of distinction making.

With our concept-making apparatus called "the brain" we look at reality through the ideas-about-reality which our cultures give us.

The ideas-about-reality are mistakenly labeled "reality" and unenlightened people are forever perplexed by the fact that other people, especially other cultures, see "reality" differently.

It is only the ideas-about-reality which differ. Real (capital-T) True reality is a level deeper than is the level of concept.
We look at the world through windows on which have been drawn grids (concepts). Different philosophies use different grids. A culture is a group of people with rather similar grids. Through a window we view chaos, and relate it to the points on our grid, and thereby understand it. The order is in the grid. That is the Aneristic Principle.

Western philosophy is traditionally concerned with contrasting one grid with another grid, and amending grids in hopes of finding a perfect one that will account for all reality and will, hence, (say unenlightened westerners) be true. This is illusory; it is what we Erisians call the Aneristic Illusion. Some grids can be more useful than others, some more beautiful than others, some more pleasant than others, etc., but none can be more True than any other.

Disorder is simply unrelated information viewed through some particular grid. But, like "relation", no-relation is a concept. Male, like female, is an idea about sex. To say that male-ness is "absence of female-ness", or vice versa, is a matter of definition and metaphysically arbitrary. The artificial concept of no-relation is the Eristic Principle.

The belief that "order is true" and disorder is false or somehow wrong, is the Aneristic Illusion. To say the same of disorder, is the Eristic Illusion.

The point is that (little-t) truth is a matter of definition relative to the grid one is using at the moment, and that (capital-T) Truth, metaphysical reality, is irrelevant to grids entirely. Pick a grid, and through it some chaos appears ordered and some appears disordered. Pick another grid, and the same chaos will appear differently ordered and disordered.

Reality is the original Rorschach. Verily! So much for all that.|Malaclypse the Younger, ''Principia Discordia'', Pages 00049–00050}}

==History== ==History==
]
]In 1978, a copy of a work from Kerry Thornley titled "THE PRINCIPIA Discordia or HOW THE WEST WAS LOST" was placed in the ] collections as document 010857.<ref>The record identifier can be found by searching for Thornley and Discordian on {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080917155729/http://www.nara.gov/cgi-bin/starfinder/0?path=jfksnew.txt&id=demo&pass=&OK=OK |date=2008-09-17 }}. {{cite web|title=Kennedy Assassination Collection: Discordian Socity |url=http://www.nara.gov/cgi-bin/starfinder/5234/jfksnew.txt|publisher=National Archives and Records Administration|access-date=17 February 2012|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121105233622/http://www.nara.gov/cgi-bin/starfinder/5234/jfksnew.txt|archive-date=5 November 2012}}</ref> ], author of ''The Prankster and the Conspiracy'' about Kerry Thornley and the early Discordians, said the copy in the JFK collection was not a copy of the first edition but a later and altered version containing some of the original material. In an interview with researcher Brenton Clutterbuck,<ref>{{cite news| title=Wikinews interviews Brenton Clutterbuck| url=http://en.wikinews.org/Wikinews_interviews_Brenton_Clutterbuck| newspaper=Wikinews | date=6 August 2012|access-date=29 August 2013}}</ref> Gorightly said he had been given Greg Hill's copy of the first edition. This appeared in its entirety in ''Historia Discordia'', a book on Discordian history released in spring of 2014.<ref>{{cite web|title=Adam Gorightly presents the COMPLETE first edition Principia Discordia |date=17 February 2013 |url=http://gorightly.wordpress.com/2013/02/17/adam-gorightly-presents-the-complete-first-edition-principia-discordia/ |access-date=29 August 2013}}</ref><ref>Adam Gorightly: "Historia Discordia" (2014). {{ISBN|1618613219}}</ref> In 2015 Gorightly stated that he now believed that the copy in the JFK collection was an earlier draft of the Principia Discordia predating the first edition.<ref>{{cite web|title=Principia Discordia: Celebrating 50 Years of Chaos! (Maybe!) |date=22 November 2015 |url=http://historiadiscordia.com/principia-discordia-celebrating-50-years-of-chaos-maybe/ |access-date=22 January 2024}}</ref>
The ''Principia Discordia or How The West Was Lost'' was first published in a limited edition of five copies and released into the ] in 1965.<ref>{{cite news|last=Frauenfelder|first=Mark|title=Publisher alters, then copyrights Principia Discordia|url=http://www.boingboing.net/2006/11/01/publisher-alters-the.html|newspaper=Boing Boing|date=November 1, 2006}}</ref> The full title of the fourth and most well-known edition is ''Principia Discordia or How I Found Goddess And What I Did To Her When I Found Her: The Magnum Opiate Of Malaclypse The Younger, Wherein is Explained Absolutely Everything Worth Knowing About Absolutely Anything''. Included on page 00075 is the following note about the history of the ''Principia'':

{{quote|This being the 4th Edition, March 1970, San Francisco; a revision of the 3rd Edition of 500 copies, whomped together in Tampa 1969; which revised the 2nd Edition of 100 copies from Los Angeles 1969; which was a revision of ''PRINCIPIA Discordia or HOW THE WEST WAS LOST'' published in New Orleans in 1965 in five copies, which were mostly lost.}}

Additionally, the "contents of this edition" note in the Loompanics edition identifies the fourth edition as having originally been published by ] of ].

A "Fifth Edition" consisting of a single Western Union telegram page filled with the letter M was published as an appendix to the Loompanics and SJ Games re-printings of the 4th Edition.

In 1978, a copy of a work from Kerry Thornley titled "THE PRINCIPIA Discordia or HOW THE WEST WAS LOST" was placed in the ] collections as document 010857.<ref>The record identifier can be found by searching for Thornley and Discordian on {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080917155729/http://www.nara.gov/cgi-bin/starfinder/0?path=jfksnew.txt&id=demo&pass=&OK=OK |date=2008-09-17 }}. {{cite web|title=Kennedy Assassination Collection: Discordian Socity |url=http://www.nara.gov/cgi-bin/starfinder/5234/jfksnew.txt|publisher=National Archives and Records Administration|access-date=17 February 2012|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121105233622/http://www.nara.gov/cgi-bin/starfinder/5234/jfksnew.txt|archive-date=5 November 2012}}</ref> ], author of ''The Prankster and the Conspiracy'' about Kerry Thornley and the early Discordians, said the copy in the JFK collection was not a copy of the first edition but a later and altered version containing some of the original material. In an interview with researcher Brenton Clutterbuck,<ref>{{cite news| title=Wikinews interviews Brenton Clutterbuck| url=http://en.wikinews.org/Wikinews_interviews_Brenton_Clutterbuck| newspaper=Wikinews | date=6 August 2012|access-date=29 August 2013}}</ref> Gorightly said he had been given Greg Hill's copy of the first edition. This appeared in its entirety in ''Historia Discordia'', a book on Discordian history released in spring of 2014.<ref>{{cite web|title=Adam Gorightly presents the COMPLETE first edition Principia Discordia |date=17 February 2013 |url=http://gorightly.wordpress.com/2013/02/17/adam-gorightly-presents-the-complete-first-edition-principia-discordia/ |access-date=29 August 2013}}</ref><ref>Adam Gorightly: "Historia Discordia" (2014). {{ISBN|1618613219}}</ref> In 2015 Gorightly stated that he now believed that the copy in the JFK collection was an earlier draft of the Principia Discordia predating the first edition.<ref>{{cite web|title=Principia Discordia: Celebrating 50 Years of Chaos! (Maybe!) |date=22 November 2015 |url=http://historiadiscordia.com/principia-discordia-celebrating-50-years-of-chaos-maybe/ |access-date=22 January 2024}}</ref>

The ''Principia'' includes a notice which purports to disclaim any ] in relation to the work: "Ⓚ ] – reprint what you like." Regardless of the legal effect of this notice, the ''Principia'' has been widely disseminated in the ] via the ] and more traditional print publishers. Some re-publishers have claimed copyright in relation to the additional material included in their editions.

==Reprints of the fourth and fifth editions==
{{unreferenced section|date=October 2014}}
* ] published a red hardcover of the Fourth Edition in 1976, adding a stamp reading "This work is a bridge so move on thru" to the right of the golden apple on page 00075. ({{ISBN|0-685-75085-X}})
* ] published a version (the "yellow cover version") in 1979, adding an introduction by ], an afterword by Malaclypse the Younger, and the aforementioned "Fifth Edition". ({{ISBN|1-55950-040-9}}) This version is reprinted by ] under {{ISBN|1-58160-547-1}}.
* ] published a version (the "black cover version") in 1994, adding an introduction by ] and 20 pages of new Discordian text, mostly collected from online Discordians. ({{ISBN|1-55634-320-5}}) Steve Jackson Games also publishes Discordian and ]-inspired games, such as ] Illuminati and the ].
* ], of Olympia, Washington, released a series of reprints of the Loompanics/Paladin Press editions beginning in 2009, with a series of different cover designs and paper stocks, including a rainbow edition. Their 2015 edition is printed under {{ISBN|1-94423-406-3}}.
*] publishing division has published the "Evangelical" edition since 2009 ({{ISBN|978-1-387-76266-8}}).


<gallery> <gallery>
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==Discordian works== ==Discordian works==
{{Main|List of Discordian works}} {{See also|The Illuminatus! Trilogy|Illuminati (game)|Illuminati: New World Order|List of Discordian works}}


==See also== ==See also==
Line 55: Line 92:
{{wikiquote}} {{wikiquote}}
{{wikisource}} {{wikisource}}
*

===Online versions=== ===Online versions===
* Text version − on www.cs.cmu.edu or on www.ology.org * The original text version − on www.cs.cmu.edu or on www.ology.org
* Version with images and stamps − at PrincipiaDiscordia.com * The visually true-to-the-original (with images and stamps) version − at PrincipiaDiscordia.com


{{Discordianism|state=expanded}} {{Discordianism|state=expanded}}
Line 64: Line 103:


{{Authority control}} {{Authority control}}



] ]

Revision as of 11:33, 6 April 2024

1963 Discordian religious text
Principia Discordia
The Loompanics "Yellow Cover" combined 4th and 5th Edition Principia Discordia, (1979). In print until the company went out of business in 2006.
AuthorGreg Hill and Kerry Wendell Thornley

The Principia Discordia is the first published Discordian religious text. It was written by Greg Hill (Malaclypse the Younger) with Kerry Wendell Thornley (Lord Omar Khayyam Ravenhurst) and others. The first edition was printed allegedly using Jim Garrison's Xerox printer in 1963. The second edition was published under the title Principia Discordia or How The West Was Lost in a limited edition of five copies in 1965. The phrase Principia Discordia, reminiscent of Isaac Newton's 1687 Principia Mathematica, is presumably intended to mean Discordant Principles, or Principles of Discordance.

The Principia describes the Discordian Society and its Goddess Eris, as well as the basics of the POEE denomination of Discordianism. It features typewritten and handwritten text intermixed with clip art, stamps, and seals appropriated from other sources.

While the Principia is full of literal contradictions and unusual humor, it contains several passages which propose that there is serious intent behind the work, for example a message scrawled on page 00075: "If you think the PRINCIPIA is just a ha-ha, then go read it again."

The Principia is quoted extensively in and shares many themes with the satirical 1975 science fiction book The Illuminatus! Trilogy by Robert Shea and Robert Anton Wilson. Wilson was not directly involved in writing the Principia.

Golden Apple, symbol of Eris, Our Lady of Discord

Notable symbols in the book include the Apple of Discord, the pentagon, and the "Sacred Chao", which resembles the Taijitu of Taoism, but the two principles depicted are "Hodge" and "Podge" rather than yin and yang, and they are represented by the apple and the pentagon, and not by dots. Saints identified include Emperor Norton, Yossarian, Don Quixote, and Bokonon. The Principia also introduces the mysterious word "fnord", later popularized in The Illuminatus! Trilogy; the trilogy itself is mentioned in the afterword to the Loompanics edition, and in the various introductions to the fifth editions.

Overview

The Principia Discordia holds three core principles: the Aneristic Principle (order), the Eristic Principle (disorder) and the notion that both are mere illusions. The following excerpt summarizes these principles:

The Aneristic Principle is that of apparent order; the Eristic Principle is that of apparent disorder. Both order and disorder are man made concepts and are artificial divisions of pure chaos, which is a level deeper than is the level of distinction making.

With our concept-making apparatus called "the brain" we look at reality through the ideas-about-reality which our cultures give us.

The ideas-about-reality are mistakenly labeled "reality" and unenlightened people are forever perplexed by the fact that other people, especially other cultures, see "reality" differently.

It is only the ideas-about-reality which differ. Real (capital-T) True reality is a level deeper than is the level of concept. We look at the world through windows on which have been drawn grids (concepts). Different philosophies use different grids. A culture is a group of people with rather similar grids. Through a window we view chaos, and relate it to the points on our grid, and thereby understand it. The order is in the grid. That is the Aneristic Principle.

Western philosophy is traditionally concerned with contrasting one grid with another grid, and amending grids in hopes of finding a perfect one that will account for all reality and will, hence, (say unenlightened westerners) be true. This is illusory; it is what we Erisians call the Aneristic Illusion. Some grids can be more useful than others, some more beautiful than others, some more pleasant than others, etc., but none can be more True than any other.

Disorder is simply unrelated information viewed through some particular grid. But, like "relation", no-relation is a concept. Male, like female, is an idea about sex. To say that male-ness is "absence of female-ness", or vice versa, is a matter of definition and metaphysically arbitrary. The artificial concept of no-relation is the Eristic Principle.

The belief that "order is true" and disorder is false or somehow wrong, is the Aneristic Illusion. To say the same of disorder, is the Eristic Illusion.

The point is that (little-t) truth is a matter of definition relative to the grid one is using at the moment, and that (capital-T) Truth, metaphysical reality, is irrelevant to grids entirely. Pick a grid, and through it some chaos appears ordered and some appears disordered. Pick another grid, and the same chaos will appear differently ordered and disordered.

Reality is the original Rorschach. Verily! So much for all that.

— Malaclypse the Younger, Principia Discordia, Pages 00049–00050

History

showing the Hodge and Podge in dynamic tension
The Sacred Chao

The Principia Discordia or How The West Was Lost was first published in a limited edition of five copies and released into the public domain in 1965. The full title of the fourth and most well-known edition is Principia Discordia or How I Found Goddess And What I Did To Her When I Found Her: The Magnum Opiate Of Malaclypse The Younger, Wherein is Explained Absolutely Everything Worth Knowing About Absolutely Anything. Included on page 00075 is the following note about the history of the Principia:

This being the 4th Edition, March 1970, San Francisco; a revision of the 3rd Edition of 500 copies, whomped together in Tampa 1969; which revised the 2nd Edition of 100 copies from Los Angeles 1969; which was a revision of PRINCIPIA Discordia or HOW THE WEST WAS LOST published in New Orleans in 1965 in five copies, which were mostly lost.

Additionally, the "contents of this edition" note in the Loompanics edition identifies the fourth edition as having originally been published by Rip Off Press of San Francisco, California.

A "Fifth Edition" consisting of a single Western Union telegram page filled with the letter M was published as an appendix to the Loompanics and SJ Games re-printings of the 4th Edition.

In 1978, a copy of a work from Kerry Thornley titled "THE PRINCIPIA Discordia or HOW THE WEST WAS LOST" was placed in the HSCA JFK collections as document 010857. Adam Gorightly, author of The Prankster and the Conspiracy about Kerry Thornley and the early Discordians, said the copy in the JFK collection was not a copy of the first edition but a later and altered version containing some of the original material. In an interview with researcher Brenton Clutterbuck, Gorightly said he had been given Greg Hill's copy of the first edition. This appeared in its entirety in Historia Discordia, a book on Discordian history released in spring of 2014. In 2015 Gorightly stated that he now believed that the copy in the JFK collection was an earlier draft of the Principia Discordia predating the first edition.

The Principia includes a notice which purports to disclaim any copyright in relation to the work: "Ⓚ All Rites Reversed – reprint what you like." Regardless of the legal effect of this notice, the Principia has been widely disseminated in the public domain via the Internet and more traditional print publishers. Some re-publishers have claimed copyright in relation to the additional material included in their editions.

Reprints of the fourth and fifth editions

This section does not cite any sources. Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (October 2014) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

Mythology

In Discordian mythology, Aneris is described as the sister of Eris aka Discordia. Whereas Eris/Discordia is the Goddess of Disorder and Being, Aneris/Harmonia is the Goddess of Order and Non-Being.

"DOGMA III – HISTORY 32, 'COSMOGONY'" in Principia Discordia, states:

In the beginning there was VOID, who had two daughters; one (the smaller) was that of BEING, named ERIS, and one (the larger) was of NON-BEING, named ANERIS.

The sterile Aneris becomes jealous of Eris (who was born pregnant), and starts making existent things non-existent. This explains why life begins, and later ends in death:

And to this day, things appear and disappear in this very manner.

The names of Eris and Aneris (who are later given a brother, Spirituality), are used to show some fundamental Discordian principles in "Psycho-Metaphysics":

The Aneristic Principle is that of APPARENT ORDER; the Eristic Principle is that of APPARENT DISORDER. Both order and disorder are man made concepts and are artificial divisions of PURE CHAOS, which is a level deeper than is the level of distinction making.

Discordian works

See also: The Illuminatus! Trilogy, Illuminati (game), Illuminati: New World Order, and List of Discordian works

See also

References

  1. "Principia Discordia". Archived from the original on 2021-10-25. Retrieved 2022-06-24.
  2. "Principia Discordia". Retrieved 2022-06-24.
  3. Wilson, Robert Anton (1992). Cosmic Trigger I: Final Secret of the Illuminati. Scottsdale, AZ: New Falcon Publications. p. 65. ISBN 978-1561840038.
  4. Frauenfelder, Mark (November 1, 2006). "Publisher alters, then copyrights Principia Discordia". Boing Boing.
  5. The record identifier can be found by searching for Thornley and Discordian on nara.gov Archived 2008-09-17 at the Wayback Machine. "Kennedy Assassination Collection: Discordian Socity [sic]". National Archives and Records Administration. Archived from the original on 5 November 2012. Retrieved 17 February 2012.
  6. "Wikinews interviews Brenton Clutterbuck". Wikinews. 6 August 2012. Retrieved 29 August 2013.
  7. "Adam Gorightly presents the COMPLETE first edition Principia Discordia". 17 February 2013. Retrieved 29 August 2013.
  8. Adam Gorightly: "Historia Discordia" (2014). ISBN 1618613219
  9. "Principia Discordia: Celebrating 50 Years of Chaos! (Maybe!)". 22 November 2015. Retrieved 22 January 2024.
  10. ^ "Page 56". Principia Discordia. Retrieved 2012-08-19.
  11. "Principia Discordia Psycho-Metaphysics". 2009-10-27. Archived from the original on October 27, 2009. Retrieved 2012-08-19.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)

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