The Book of Satan 1:1
In this arid wilderness of steel and stone I raise up my
voice that you may hear. To the East and to the West
I beckon. To the North and to the South I show a sign
proclaiming: Death to the weakling, wealth to the strong!1
Besides the foreword and introduction, this is the opening statement of the Satanic Bible. My interpretation is as follows:
The arid wilderness is of course real life, and Redbeard uses the words "steel" and "stone" which are both hard words, harsh, materialistic and cold. This is how Satanists view nature: as uncaring. Satan represents the dark force in nature, representing the uncaring elements. The I throughout the Book Of Satan refers to Satan.
It is occult and religious tradition to assign gods or forces to the 4 cardinal directions of the compass. The Christian Bible contains 4 gospels for the same reason, "for there are 4 directions the wind blows". The Four Crown Princes Of Hell are the four allegorical personalities of Satan, each embodying a cardinal point.
The proclamation at the end of the first verse of the first book in the Satanic Bible is controversial: "Death to the weakling, wealth to the strong". This statement is another reflection of real life which is represented by Satan. This philosophy is not about right or wrong, moral or immoral; it is about reality. And in reality, the weak die and the strong gain. Many people are too weak or unfortunate to survive birth, some commit suicide, etc; these are the "weak". The "strong" are those who take control of their own lives. Satan proclaims "death to the weakling" not because it is right but because that's the way reality and nature works. Some people do choose to infer that this means "might is right" is right.
The social psychologist David Myers makes an important contribution in pointing out the difference between the Satanic description of what is from the moral assertions of what is right. He says:
"A seductive error [is the] sliding from a description of what is into a prescription of what ought to be. Philosophers call this the naturalistic fallacy. The gulf between 'is' and 'ought', between scientific description and ethical prescription, remains as wide today as when philosopher David Hume pointed it out 200 years ago."
Myers, "Social Psychology", p13
This reflection is vital for understanding the truth of Satanism. Satanism is a religion of truthful description and leaves it up to individuals to choose what is right.
Unknown "meow"
- 15 years, 9 months, 8 days ago