Episode 1: The Hermetic Order
Strip away the modern political buzzwords, the internet rumors, and the contemporary paranoia, and you are still left with a substantial, ancient web of hidden history. In this foundational episode, we begin the attempt to demystify the origins of the world's most enduring esoteric traditions.
We start at the beginning: tracking human survival from the cataclysms of the Ice Age and the Younger Dryas, and examining how early spiritual beliefs evolved in tandem with the stars. By following the precession of the equinoxes through the Astrological Ages, we explore the radical shifts in human theology, from the primordial Earth Mothers of the Paleolithic to the hierarchical Sky Gods of the Bronze Age.
But this is not a story about the magic of the stars. It is a historical analysis of the power of belief, the pursuit of hidden knowledge, and how the elite classes have historically weaponized philosophy to govern.
From Zoroaster’s invention of linear time and Plato’s "Noble Lie," to the pharmacological rituals of the Egyptian priesthood and the birth of Hermeticism, we trace a continuous thread of occulted knowledge. We follow this philosophical lineage as it is preserved by Islamic scholars and Sufi mystics during the European Dark Ages, before being absorbed by the Knights Templar. Finally, we examine how this ancient framework drove the Age of Discovery and ultimately laid the physical and ideological groundwork for modern Freemasonry.
Topics covered in this episode:
• The Younger Dryas and the theology of the Astrological Ages (Virgo to Pisces)
• The discovery of gold and the rise of the agricultural god-kings
• Zoroastrianism, dualism, and Plato’s philosophical architecture
• The Kemetic origins of alchemy and the use of psychoactive botanicals in ancient rites
• Hermes Trismegistus and the suppression of the Book of Enoch
• The Sabians, the Hashshashins, and the preservation of esoteric science
• The Knights Templar, Baphomet, and their geopolitical monopoly
• Prince Henry the Navigator, Prester John, and the esoteric motives behind the Age of Discovery
• Rosslyn Chapel and the birth of the Scottish Masons