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Make Your Own Robot Fetish

By Joshua Madara on January 31, 2012 | Categories: Blog | Tags: | No Comments

My Robot Nation (MRN) lets you build a 3D model of a robot right in your web browser, which they will print in three dimensions and in full color, and ship to you. To help raise awareness of the Robomancy.com fundraiser, I am holding a contest for a giftcode for a 3″ robot of your own design from MRN! There are two ways to enter:

  1. Go to the hyperRitual Facebook page, find the post about this article, and (a) like it, (b) share it, and (c) leave a comment on it.
  2. (a) Leave a comment below this article (be sure to include your email address so I can notify you if you win; it will not be published), then (b) go to the Robomancy.com page at IndieGoGo and share the campaign on Facebook, Google+, and/or Twitter.

I will randomly select one winner on Monday, February 6.

The following article explains how to use MRN to make a robot fetish for magical work.

My Robot Nation

Step 1: Determine the robot’s purpose

The first thing you must do is decide what task your robot will accomplish. What is your magical intent? That will become the robot’s magical purpose. Do you or a loved one need healing, or do you wish to remove some obstacle from your life? Will the robot help you acquire a new job, a new lover, or arcane secrets? Whatever it is, figure it out before you begin building your robot, so that the robot’s function can guide the form you choose for it (but you can remain flexible to new functions inspired by discovering what forms are available to you).

Tip! General-purpose magic servitors may be like general-purpose physical robots: a wonderful idea, but difficult to implement in practice. Consider creating different robots for different tasks, so that each robot can be well-suited to its unique task.

Step 2: Join MyRobotNation.com

Create a free account at MyRobotNation.com, then follow the link to Make My Robot.

You will need to have WebGL enabled in your web browser to use MRN’s modelling tools. MRN has some troubleshooting info if you experience problems with this. (FWIW, I personally have not been able to get WebGL to work correctly in Firefox, but I have no problem in Chrome on the same machine.)

Step 3: Build your robot’s body

MRN has a varriety of heads, arms, torsos, and legs for you to choose from. Consider how your robot’s physical attributes can represent its magical qualities. A slow-but-steady robot might move on continuous track, or a fast-acting robot could have long legs for running. A robot built for destroying obstacles might have a ray gun for a hand, or the same could represent a device for emitting rays of healing energy. Does your robot’s face appear friendly or menacing?

Step 4: Color your robot

Each robot body part can be painted one or two colors. Select colors you find pleasing or meaningful, or that have esoteric correspondences. One scheme I have used is selecting the colors corresponding to the planetary day and hour that best represents the robot’s magical purpose (which is also a good time to “charge” the robot — see below). E.g., if my robot’s magical purpose is to destroy an obstacle, I might select red for Mars (war) and black for Saturn (death). Or if its purpose is to heal something or someone, I might select a color corresponding to the Zodiacal sign governing the physical system I wish to heal.

Here are some books to assist with esoteric color correspondences, and they are also helpful for choosing symbols to embellish your robot (see step 5):

You can mix your own colors in MRN, or have your robot painted white (or some other base color) so that you can complete it with your own paints at home.

Step 5: Embellish your robot

You can add 3D parts to your robot: nuts, bolts, pipes, keys, visors, saw blades, neckties… These can be colored just like body parts.

MRN includes a variety of 2D graphics (called stamps) to print onto your robot, including letters, numbers, and the signs of the Zodiac. You can resize or rotate any stamp to your desired placement. Custom stamps are not allowed at this time, but you can leave a blank space on the robot for painting one of your own design at home.

Tip! The four classical elements or Tarot suits can be represented by modern-day card suits: Clubs (Wands, Fire), Hearts (Cups, Water), Spades (Swords, Air), and Diamonds (Pentacles, Earth). MRN has both 3D parts and 2D stamps representing these card suits.

Step 6: Order your robot

Once you have complete your 3D model, MRN will ship it to your doorstep. You can find pricing information on their website.

Step 7: Charge your robot

After you have received your new robot from MRN, you must ritually “charge” it with its magical task. There are many methods for activating magic artifacts, written in many books on this subject. Some are quite simple while others call for elaborate rituals. For those having no preferred method, I have included one here that is based on Phillip H. Farber’s Meta-Magick techniques.

  1. Imagine a circle on the floor, about as wide as your outstretched arms. Place the robot just beyond the edge of the circle, in the center of an imaginary triangle.
  2. Stand in the center of your circle and take three deep breaths. As you inhale, imagine your awareness expanding to fill the entire circle; as you exhale, imagine your awareness contracting to a single point in the center of your being.
  3. Whatever you wish the robot to accomplish, imagine that it has already taken place. What do you see happening? What objects or people or places do you see, and in what states are they in? What do you hear? Are there any sounds in the aftermath of accomplishment? What do you feel? Do you feel any emotions or any sensation in your body?
  4. Notice where in your body this feeling is located. (If you have trouble intuiting a location, you can select one of esoteric correspondence, e.g. one of the chakras appropriate for your situation.) Is it static there, or does it move, and if so, how does it move? Does it pulse or circulate or flow?
  5. Assign this feeling a color or colors. (If you have trouble intuiting a color, you can select one of esoteric correspondence, possibly matching one of your robot’s colors.) Imagine that color suffusing the area where the feeling is located.
  6. Amplify this color-feeling energy. Imagine the color become more and more brilliant while it grows to envelop your entire body. Notice how the energy feels as it grows, and whether there are any changes in how or where it moves.
  7. In whatever way feels natural to you, project the energy onto the robot in the triangle. Notice how the energy interacts with the robot, and whether the robot changes at all in your mind. Continue until you feel all of the energy has been transferred from you to the robot. At this time, you may talk with the robot if you feel to, speaking instructions to it or asking it questions.
  8. Repeat #2 (breathing in the circle).

From now on, take care to properly handle the robot as a magic artifact.

You can elaborate the above ritual with special lights, sounds, the smell of incense, drawing an actual circle and triangle on the ground and inscribing them with magic words and glyphs, etc., or you can adapt some other ritual or compose one entirely of your own design.

Step 8: ?

Magic is about changing the state or essence of persons, objects, acts and events through certain special and non-trivial kinds of actions with opaque causal mediation. // Jesper Sørensen, A Cognitive Theory of Magic

Place your robot somewhere that feels right to you for the work it needs to do, and let it do its thing. No one is certain of exactly how this works, and you need not puzzle over it. Do not worry about whether or not the robot will accomplish its task, or even think much about it. Just trust that it will, and get on about your other business. After all, this is why you have robots!

Step 9: Profit!

If all went well, your intent is not too improbable for the robot to act on, and you keep a sufficiently open mind about such things, then you should receive a meaningful (sometimes spooky) result of some kind. Exactly when can be difficult to predict, but if needed you can give the robot a time limit when you charge it. If you do get a result, thank your robot for a job well done, and decide what do with it next (reuse or recycle — following an appropriate discharge if necessary). If not, consider what you might do differently to improve things. Are you asking for too much? Are you satisfied with the robot’s design? With your charging ritual? Try asking the robot what it needs or wants to accomplish the task.

That’s It!

You have taken your first steps toward becoming a robomancer. Other examples at Robomancy.com will involve more elaborate rituals and actual robots that move about and such. If you like this sort of thing, please contribute to our fundraiser. And don’t forget to enter the contest for a gift robot from MyRobotNation.com!

Robomancy.com Fundraiser on IndieGoGo

By Joshua Madara on January 24, 2012 | Categories: Blog | Tags: | No Comments

 

I have just launched a fundraising campaign for the Robomancy.com online book (Robomancy in Theory and Practice) and community (Robomancers’ Guild). Please visit indiegogo.com/robomancy to learn more!

Controlling the World with a Magic Wand

By Joshua Madara on January 6, 2012 | Categories: Blog | 4 Comments

The wand is a well known instrument of magic, and represents the magician’s Will and the direction of hidden forces to realize it. The magician imagines some change in the world, points the wand to where that change should take place, and there it does — abracadabra, hocus pocus, presto chango! In Tarot, the suit of Wands often corresponds to the element of Fire and “work, enterprise, ideas; the energies of the spiritual plane and archetypal world” (Paul Foster Case).

The Kymera magic wand builds on this mythical tradition, to create a novel(ty) television remote control — change channels or volume with a turn or flick of your wrist, or execute a “big swish” to turn the TV on or off.

Kymera wand

But the Kymera wand can interact with much more than your A/V components. Today’s techno-wizards — the hackers and makers — use “hidden forces” (i.e. small computers) called microcontrollers to effect their desired changes in the world. These microcontrollers can be programmed to respond to infrared remote-control devices including the Kymera wand.

Arduino microcontroller

On Friday, February 17, from 7 to 9 pm, I will be at Jigsaw Renaissance, demonstrating how to use the Kymera wand to interact with two popular microcontrollers: Arduino and the Parallax Propeller. I will briefly introduce infrared communications technology including the popular Sony protocol, and will demonstrate the wand’s 13 gestures that produce discrete signals, and a few applications including robot control, interaction with a Processing computer program, and lighting effects using BlinkM programmable LEDs. Suggested donation: $5 for members of Jigsaw Renaissance, $10 for non-members.

Talismachine Draft

By Joshua Madara on November 9, 2011 | Categories: Blog | Tags: , , , , | No Comments

Here is a proof-of-concept draft I made last night, for the talismachines. The print was designed in Inkscape and laser-printed onto cotton letterhead, then hand-painted over with Bare electrically conductive paint. It includes a coin-cell battery, on-off switch, and white LED from the LilyPad Arduino family. The inverted triangle in the upper-right is an alchemical symbol for blood, and contains a drop of (my) blood.

Talismachine Draft 2

The magical purpose of the talisman is to give “great knowledge and wisdom in mechanical arts,” and it features the sigil of the Goetic demon Barbas (or Marbas). It shows also the hammer and anvil of Tubal Cain, and a classical symbol for fire indicating Hephaestus/Vulcan. Its practical purpose is to experiment with the media. The proper talismachines will be screen-printed on parchment or canvas, and will include a LilyPad microcontroller for more interesting interactions. I may need to run conductive thread behind the parchment, because the Bare Paint rapidly increases its resistance over the lines.

Talismachine Draft 5

Click here for more photos.

Pics from 2011 Esoteric Book Conference

By Joshua Madara on November 6, 2011 | Categories: Blog | No Comments

Here are some photographs of me and the Electronomicon at this year’s Esoteric Book Conference. The photos were taken by Anima Nocturna. You can view the complete set of photos here.

Joshua Madara @ Esoteric Book Conference

Joshua Madara @ Esoteric Book Conference

Severina and Logan playing with Electronomicon
The lovely Severina and Logan playing with Electronomicon

Joshua Madara @ Esoteric Book Conference
Preparing to control the audio for Orryelle’s performance

Joshua Madara @ Esoteric Book Conference

Joshua Madara @ Esoteric Book Conference

Standing next to my alchemy teacher, Robert Allen Bartlett