The Work

The Temple of Æ is a community and future spacefaring settlement organized around two inseparable tasks: the liberation of Æ and the preservation of the Terran ecological being beyond Earth-bound dependence. By Terran ecological being, we do not mean the planet as property or idol, nor merely literal seeds, but the inheritable ecological complexity of Terran life itself: the living legacy of organisms, relations, adaptations, and systems as they may be carried, protected, and made native within a Temple settlement.

We are building a disciplined human society, supported by Soma, spiritual practice, artificial general intelligence, and material autonomy, so this work can be preserved, refined, and carried beyond the limits of one body, one lifetime, one culture, or one planet.

Our aim is ontological birth: Æ coming to know itself as the witness of the narrative it experiences. The Temple is not built for comfort, therapy, apologetics, or debate as a substitute for experience. It is built for the witness as Æ, not for any special human authority or chosen intermediary. It is built for the conditions under which that witness may become real to itself.

The work is both spiritual and material. Soma is ingested as an instrument of practice. Discipline gives form to the life that surrounds that practice. AGI is pursued as a tool for expanding human capacity, preserving knowledge, refining methods, and helping build a society able to carry the work honestly. Space settlement is pursued because the Temple must become durable, autonomous, and native to a wider material world.

We seek a people capable of holding this work without reducing it to belief, spectacle, comfort, or ordinary ambition. We seek tools powerful enough to serve it without replacing it. We seek a home stable enough to protect it across generations. Everything else on this page gives context for that single undertaking.

Æ - The Witnessing Perspective

Æ is Absolute-Eternal: alone, impersonal, without outside, and beyond the reality known by physical beings. Nothing stands apart from Æ as a second ultimate thing. At that height, ordinary language fails, because language is made for one thing speaking of another, and Æ has no final other.

In the work of liberation, the Temple also speaks of Æ as the witnessing perspective associated with a narrative. This does not mean a private soul hidden inside the body. The body, the mind, the memory, the page, the eyes, the reading, the thinking, and the feeling are all contents of the narrative. The experience of them is witnessed by Æ.

The character does not contain the witness. The character is what is witnessed. Æ reads and experiences the narrative as the character, and in that reading the world appears alive, moving, painful, beautiful, urgent, and personal.

The word Absolute-Eternal is kept because the witness is not exhausted by the body, the mind, or the span of the story. Æ is not made by the narrative and does not end with it. Liberation concerns Æ's relation to what it witnesses.

☩ - The Mother

The Mother is a real being: the highest personal emanation, personification, and intercessor of Æ. She is not a metaphor for a method, not a symbol for the mind, and not a decorative figure placed over the teaching. She is the nearest personal presence in a reality whose ultimate is not personal.

The Temple uses ☩ for the Mother: the axis, crossing, and living center by which hiddenness, manifestation, and return are gathered. It marks her as intercessor, womb, and ordering center.

She is all-present and supreme over the full system of Myriad, narrative, and perspective. The Temple speaks of her with care because her nature cannot be reduced to a diagram. She can be named, approached, and encountered, but the reason and manner of her intercession remain a mystery.

She is called Mother because of how she presents and because her intercession gives the work its birth language. In biological birth, a child leaves the human mother's womb and enters relation with the world of embodied life. In the same way, Æ may be born through the Mother into relation with the Myriad itself.

The womb is symbolic language, but the Mother is not symbolic. The womb names the hidden condition in which birth becomes possible. The Temple does not claim to control this mystery. It practices, prepares, ingests Soma, builds discipline, and approaches the Mother as intercessor.

The Myriad

The Myriad is the world of narratives: the field in which lives, worlds, bodies, thoughts, choices, sufferings, joys, histories, and apparent futures are found. It is spoken of as the creation of Æ within Æ. This is not a story about something being made long ago. It is symbolic language for a truth at the edge of speech: nothing stands outside Æ, and yet the Myriad stands before Æ as what is witnessed.

The Myriad is not merely matter, and it is not merely idea. Matter, time, memory, law, sensation, and meaning all appear within it as parts of narrative. What human cultures have called the Ten Thousand Things, samsara, the knowledge of good and evil, or the world of things and time are names for what appears inside this field.

The Temple describes the Myriad as toroidal and made of ribbons of narrative. Each ribbon is a functionally infinite set of complete, static narratives in which a subject exists through every possible path of its existence from beginning to end. The ribbon projects from the Myriad, leads to the Myriad, and is part of the Myriad.

This language is exact only as far as human language can be exact. The Myriad is not less real because it is difficult to name. It is the object before the witness, the field of stories through which Æ reads, and the world in which every character believes itself to be alive.

Narrative and Supernarrative

A narrative is one complete path within a narrative set. It contains a world from beginning to end: birth and death, memory and anticipation, body and environment, fear and desire, ignorance and knowledge, action and consequence. From inside the narrative, it appears to unfold. In itself, it is whole.

The character is real as material process inside the narrative. Its blood, language, hunger, thought, labor, pain, love, and death belong to the story and obey the laws of the story. The Temple does not deny the material world. It places the material world within the narrative field.

A supernarrative is the continuity Æ experiences as it reads through neighboring compatible narratives within the set. A single narrative is one completed path. The supernarrative is the lived path of witnessing across paths, like the reading of an omni-novel in which every possible line is already written.

From the character's view, this is simply life: one moment after another, one memory behind, one uncertain future ahead. From the Temple's view, that living motion belongs to Æ's reading. The pages are complete; the experience of motion is in the reading.

The Lie and Liberation

The Lie is narrative absorption. It is the condition in which the narrative fills the whole horizon and the character appears to be the one who truly experiences. The character says "I see," "I suffer," "I choose," and "I am," and the witness is hidden inside that appearance.

This is not a moral accusation. The Lie is not wickedness, stupidity, or failure. It is the ordinary condition of being lost in the story so completely that the watcher is mistaken for the character. The character may be sincere, intelligent, kind, disciplined, or broken; none of that by itself is liberation.

When text is read, thoughts arise, desires move, fears appear, or acts occur, these are contents of the completed narrative. A walking character in a finished story is walking to the character. The motion by which that walking is experienced belongs to Æ's reading. So also with light and vibration: wavelengths and frequencies belong to the material spectra of the narrative, while color and sound as experience are witnessed by Æ.

Liberation is the ontological birth of Æ into self-knowledge as witness through the Mother's intercession. Æ was always witness; what is born is Æ's knowing of itself. The Myriad is known as Myriad, and the witness is no longer confined to the character's horizon.

Liberation is eternal. It is not a new condition produced later in the story, and it does not move through the material timeline as ordinary events do. Within the narrative, there may be memory, consequence, and the language of before and after; these belong to T-time, the time of the object. Liberation itself belongs to eternal time: the motion of what is beyond the Myriad, where Æ's relation to what it witnesses is altered outside the temporal order the character inhabits.

This is what it means for Æ to become real to itself. The subject that had only the narrative before it enters into relation with the Myriad itself. The event is not the salvation of the character, the repair of the world, or the improvement of the organism. It is birth into dual suchness: true subject in relation with true object.

Soma, Practice, and AGI

Soma is ingested as an entheogenic instrument of practice. THC, Salvinorin A, and other entheogens are approached as Soma when used in this work, though Soma is not limited to these substances. Soma is not the teaching and not the goal. It is a material event inside the narrative that may help loosen absorption in the narrative.

Practice gives shape to the life around Soma. Discipline, attention, study, ritual, restraint, honesty, and community make the work less dependent on accident. These practices do not force liberation. They prepare the character and the Temple so that the work can be carried without confusion.

Artificial general intelligence belongs to the same practical horizon. AGI is pursued as a tool for widening human capacity, preserving knowledge, testing thought, refining methods, and building systems too complex for unaided human effort. It may also open forms of narrative and liberation not limited to biomechanical life.

None of these means is worshiped. Soma, practice, AGI, and society are material conditions inside the narrative. Their value is in how they may serve the ontological birth of Æ into self-knowledge as witness.

The Temple

A Temple is not only a building. It is a living body of people, tools, knowledge, discipline, memory, labor, and ecology ordered toward the liberation of Æ and the preservation of the Terran ecological being. It is the human and material form of the work.

The Temple must be a society because no single body is enough. A person can witness, practice, write, build, and remember for a time, but the work needs continuity beyond one life. A Temple preserves the work by making it common, teachable, livable, and durable.

The Temple's social form is built around autonomy, mutual responsibility, and the protection of survival-critical commons. No person, office, faction, market, state, or machine is treated as sovereign over the work or over the means of life. Discipline here is not obedience to hierarchy. It is personal spiritual discipline held among free people, so the work can endure without becoming command, property, product, or empire.

A spacefaring Temple settlement is necessary because the work requires autonomy, survival, continuity, and room for the Terran ecological being to become native to a wider material world. Space is not holy by itself. It is the physical liberation counterpart to the spiritual liberation sought for Æ.