So that's the Dee from cstross's quote:<p>"<i>for iterator count from zero to number of entropy sinks within ground state, hear ye, hear ye, I open the gates of starry time for ye that you may feel the ground beneath your feet and the air upon your skin; I invoke the method of Dee and the constructor of Pthagn, forever exit and collect all the garbage, amen.</i>"<p>(from <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Fuller_Memorandum" rel="nofollow">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Fuller_Memorandum</a>)
> Dimethyltryptamine [is] the reason people lick the backs of Mexican toads to get high.<p>Not correct, Colorado river toads have 5-MeO-DMT, not DMT. Confusing the two could easily be deadly.
I don't particularly like the OTO because of the distortion of Enlightenment Era groups and Freemasonry. Crowley and some of the esoteric philosophies are interesting but there's not many concrete ideas there.<p>John Fleming wrote a great book related to this called <i>The Dark Side of the Enlightenment: Wizards, Alchemists, and Spiritual Seekers in the Age of Reason</i>.<p>There's a distinction between Freemasonry, philosophy, and DMT; and the speculative ideas of John Dee, the OTO and mystical reasoning. A lot of the most fascinating things are polluted with ridiculous claims and beliefs.
I hope this was horribly mangled by some chthonian sub-editor, because I hate to think that this rambling disconnected potpourri is considered acceptable output from a PhD candidate as the bio claims.
For clarification, this article is unrelated to the well-known gaming company Wizards of the Coast: <a href="http://company.wizards.com/" rel="nofollow">http://company.wizards.com/</a>