In
chaos magic, following Spare, sigils are commonly created in a well-ordered fashion by writing an intention, then condensing the letters of the statement down to form a
monogram. The chaos magician then uses the
gnostic state to "launch" or "charge" the sigil—essentially bypassing the conscious mind to implant the desire in the unconscious. To quote Ray Sherwin: After charging the sigil, it is considered necessary to repress all memory of it. In the words of Spare, there should be "a deliberate striving to forget it". In modern chaos magic, when a complex of thoughts, desires, and intentions gains such a level of sophistication that it appears to operate autonomously from the magician's consciousness, as if it were an independent being, then such a complex is referred to as a servitor. When such a being becomes large enough that it exists independently of any one individual, as a form of "group mind", then it is referred to as an
egregore. Later chaos magicians have expanded on the basic sigilization technique.
Grant Morrison coined the term
hypersigil to refer to an extended work of art with magical meaning and willpower, created using adapted processes of sigilization. Their
comic book series
The Invisibles was intended as such a hypersigil. Morrison has also argued that modern
corporate logos like "the
McDonald's Golden Arches, the
Nike swoosh and the
Virgin autograph" are a form of viral sigil: ==See also==