The Illuminatus! Trilogy covers a wide range of subjects throughout the book. These include discussions about mythology, current events, conspiracy theories and counterculture.
Conspiracies on a
dollar bill Although the many
conspiracy theories in the book are imaginary, these are mixed in with enough truth to make them seem plausible. For example, the title of the first book,
The Eye in the Pyramid, refers to the
Eye of Providence, a mystical symbol which derives from the ancient Egyptian
Eye of Horus and is erroneously claimed to be the symbol of the
Bavarian Illuminati. Some of
America's founding fathers are alleged by conspiracy theorists to have been members of this sect. The books are loaded with references to the Illuminati, the
Argenteum Astrum, many and various
world domination plans, conspiracy theories and pieces of
gnostic knowledge. Many of the odder conspiracies in the book are taken from unpublished letters to
Playboy magazine, where the authors were working as
associate editors while they wrote the novels. Among the oddest was the suggestion that
Adam Weishaupt, founder of the Bavarian Illuminati, killed
George Washington and took on his identity as
President of the United States. This is often noted in Illuminati-conspiracy discussion.
Fnord The
nonsense word fnord, invented by the writers of
Principia Discordia, is given a specific and sinister meaning in the trilogy. It is a
subliminal message technique, a word that the majority of the population since early childhood has been trained to ignore (and trained to forget both the training and that they are ignoring it), but which they associate with a vague sense of unease. Upon seeing the word, readers experience a panic reaction. They then subconsciously suppress all memories of having seen the word, but the sense of panic remains. They therefore associate the unease with the news story they are reading. Fnords are scattered liberally in the text of newspapers and magazines, causing
fear and
anxiety in those following current events. There are no fnords in the
advertisements, thus encouraging a
consumerist society.
Fnord magazine equated the fnords with a generalized effort to control and brainwash the populace. To "see the fnords" would imply an attempt to wrestle back individual autonomy, similar to the idea of
reading between the lines, especially since the word fnord was actually said to appear between regular lines of text. The word makes its first appearance in
The Illuminatus! Trilogy without any explanation during an
acid trip by Dr. Ignotum Per Ignotius and Joe Malik: "The only good fnord is a dead fnord". Several other unexplained appearances follow. Only much later in the story is the secret revealed, when Malik is hypnotized by Hagbard Celine to recall suppressed memories of his first-grade teacher conditioning his class to ignore the fnords: "If you don't see the fnord it can't eat you, don't see the fnord, don't see the fnord..."
Numerology Numerology is given great credence by many of the characters, with the Law of Fives in particular being frequently mentioned. Hagbard Celine states the Law of Fives in Appendix Gimmel: "All phenomena are directly or indirectly related to the number five." He gives away the secret when he adds, "given enough ingenuity on the part of the demonstrator. That's the very model of what a scientific law must always be: a statement about how the human mind relates to the cosmos." (Late in the work, Celine demonstrates the meaninglessness of the Law of Fives by showing another character a picture of a young girl with
six fingers on each hand and saying, "If we were all like her, there'd be a Law of Sixes.") Another character, Simon Moon, identifies what he calls the "
23 synchronicity principle", which he credits
William S. Burroughs as having discovered. Both laws involve finding significance in the appearance of the number, and in its "presen[ce]
esoterically because of its conspicuous
exoteric absence." One of the reasons Moon finds 23 significant is because "All the great anarchists died on the 23rd day of some month or other." He also identifies a "23/17 phenomenon." They are both tied to the Law of Fives, he explains, because 2 + 3 = 5, and 1 + 7 = 8 = 2³. Robert Anton Wilson claimed in a 1988 interview that "23 is a part of the cosmic code. It's connected with so many
synchronicities and weird coincidences that it must mean something, I just haven't figured out yet what it means!".
Counterculture The books were written at the height of the late 1960s, and are infused with the popular
counterculture ideas of that time. For instance, the
New Age slogan "
flower power" is referenced via its German form,
Ewige Blumenkraft (literally "eternal flower power"), described by Shea and Wilson as a slogan of the Illuminati, the enemies of the
hippie ideal. The book's attitude to New Age philosophies and beliefs are ambiguous. Wilson explained in a later interview: "I'm some kind of antibody in the New Age movement. on the rewrite we deliberately threw in a couple of references to it, but we had worked out the structure on our own, mostly on the basis of the nut mail that Playboy gets".
Cognitive dissonance Every view of
reality that is introduced in the story is later derided in some way, whether that view is traditional or iconoclastic. The trilogy is an exercise in
cognitive dissonance, with an absurdist plot built of seemingly plausible, if unprovable, components. Ultimately, readers are left to form their own interpretations as to which, if any, of the numerous contradictory viewpoints presented by the characters are valid or plausible, and which are simply
satirical gags and
shaggy dog jokes. This style of building up a viable belief system, then tearing it down to replace it with another one, was described by Wilson as "
guerrilla ontology".
Self-reference There are several parts in the book where it reviews and jokingly deconstructs itself. The fictional journalist Epicene Wildeblood at one point is required to critique a book uncannily similar to
The Illuminatus! Trilogy: Several protagonists come to the realization that they are merely fictional characters, or at least begin to question the reality of their situation. George Dorn wonders early on if he "was in some crazy surrealist movie, wandering from telepathic sheriffs to homosexual assassins, to nympho lady Masons, to psychotic pirates, according to a script written in advance by two acid-heads and a Martian humorist". Hagbard Celine claims towards the climax that the entire story is a computer-generated synthesis of random conspiracies: "I can fool the rest of you, but I can't fool the reader. FUCKUP has been working all morning, correlating all the data on this caper and its historical roots, and I programmed him to put it in the form of a novel for easy reading. Considering what a lousy job he does at poetry, I suppose it will be a
high-camp novel, intentionally or unintentionally."
Allusions to other works The novel
Telemachus Sneezed by the character Atlanta Hope with its catchphrase "What is John Guilt?" is a spoof of
Ayn Rand's
Atlas Shrugged, the origin of the character
John Galt. Ayn Rand is mentioned by name a few times in
Illuminatus!, and her novel is alluded to by Hagbard who says, "If Atlas can Shrug and Telemachus can Sneeze, why can't Satan Repent?" Rand is also disparaged in one of the appendices concerning property, ostensibly written by Hagbard, which serves as an explanation of anarchist
Pierre-Joseph Proudhon's views on the subject. There are also references to
Thomas Pynchon's
The Crying of Lot 49 and his ''
Gravity's Rainbow, an equally enormous experimental novel concerning liberty and paranoia that was published two years prior to Illuminatus!'' Wilson claims his book was already complete by the time he and Shea read Pynchon's novel (which went on to win several awards), but they then went back and made some modifications to the text before its final publication to allude to Pynchon's work. == Reviews and reputation ==