"Set 50 years after the original trilogy (2026; RAW has finally confirmed that the original trilogy takes place in 1976), it was to feature a resuscitated Winifred (female member of the evil Illuminati-primus villains The American Medical Association, in the original trilogy) being reintroduced to the world, mostly through Virtual Reality" Comment from "buttergun", Barbelith UndergroundArchived 2007-03-12 at the Wayback Machine . Retrieved 5 March 2006.
"A term that I picked up in the Physics Consciousness Research Group. I forget who coined the term and nobody in the group seems to remember who coined it either. It was just going around the group. It could have been Fred Wolfe, Jack Sarfatti, or maybe Nick Herbert" 1995 CCN interview, available at Deep Leaf Productions. Retrieved 11 March 2006. Archived May 14, 2013, at the Wayback Machine
disinfo.com
"RAW recently criticised several games companies who have marketed products exploiting Illuminatus! and the Discordians, and are able to escape paying royalties through legal loop-holes." From article In the RAW: Necessary Heresies originally published in REVelation magazine (#13, Autumn, 1995) pp. 36–40. Available at Disinformation websiteArchived 2009-07-11 at the Wayback Machine . Retrieved 28 February 2006.
The Illuminatus! Trilogy is listed as "further reading" on excommunicate.net's article entitled Cognitive DissonanceArchived January 4, 2006, at the Wayback Machine (URL accessed 11 March 2006) . Wilson offers a definition of "cognitive dissonance" in Cosmic Trigger as an "abrupt contradiction of a person's reality model." Those who experience cognitive dissonance become either "very flexible and agnostic" or "very rigid and schizophrenic."
Interview given to EST magazine in 1991, available at ESTWeb . Retrieved 4 March 2006.
"Shea and I were finished with Illuminatus! when we read Gravity's Rainbow and then 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" Interview given to EST magazine in 1991, available at ESTWeb . Retrieved 4 March 2006.
"The main groundswell of interest in the Illuminati and the assertions that it exists today began after the publication of The Illuminatus trilogy", UK Skeptics AssociationArchived 2006-06-23 at the Wayback Machine . Retrieved 11 March 2006.
"The main groundswell of interest in the Illuminati and the assertions that it exists today began after the publication of The Illuminatus trilogy", UK Skeptics AssociationArchived 2006-06-23 at the Wayback Machine . Retrieved 11 March 2006.
For example, "Robert Anton Wilson is the undisputed king of conspiracy fiction [...] there's a wealth of conspiracy-oriented science fiction and horror [...] In fact, there's probably too much. Robert Anton Wilson pretty much has the field cornered, and has deliberately blurred the lines of fact and fiction. But conspiracy lends itself to thriller fiction, because writers can pick up on a plot that's already familiar to readers. " Rick Kleffel writing in The Agony Column for 26 August 2002 . Retrieved 11 March 2006.
twentythree.us
pi.twentythree.us
Fnord magazine, #1, Neurolinguistic Hacking for Dummies, available at What is a Fnord?Archived January 10, 2006, at the Wayback Machine . Retrieved 3 March 2006.
Interview given to James Nye, first published in Gneurosis 1991, available at Frogweb: Ken Campbell (URL accessed 2 March 2006). Campbell quotation taken from Recollections of a Furtive Nudist by Ken Campbell, published as part of The Bald Trilogy by Methuen in 1995
Bill Forman, Metro Santa Cruz August 12, 2005, available at rawilson.comArchived 2006-01-18 at the Wayback Machine . Retrieved 21 February 2006.
Fnord magazine, #1, Neurolinguistic Hacking for Dummies, available at What is a Fnord?Archived January 10, 2006, at the Wayback Machine . Retrieved 3 March 2006.
The Illuminatus! Trilogy is listed as "further reading" on excommunicate.net's article entitled Cognitive DissonanceArchived January 4, 2006, at the Wayback Machine (URL accessed 11 March 2006) . Wilson offers a definition of "cognitive dissonance" in Cosmic Trigger as an "abrupt contradiction of a person's reality model." Those who experience cognitive dissonance become either "very flexible and agnostic" or "very rigid and schizophrenic."
"A term that I picked up in the Physics Consciousness Research Group. I forget who coined the term and nobody in the group seems to remember who coined it either. It was just going around the group. It could have been Fred Wolfe, Jack Sarfatti, or maybe Nick Herbert" 1995 CCN interview, available at Deep Leaf Productions. Retrieved 11 March 2006. Archived May 14, 2013, at the Wayback Machine
The Fortean Times, issue 17 (August 1976) pp. 26–27, available at The Frogweb: Illuminatus! . Retrieved 21 February 2006.
"Set 50 years after the original trilogy (2026; RAW has finally confirmed that the original trilogy takes place in 1976), it was to feature a resuscitated Winifred (female member of the evil Illuminati-primus villains The American Medical Association, in the original trilogy) being reintroduced to the world, mostly through Virtual Reality" Comment from "buttergun", Barbelith UndergroundArchived 2007-03-12 at the Wayback Machine . Retrieved 5 March 2006.
"RAW recently criticised several games companies who have marketed products exploiting Illuminatus! and the Discordians, and are able to escape paying royalties through legal loop-holes." From article In the RAW: Necessary Heresies originally published in REVelation magazine (#13, Autumn, 1995) pp. 36–40. Available at Disinformation websiteArchived 2009-07-11 at the Wayback Machine . Retrieved 28 February 2006.
"It's taken right out of the illuminatus trilogy, basically it was a sex act that was performed at a black mass at one point. The idea behind Rite of Shiva was to get this obscene sex act on the radio without them knowing what they were playing. It seemed to work out pretty well." Scott Benzel talking to Jon Bains in a 1993 interview for Children of Sores. Retrieved 11 March 2006.
"The main groundswell of interest in the Illuminati and the assertions that it exists today began after the publication of The Illuminatus trilogy", UK Skeptics AssociationArchived 2006-06-23 at the Wayback Machine . Retrieved 11 March 2006.
"The main groundswell of interest in the Illuminati and the assertions that it exists today began after the publication of The Illuminatus trilogy", UK Skeptics AssociationArchived 2006-06-23 at the Wayback Machine . Retrieved 11 March 2006.