Lucifer's Third Book of Inventions and Ideas


Book Description

This is a highly visual book loaded with numerous new ideas and inventions that any one may freely use. It may be used to create and patent what's inside if it haven't been previously. A public domain book.




Lucifer's Sixth Book of Inventions and Ideas


Book Description

This is a book of free inventions. It is a highly visual book providing numerous ideas for as of yet unpatented inventions. It is a public domain book aimed at improving the world and providing anyone an opportunity to become rich from its use. This is the sixth and final book of its series.










Godism 2: The Uses of Science and Technology


Book Description

Godism is a pseudo-religion but not a religion in its truest sense. It answers the question, "what can humans do and would do if they became as gods?" It teaches about the potential of science and technology and teaches a scientific lifestyle of personal growth and achievement. It's at anyone's use who wishes to procure a scientific mind capable of creating great things.




Lucifer's Notebook: Part Six


Book Description

Here is a handwritten Satanic notebook going over everything that can be imagined. This is creative fun, full of stickers, color pens, and stenciled Old English letters. It is an easy read. It is loaded with the original. It contains things that simply cannot be found elsewhere. In other words it has a unique approach to Satanism. It lends toward the philanthropic. It contains hard learned and hard gotten wisdom. It is a great book for Satanic growth, too.




Branches of the Satanic Tree


Book Description

A book of growth for both a Satanist and Satanism. A book of knowledge that Satan gave me to hand down. One that makes the basis of Satanism worldliness and worldly pleasure. A book of rich Satanic philosophy, magic, our perfection, and our expansion. As well it is a book that guides a Satanist into finding their purpose as given them by Satan.







American Lucifers


Book Description

The myth of light and progress has blinded us. In our electric world, we are everywhere surrounded by effortlessly glowing lights that simply exist, as they should, seemingly clear and comforting proof that human genius means the present will always be better than the past, and the future better still. At best, this is half the story. At worst, it is a lie. From whale oil to kerosene, from the colonial period to the end of the U.S. Civil War, modern, industrial lights brought wonderful improvements and incredible wealth to some. But for most workers, free and unfree, human and nonhuman, these lights were catastrophes. This book tells their stories. The surprisingly violent struggle to produce, control, and consume the changing means of illumination over the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries transformed slavery, industrial capitalism, and urban families in profound, often hidden ways. Only by taking the lives of whalers and enslaved turpentine makers, match-manufacturing children and coal miners, night-working seamstresses and the streetlamp-lit poor—those American lucifers—as seriously as those of inventors and businessmen can the full significance of the revolution of artificial light be understood.