PGM V. 96-172 and also found in the Leiden Papyrus. The Coptic versions confirm textual stability. Modern practitioners of thelema and chaos magic have used this with reported success, but academic verification rests on multiple manuscript witnesses.
Given the copyright and ethical sourcing concerns, here are legitimate pathways:
: Procedures for securing a Paredros (an assistant daimon) and invoking various spirits, gods, and the dead.
: Rituals for gaining "fellowship" or a personal introduction to a god.
The primary verified source is the , a collection of dozens of texts from Thebes and elsewhere, written primarily in Greek with Egyptian, Hebrew, and Coptic loanwords. Another key corpus is the Demotic Magical Papyri (PDM) , in the Egyptian language but reflecting similar techniques.