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Magic (supernatural)

Magic is an ancient practice rooted in rituals, spiritual divinations, and/or cultural lineage—with an intention to invoke, manipulate, or otherwise manifest supernatural forces, beings, or entities in the natural world.[1] It is a categorical yet often ambiguous term which has been used to refer to a wide variety of beliefs and practices, frequently considered separate from both religion and science.[2]

The Magician, an illustration from the Rider–Waite tarot deck first published in 1910

Connotations have varied from positive to negative at times throughout history,[3] Within Western culture, magic has been linked to ideas of the Other,[4] foreignness,[5] and primitivism;[6] indicating that it is "a powerful marker of cultural difference"[7] and likewise, a non-modern phenomenon.[8] During the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, Western intellectuals perceived the practice of magic to be a sign of a primitive mentality and also commonly attributed it to marginalised groups of people.[7]

Aleister Crowley (1875–1947), a British occultist, defined "magick" as "the Science and Art of causing Change to occur in conformity with Will",[9] adding a 'k' to distinguish ceremonial or ritual magic from stage magic.[10] In modern occultism and neopagan religions, many self-described magicians and witches regularly practice ritual magic.[11] This view has been incorporated into chaos magic and the new religious movements of Thelema and Wicca.

Etymology edit

 
One of the earliest surviving accounts of the Persian mágoi was provided by the Greek historian Herodotus.

The English words magic, mage and magician come from the Latin term magus, through the Greek μάγος, which is from the Old Persian maguš. (𐎶𐎦𐎢𐏁|𐎶𐎦𐎢𐏁, magician).[12] The Old Persian magu- is derived from the Proto-Indo-European megʰ-*magh (be able). The Persian term may have led to the Old Sinitic *Mγag (mage or shaman).[13] The Old Persian form seems to have permeated ancient Semitic languages as the Talmudic Hebrew magosh, the Aramaic amgusha (magician), and the Chaldean maghdim (wisdom and philosophy); from the first century BCE onwards, Syrian magusai gained notoriety as magicians and soothsayers.[14]

During the late-sixth and early-fifth centuries BCE, the term goetia found its way into ancient Greek, where it was used with negative connotations to apply to rites that were regarded as fraudulent, unconventional, and dangerous.[15] in particular they dedicate themselves to the evocation and invocation of daimons (lesser divinities or spirits) to control and acquire powers. This concept remained pervasive throughout the Hellenistic period, when Hellenistic authors categorised a diverse range of practices—such as enchantment, witchcraft, incantations, divination, necromancy, and astrology—under the label "magic".[16]

The Latin language adopted this meaning of the term in the first century BCE. Via Latin, the concept became incorporated into Christian theology during the first century CE. Early Christians associated magic with demons, and thus regarded it as against Christian religion. In early modern Europe, Protestants often claimed that Roman Catholicism was magic rather than religion, and as Christian Europeans began colonizing other parts of the world in the sixteenth century, they labelled the non-Christian beliefs they encountered as magical. In that same period, Italian humanists reinterpreted the term in a positive sense to express the idea of natural magic. Both negative and positive understandings of the term recurred in Western culture over the following centuries.[citation needed]

Since the nineteenth century, academics in various disciplines have employed the term magic but have defined it in different ways and used it in reference to different things. One approach, associated with the anthropologists Edward Tylor (1832–1917) and James G. Frazer (1854–1941), uses the term to describe beliefs in hidden sympathies between objects that allow one to influence the other. Defined in this way, magic is portrayed as the opposite to science. An alternative approach, associated with the sociologist Marcel Mauss (1872–1950) and his uncle Émile Durkheim (1858–1917), employs the term to describe private rites and ceremonies and contrasts it with religion, which it defines as a communal and organised activity. By the 1990s many scholars were rejecting the term's utility for scholarship. They argued that the label drew arbitrary lines between similar beliefs and practices that were alternatively considered religious, and that it constituted ethnocentric to apply the connotations of magic—rooted in Western and Christian history—to other cultures.[citation needed]

Branches or types edit

White, gray and black edit

Historian Owen Davies says the term "white witch" was rarely used before the 20th century.[17] White magic is understood as the use of magic for selfless or helpful purposes, while black magic was used for selfish, harmful or evil purposes.[18] Black magic is the malicious counterpart of the benevolent white magic. There is no consensus as to what constitutes white, gray or black magic, as Phil Hine says, "like many other aspects of occultism, what is termed to be 'black magic' depends very much on who is doing the defining."[19] Gray magic, also called "neutral magic", is magic that is not performed for specifically benevolent reasons, but is also not focused towards completely hostile practices.[citation needed]

High and low edit

Historians and anthropologists have distinguished between practitioners who engage in high magic, and those who engage in low magic.[20] High magic, also known as theurgy and ceremonial or ritual magic,[21] is more complex, involving lengthy and detailed rituals as well as sophisticated, sometimes expensive, paraphernalia.[20] Low magic and natural magic[21] are associated with peasants and folklore[22] with simpler rituals such as brief, spoken spells.[20] Low magic is also closely associated with sorcery and witchcraft.[23] Anthropologist Susan Greenwood writes that "Since the Renaissance, high magic has been concerned with drawing down forces and energies from heaven" and achieving unity with divinity.[24] High magic is usually performed indoors while witchcraft is often performed outdoors.[25]

History edit

Mesopotamia edit

 
Bronze protection plaque from the Neo-Assyrian era showing the demon Lamashtu

Magic was invoked in many kinds of rituals and medical formulae, and to counteract evil omens. Defensive or legitimate magic in Mesopotamia (asiputu or masmassutu in the Akkadian language) were incantations and ritual practices intended to alter specific realities. The ancient Mesopotamians believed that magic was the only viable defense against demons, ghosts, and evil sorcerers.[26] To defend themselves against the spirits of those they had wronged, they would leave offerings known as kispu in the person's tomb in hope of appeasing them.[27] If that failed, they also sometimes took a figurine of the deceased and buried it in the ground, demanding for the gods to eradicate the spirit, or force it to leave the person alone.[28]

The ancient Mesopotamians also used magic intending to protect themselves from evil sorcerers who might place curses on them.[29] Black magic as a category did not exist in ancient Mesopotamia, and a person legitimately using magic to defend themselves against illegitimate magic would use exactly the same techniques.[29] The only major difference was that curses were enacted in secret;[29] whereas a defense against sorcery was conducted in the open, in front of an audience if possible.[29] One ritual to punish a sorcerer was known as Maqlû, or "The Burning".[29] The person viewed as being afflicted by witchcraft would create an effigy of the sorcerer and put it on trial at night.[29] Then, once the nature of the sorcerer's crimes had been determined, the person would burn the effigy and thereby break the sorcerer's power over them.[29]

The ancient Mesopotamians also performed magical rituals to purify themselves of sins committed unknowingly.[29] One such ritual was known as the Šurpu, or "Burning",[30] in which the caster of the spell would transfer the guilt for all their misdeeds onto various objects such as a strip of dates, an onion, and a tuft of wool.[30] The person would then burn the objects and thereby purify themself of all sins that they might have unknowingly committed.[30] A whole genre of love spells existed.[31] Such spells were believed to cause a person to fall in love with another person, restore love which had faded, or cause a male sexual partner to be able to sustain an erection when he had previously been unable.[31] Other spells were used to reconcile a man with his patron deity or to reconcile a wife with a husband who had been neglecting her.[32]

The ancient Mesopotamians made no distinction between rational science and magic.[33][34][35] When a person became ill, doctors would prescribe both magical formulas to be recited as well as medicinal treatments.[34][35][36] Most magical rituals were intended to be performed by an āšipu, an expert in the magical arts.[34][35][36][37] The profession was generally passed down from generation to generation[36] and was held in extremely high regard and often served as advisors to kings and great leaders.[38] An āšipu probably served not only as a magician, but also as a physician, a priest, a scribe, and a scholar.[38]

The Sumerian god Enki, who was later syncretized with the East Semitic god Ea, was closely associated with magic and incantations;[39] he was the patron god of the bārȗ and the ašipū and was widely regarded as the ultimate source of all arcane knowledge.[40][41][42] The ancient Mesopotamians also believed in omens, which could come when solicited or unsolicited.[43] Regardless of how they came, omens were always taken with the utmost seriousness.[43]

Incantation bowls edit

 
Mandaic-language incantation bowl

A common set of shared assumptions about the causes of evil and how to avert it are found in a form of early protective magic called incantation bowl or magic bowls. The bowls were produced in the Middle East, particularly in Upper Mesopotamia and Syria, what is now Iraq and Iran, and fairly popular during the sixth to eighth centuries.[44][45] The bowls were buried face down and were meant to capture demons. They were commonly placed under the threshold, courtyards, in the corner of the homes of the recently deceased and in cemeteries.[46] A subcategory of incantation bowls are those used in Jewish magical practice. Aramaic incantation bowls are an important source of knowledge about Jewish magical practices.[47][48][49][50][51]

Egypt edit

 
Ancient Egyptian Eye of Horus amulet

In ancient Egypt (Kemet in the Egyptian language), Magic (personified as the god heka) was an integral part of religion and culture which is known to us through a substantial corpus of texts which are products of the Egyptian tradition.[52]

While the category magic has been contentious for modern Egyptology, there is clear support for its applicability from ancient terminology.[53] The Coptic term hik is the descendant of the pharaonic term heka, which, unlike its Coptic counterpart, had no connotation of impiety or illegality, and is attested from the Old Kingdom through to the Roman era.[53] heka was considered morally neutral and was applied to the practices and beliefs of both foreigners and Egyptians alike.[54] The Instructions for Merikare informs us that heka was a beneficence gifted by the creator to humanity "... in order to be weapons to ward off the blow of events".[55]

Magic was practiced by both the literate priestly hierarchy and by illiterate farmers and herdsmen, and the principle of heka underlay all ritual activity, both in the temples and in private settings.[56]

The main principle of heka is centered on the power of words to bring things into being.[57]: 54  Karenga explains the pivotal power of words and their vital ontological role as the primary tool used by the creator to bring the manifest world into being.[58] Because humans were understood to share a divine nature with the gods, snnw ntr (images of the god), the same power to use words creatively that the gods have is shared by humans.[59]

Book of the Dead edit

 
Illustration from the Book of the Dead of Hunefer showing the Opening of the Mouth ceremony being performed before the tomb

The interior walls of the pyramid of Unas, the final pharaoh of the Egyptian Fifth Dynasty, are covered in hundreds of magical spells and inscriptions, running from floor to ceiling in vertical columns.[57]: 54  These inscriptions are known as the Pyramid Texts[57]: 54  and they contain spells needed by the pharaoh in order to survive in the Afterlife.[57]: 54  The Pyramid Texts were strictly for royalty only;[57]: 56  the spells were kept secret from commoners and were written only inside royal tombs.[57]: 56  During the chaos and unrest of the First Intermediate Period, however, tomb robbers broke into the pyramids and saw the magical inscriptions.[57]: 56  Commoners began learning the spells and, by the beginning of the Middle Kingdom, commoners began inscribing similar writings on the sides of their own coffins, hoping that doing so would ensure their own survival in the afterlife.[57]: 56  These writings are known as the Coffin Texts.[57]: 56 

After a person died, his or her corpse would be mummified and wrapped in linen bandages to ensure that the deceased's body would survive for as long as possible[60] because the Egyptians believed that a person's soul could only survive in the afterlife for as long as his or her physical body survived here on earth.[60] The last ceremony before a person's body was sealed away inside the tomb was known as the Opening of the Mouth.[60] In this ritual, the priests would touch various magical instruments to various parts of the deceased's body, thereby giving the deceased the ability to see, hear, taste, and smell in the afterlife.[60]

Amulets edit

The use of amulets, (meket) was widespread among both living and dead ancient Egyptians.[61][57]: 66  They were used for protection and as a means of "...reaffirming the fundamental fairness of the universe".[62] The oldest amulets found are from the predynastic Badarian Period, and they persisted through to Roman times.[63]

Judea edit

In the Mosaic Law, practices such as witchcraft (Heb. קְסָמִ֔ים), being a soothsayer (מְעוֹנֵ֥ן) or a sorcerer (וּמְכַשֵּֽׁף) or one who conjures spells (וְחֹבֵ֖ר חָ֑בֶר) or one who calls up the dead (וְדֹרֵ֖שׁ אֶל־הַמֵּתִֽים) are specifically forbidden as abominations to the Lord.[64]

Halakha (Jewish religious law) forbids divination and other forms of soothsaying, and the Talmud lists many persistent yet condemned divining practices.[65] Practical Kabbalah in historical Judaism, is a branch of the Jewish mystical tradition that concerns the use of magic. It was considered permitted white magic by its practitioners, reserved for the elite, who could separate its spiritual source from qlippothic realms of evil if performed under circumstances that were holy (Q-D-Š) and pure (טומאה וטהרה, tvmh vthrh[66]). The concern of overstepping Judaism's strong prohibitions of impure magic ensured it remained a minor tradition in Jewish history. Its teachings include the use of Divine and angelic names for amulets and incantations.[67] These magical practices of Judaic folk religion which became part of practical Kabbalah date from Talmudic times.[67] The Talmud mentions the use of charms for healing, and a wide range of magical cures were sanctioned by rabbis. It was ruled that any practice actually producing a cure was not to be regarded superstitiously and there has been the widespread practice of medicinal amulets, and folk remedies (segullot) in Jewish societies across time and geography.[68]

Although magic was forbidden by Levitical law in the Hebrew Bible, it was widely practised in the late Second Temple period, and particularly well documented in the period following the destruction of the temple into the 3rd, 4th, and 5th centuries CE.[69][70][71]

Asia edit

China edit

Chinese shamanism, alternatively called Wuism (Chinese: 巫教; pinyin: wū jiào; lit. 'wu religion', 'shamanism', 'witchcraft'; alternatively 巫觋宗教 wū xí zōngjiào), refers to the shamanic religious tradition of China.[72][73] Its features are especially connected to the ancient Neolithic cultures such as the Hongshan culture.[74] Chinese shamanic traditions are intrinsic to Chinese folk religion.[75] Various ritual traditions are rooted in original Chinese shamanism: contemporary Chinese ritual masters are sometimes identified as wu by outsiders,[76] though most orders do not self-identify as such.

Also Taoism has some of its origins from Chinese shamanism:[72][77] it developed around the pursuit of long life (shou /寿), or the status of a xian (, "mountain man", "holy man").[72] Taoism in ancient times until the modern day has used rituals, mantras, and amulets with godly or supernatural powers. Taoist worldviews were thought of as magical or alchemical.[78]

Greco-Roman world edit

 
Hecate, the ancient Greek goddess of magic

During the late sixth and early fifth centuries BCE, the Persian maguš was Graecicized and introduced into the ancient Greek language as μάγος and μαγεία.[15] In doing so it transformed meaning, gaining negative connotations, with the magos being regarded as a charlatan whose ritual practices were fraudulent, strange, unconventional, and dangerous.[15] As noted by Davies, for the ancient Greeks—and subsequently for the ancient Romans—"magic was not distinct from religion but rather an unwelcome, improper expression of it—the religion of the other".[79] The historian Richard Gordon suggested that for the ancient Greeks, being accused of practicing magic was "a form of insult".[80]

This change in meaning was influenced by the military conflicts that the Greek city-states were then engaged in against the Persian Empire.[15] In this context, the term makes appearances in such surviving text as Sophocles' Oedipus Rex, Hippocrates' De morbo sacro, and Gorgias' Encomium of Helen.[15] In Sophocles' play, for example, the character Oedipus derogatorily refers to the seer Tiresius as a magos—in this context meaning something akin to quack or charlatan—reflecting how this epithet was no longer reserved only for Persians.[81]

In the first century BCE, the Greek concept of the magos was adopted into Latin and used by a number of ancient Roman writers as magus and magia.[15] The earliest known Latin use of the term was in Virgil's Eclogue, written around 40 BCE, which makes reference to magicis... sacris (magic rites).[82] The Romans already had other terms for the negative use of supernatural powers, such as veneficus and saga.[82] The Roman use of the term was similar to that of the Greeks, but placed greater emphasis on the judicial application of it.[15] Within the Roman Empire, laws would be introduced criminalising things regarded as magic.[83]

In ancient Roman society, magic was associated with societies to the east of the empire; the first century CE writer Pliny the Elder for instance claimed that magic had been created by the Iranian philosopher Zoroaster, and that it had then been brought west into Greece by the magician Osthanes, who accompanied the military campaigns of the Persian King Xerxes.[84]

Ancient Greek scholarship of the 20th century, almost certainly influenced by Christianising preconceptions of the meanings of magic and religion, and the wish to establish Greek culture as the foundation of Western rationality, developed a theory of ancient Greek magic as primitive and insignificant, and thereby essentially separate from Homeric, communal (polis) religion. Since the last decade of the century, however, recognising the ubiquity and respectability of acts such as katadesmoi (binding spells), described as magic by modern and ancient observers alike, scholars have been compelled to abandon this viewpoint.[85]: 90–95  The Greek word mageuo (practice magic) itself derives from the word Magos, originally simply the Greek name for a Persian tribe known for practicing religion.[86] Non-civic mystery cults have been similarly re-evaluated:[85]: 97–98 

the choices which lay outside the range of cults did not just add additional options to the civic menu, but ... sometimes incorporated critiques of the civic cults and Panhellenic myths or were genuine alternatives to them.

— Simon Price, Religions of the Ancient Greeks (1999)[87]

Katadesmoi (Latin: defixiones), curses inscribed on wax or lead tablets and buried underground, were frequently executed by all strata of Greek society, sometimes to protect the entire polis.[85]: 95–96  Communal curses carried out in public declined after the Greek classical period, but private curses remained common throughout antiquity.[88] They were distinguished as magical by their individualistic, instrumental and sinister qualities.[85]: 96  These qualities, and their perceived deviation from inherently mutable cultural constructs of normality, most clearly delineate ancient magic from the religious rituals of which they form a part.[85]: 102–103 

A large number of magical papyri, in Greek, Coptic, and Demotic, have been recovered and translated.[89] They contain early instances of:

  • the use of magic words said to have the power to command spirits;[90]
  • the use of mysterious symbols or sigils which are thought to be useful when invoking or evoking spirits.[91]

The practice of magic was banned in the late Roman world, and the Codex Theodosianus (438 AD) states:[92]

If any wizard therefore or person imbued with magical contamination who is called by custom of the people a magician...should be apprehended in my retinue, or in that of the Caesar, he shall not escape punishment and torture by the protection of his rank.

Middle Ages edit

Magic practices such as divination, interpretation of omens, sorcery, and use of charms had been specifically forbidden in Mosaic Law [93] and condemned in Biblical histories of the kings.[94] Many of these practices were spoken against in the New Testament as well.[95][96]

Some commentators say that in the first century CE, early Christian authors absorbed the Greco-Roman concept of magic and incorporated it into their developing Christian theology,[83]and that these Christians retained the already implied Greco-Roman negative stereotypes of the term and extented them by incorporating conceptual patterns borrowed from Jewish thought, in particular the opposition of magic and miracle.[83] Some early Christian authors followed the Greek-Roman thinking by ascribing the origin of magic to the human realm, mainly to Zoroaster and Osthanes. The Christian view was that magic was a product of the Babylonians, Persians, or Egyptians.[97] The Christians shared with earlier classical culture the idea that magic was something distinct from proper religion, although drew their distinction between the two in different ways.[98]

 
A 17th-century depiction of the medieval writer Isidore of Seville, who provided a list of activities he regarded as magical

For early Christian writers like Augustine of Hippo, magic did not merely constitute fraudulent and unsanctioned ritual practices, but was the very opposite of religion because it relied upon cooperation from demons, the henchmen of Satan.[83] In this, Christian ideas of magic were closely linked to the Christian category of paganism,[99] and both magic and paganism were regarded as belonging under the broader category of superstitio (superstition), another term borrowed from pre-Christian Roman culture.[98] This Christian emphasis on the inherent immorality and wrongness of magic as something conflicting with good religion was far starker than the approach in the other large monotheistic religions of the period, Judaism and Islam.[100] For instance, while Christians regarded demons as inherently evil, the jinn—comparable entities in Islamic mythology—were perceived as more ambivalent figures by Muslims.[100]

The model of the magician in Christian thought was provided by Simon Magus, (Simon the Magician), a figure who opposed Saint Peter in both the Acts of the Apostles and the apocryphal yet influential Acts of Peter.[101] The historian Michael D. Bailey stated that in medieval Europe, magic was a "relatively broad and encompassing category".[102] Christian theologians believed that there were multiple different forms of magic, the majority of which were types of divination, for instance, Isidore of Seville produced a catalogue of things he regarded as magic in which he listed divination by the four elements i.e. geomancy, hydromancy, aeromancy, and pyromancy, as well as by observation of natural phenomena e.g. the flight of birds and astrology. He also mentioned enchantment and ligatures (the medical use of magical objects bound to the patient) as being magical.[103] Medieval Europe also saw magic come to be associated with the Old Testament figure of Solomon; various grimoires, or books outlining magical practices, were written that claimed to have been written by Solomon, most notably the Key of Solomon.[104]

In early medieval Europe, magia was a term of condemnation.[105] In medieval Europe, Christians often suspected Muslims and Jews of engaging in magical practices;[106] in certain cases, these perceived magical rites—including the alleged Jewish sacrifice of Christian children—resulted in Christians massacring these religious minorities.[107] Christian groups often also accused other, rival Christian groups such as the Hussites—which they regarded as heretical—of engaging in magical activities.[101][108] Medieval Europe also saw the term maleficium applied to forms of magic that were conducted with the intention of causing harm.[102] The later Middle Ages saw words for these practitioners of harmful magical acts appear in various European languages: sorcière in French, Hexe in German, strega in Italian, and bruja in Spanish.[109] The English term for malevolent practitioners of magic, witch, derived from the earlier Old English term wicce.[109]

Ars Magica or magic is a major component and supporting contribution to the belief and practice of spiritual, and in many cases, physical healing throughout the Middle Ages. Emanating from many modern interpretations lies a trail of misconceptions about magic, one of the largest revolving around wickedness or the existence of nefarious beings who practice it. These misinterpretations stem from numerous acts or rituals that have been performed throughout antiquity, and due to their exoticism from the commoner's perspective, the rituals invoked uneasiness and an even stronger sense of dismissal.[110][111]

 
An excerpt from Sefer Raziel HaMalakh, featuring various magical sigils (סגולות segulot in Hebrew)

In the Medieval Jewish view, the separation of the mystical and magical elements of Kabbalah, dividing it into speculative theological Kabbalah (Kabbalah Iyyunit) with its meditative traditions, and theurgic practical Kabbalah (Kabbalah Ma'asit), had occurred by the beginning of the 14th century.[112]

One societal force in the Middle Ages more powerful than the singular commoner, the Christian Church, rejected magic as a whole because it was viewed as a means of tampering with the natural world in a supernatural manner associated with the biblical verses of Deuteronomy 18:9–12.[further explanation needed] Despite the many negative connotations which surround the term magic, there exist many elements that are seen in a divine or holy light.[113]

The divine right of kings in England was thought to be able to give them "sacred magic" power to heal thousands of their subjects from sicknesses.[114]

Diversified instruments or rituals used in medieval magic include, but are not limited to: various amulets, talismans, potions, as well as specific chants, dances, and prayers. Along with these rituals are the adversely imbued notions of demonic participation which influence of them. The idea that magic was devised, taught, and worked by demons would have seemed reasonable to anyone who read the Greek magical papyri or the Sefer-ha-Razim and found that healing magic appeared alongside rituals for killing people, gaining wealth, or personal advantage, and coercing women into sexual submission.[115] Archaeology is contributing to a fuller understanding of ritual practices performed in the home, on the body and in monastic and church settings.[116][117]

The Islamic reaction towards magic did not condemn magic in general and distinguished between magic which can heal sickness and possession, and sorcery. The former is therefore a special gift from God, while the latter is achieved through help of Jinn and devils. Ibn al-Nadim held that exorcists gain their power by their obedience to God, while sorcerers please the devils by acts of disobedience and sacrifices and they in return do him a favor.[118] According to Ibn Arabi, Al-Ḥajjāj ibn Yusuf al-Shubarbuli was able to walk on water due to his piety.[119] According to the Quran 2:102, magic was also taught to humans by devils and the angels Harut and Marut.[120]

The influence of Arab Islamic magic in medieval and Renaissance Europe was very notable. Some magic books such as Picatrix and Al Kindi's De Radiis were the basis for much of medieval magic in Europe and for subsequent developments in the Renaissance. Another Arab Muslim author fundamental to the developments of medieval and Renaissance European magic was Ahmad al-Buni, with his books such as the Shams al-Ma'arif which deal above all with the evocation and invocation of spirits or jinn to control them, obtain powers and make wishes come true. [121] These books are still important to the Islamic world specifically in Simiyya, a doctrine found commonly within Sufi-occult traditions. [122]

 
Frontispiece of an English translation of Natural Magick published in London in 1658

During the early modern period, the concept of magic underwent a more positive reassessment through the development of the concept of magia naturalis (natural magic).[83] This was a term introduced and developed by two Italian humanists, Marsilio Ficino and Giovanni Pico della Mirandola.[83] For them, magia was viewed as an elemental force pervading many natural processes,[83] and thus was fundamentally distinct from the mainstream Christian idea of demonic magic.[123] Their ideas influenced an array of later philosophers and writers, among them Paracelsus, Giordano Bruno, Johannes Reuchlin, and Johannes Trithemius.[83] According to the historian Richard Kieckhefer, the concept of magia naturalis took "firm hold in European culture" during the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries,[124] attracting the interest of natural philosophers of various theoretical orientations, including Aristotelians, Neoplatonists, and Hermeticists.[125]

Adherents of this position argued that magia could appear in both good and bad forms; in 1625, the French librarian Gabriel Naudé wrote his Apology for all the Wise Men Falsely Suspected of Magic, in which he distinguished "Mosoaicall Magick"—which he claimed came from God and included prophecies, miracles, and speaking in tongues—from "geotick" magic caused by demons.[126] While the proponents of magia naturalis insisted that this did not rely on the actions of demons, critics disagreed, arguing that the demons had simply deceived these magicians.[127] By the seventeenth century the concept of magia naturalis had moved in increasingly 'naturalistic' directions, with the distinctions between it and science becoming blurred.[128] The validity of magia naturalis as a concept for understanding the universe then came under increasing criticism during the Age of Enlightenment in the eighteenth century.[129]

Despite the attempt to reclaim the term magia for use in a positive sense, it did not supplant traditional attitudes toward magic in the West, which remained largely negative.[129] At the same time as magia naturalis was attracting interest and was largely tolerated, Europe saw an active persecution of accused witches believed to be guilty of maleficia.[125] Reflecting the term's continued negative associations, Protestants often sought to denigrate Roman Catholic sacramental and devotional practices as being magical rather than religious.[130] Many Roman Catholics were concerned by this allegation and for several centuries various Roman Catholic writers devoted attention to arguing that their practices were religious rather than magical.[131] At the same time, Protestants often used the accusation of magic against other Protestant groups which they were in contest with.[132] In this way, the concept of magic was used to prescribe what was appropriate as religious belief and practice.[131] Similar claims were also being made in the Islamic world during this period. The Arabian cleric Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab—founder of Wahhabism—for instance condemned a range of customs and practices such as divination and the veneration of spirits as sihr, which he in turn claimed was a form of shirk, the sin of idolatry.[133]

The Renaissance edit

Renaissance humanism saw a resurgence in hermeticism and Neo-Platonic varieties of ceremonial magic. The Renaissance, on the other hand, saw the rise of science, in such forms as the dethronement of the Ptolemaic theory of the universe, the distinction of astronomy from astrology, and of chemistry from alchemy.[134][page needed]

There was great uncertainty in distinguishing practices of superstition, occultism, and perfectly sound scholarly knowledge or pious ritual. The intellectual and spiritual tensions erupted in the Early Modern witch craze, further reinforced by the turmoil of the Protestant Reformation, especially in Germany, England, and Scotland.[134][page needed]

In Hasidism, the displacement of practical Kabbalah using directly magical means, by conceptual and meditative trends gained much further emphasis, while simultaneously instituting meditative theurgy for material blessings at the heart of its social mysticism.[135] Hasidism internalised Kabbalah through the psychology of deveikut (cleaving to God), and cleaving to the Tzadik (Hasidic Rebbe). In Hasidic doctrine, the tzaddik channels Divine spiritual and physical bounty to his followers by altering the Will of God (uncovering a deeper concealed Will) through his own deveikut and self-nullification. Dov Ber of Mezeritch is concerned to distinguish this theory of the Tzadik's will altering and deciding the Divine Will, from directly magical process.[136]

 
In the nineteenth century, the Haitian government began to legislate against Vodou, describing it as a form of witchcraft; this conflicted with Vodou practitioners' own understanding of their religion.[137]

In the sixteenth century, European societies began to conquer and colonise other continents around the world, and as they did so they applied European concepts of magic and witchcraft to practices found among the peoples whom they encountered.[138] Usually, these European colonialists regarded the natives as primitives and savages whose belief systems were diabolical and needed to be eradicated and replaced by Christianity.[139] Because Europeans typically viewed these non-European peoples as being morally and intellectually inferior to themselves, it was expected that such societies would be more prone to practicing magic.[140] Women who practiced traditional rites were labelled as witches by the Europeans.[140]

In various cases, these imported European concepts and terms underwent new transformations as they merged with indigenous concepts.[141] In West Africa, for instance, Portuguese travellers introduced their term and concept of the feitiçaria (often translated as sorcery) and the feitiço (spell) to the native population, where it was transformed into the concept of the fetish. When later Europeans encountered these West African societies, they wrongly believed that the fetiche was an indigenous African term rather than the result of earlier inter-continental encounters.[141] Sometimes, colonised populations themselves adopted these European concepts for their own purposes. In the early nineteenth century, the newly independent Haitian government of Jean-Jacques Dessalines began to suppress the practice of Vodou, and in 1835 Haitian law-codes categorised all Vodou practices as sortilège (sorcery/witchcraft), suggesting that it was all conducted with harmful intent, whereas among Vodou practitioners the performance of harmful rites was already given a separate and distinct category, known as maji.[137]

Baroque period edit

During the Baroque era, several intriguing figures engaged with occult and magical themes that went beyond conventional thinking. Michael Sendivogius (1566–1636), a Polish alchemist, emphasized empirical experimentation in alchemy and made notable contributions to early chemistry. Tommaso Campanella (1568–1639), an Italian philosopher, blended Christianity with mysticism in works like The City of the Sun, envisioning an ideal society governed by divine principles. Jakob Böhme (1575–1624), a German mystic, explored the relationship between the divine and human experience, influencing later mystical movements.

Jan Baptist van Helmont, a Flemish chemist, coined the term "gas" and conducted experiments on plant growth, expanding the understanding of chemistry. Sir Kenelm Digby, known for his diverse interests, created the "Sympathetic Powder", believed to have mystical healing properties. Isaac Newton, famous for his scientific achievements, also delved into alchemy and collected esoteric manuscripts, revealing his fascination with hidden knowledge. These individuals collectively embody the curiosity and exploration characteristic of the Baroque period.

Modernity edit

By the nineteenth century, European intellectuals no longer saw the practice of magic through the framework of sin and instead regarded magical practices and beliefs as "an aberrational mode of thought antithetical to the dominant cultural logic – a sign of psychological impairment and marker of racial or cultural inferiority".[142]

As educated elites in Western societies increasingly rejected the efficacy of magical practices, legal systems ceased to threaten practitioners of magical activities with punishment for the crimes of diabolism and witchcraft, and instead threatened them with the accusation that they were defrauding people through promising to provide things which they could not.[143]

This spread of European colonial power across the world influenced how academics would come to frame the concept of magic.[144] In the nineteenth century, several scholars adopted the traditional, negative concept of magic.[129] That they chose to do so was not inevitable, for they could have followed the example adopted by prominent esotericists active at the time like Helena Blavatsky who had chosen to use the term and concept of magic in a positive sense.[129] Various writers also used the concept of magic to criticise religion by arguing that the latter still displayed many of the negative traits of the former. An example of this was the American journalist H. L. Mencken in his polemical 1930 work Treatise on the Gods; he sought to critique religion by comparing it to magic, arguing that the division between the two was misplaced.[145] The concept of magic was also adopted by theorists in the new field of psychology, where it was often used synonymously with superstition, although the latter term proved more common in early psychological texts.[146]

In the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries, folklorists examined rural communities across Europe in search of magical practices, which at the time they typically understood as survivals of ancient belief systems.[147] It was only in the 1960s that anthropologists like Jeanne Favret-Saada also began looking in depth at magic in European contexts, having previously focused on examining magic in non-Western contexts.[148] In the twentieth century, magic also proved a topic of interest to the Surrealists, an artistic movement based largely in Europe; the Surrealism André Breton for instance published L'Art magique in 1957, discussing what he regarded as the links between magic and art.[149]

The scholarly application of magic as a sui generis category that can be applied to any socio-cultural context was linked with the promotion of modernity to both Western and non-Western audiences.[150]

The term magic has become pervasive in the popular imagination and idiom.[6] In contemporary contexts, the word magic is sometimes used to "describe a type of excitement, of wonder, or sudden delight", and in such a context can be "a term of high praise".[151] Despite its historical contrast against science, scientists have also adopted the term in application to various concepts, such as magic acid, magic bullets, and magic angles.[6]

 
Many concepts of modern ceremonial magic are heavily influenced by the ideas of Aleister Crowley.

Modern Western magic has challenged widely-held preconceptions about contemporary religion and spirituality.[152] The polemical discourses about magic influenced the self-understanding of modern magicians, several whom—such as Aleister Crowley —were well versed in academic literature on the subject.[153] According to scholar of religion Henrik Bogdan, "arguably the best known emic definition" of the term magic was provided by Crowley.[153] Crowley—who favoured the spelling 'magick' over magic to distinguish it from stage illusionism[10]—was of the view that "Magick is the Science and Art of causing Change to occur in conformity with Will".[153] Crowley's definition influenced that of subsequent magicians.[153] Dion Fortune of the Fraternity of the Inner Light for instance stated that "Magic is the art of changing consciousness according to Will".[153] Gerald Gardner, the founder of Gardnerian Wicca, stated that magic was "attempting to cause the physically unusual",[153] while Anton LaVey, the founder of LaVeyan Satanism, described magic as "the change in situations or events in accordance with one's will, which would, using normally acceptable methods, be unchangeable."[153]

The chaos magic movement emerged during the late 20th century, as an attempt to strip away the symbolic, ritualistic, theological or otherwise ornamental aspects of other occult traditions and distill magic down to a set of basic techniques.[154]

These modern Western concepts of magic rely on a belief in correspondences connected to an unknown occult force that permeates the universe.[155] As noted by Hanegraaff, this operated according to "a new meaning of magic, which could not possibly have existed in earlier periods, precisely because it is elaborated in reaction to the "disenchantment of the world"."[155] For many, and perhaps most, modern Western magicians, the goal of magic is deemed to be personal spiritual development.[156] The perception of magic as a form of self-development is central to the way that magical practices have been adopted into forms of modern Paganism and the New Age phenomenon.[156] One significant development within modern Western magical practices has been sex magic.[156] This was a practice promoted in the writings of Paschal Beverly Randolph and subsequently exerted a strong interest on occultist magicians like Crowley and Theodor Reuss.[156]

The adoption of the term magic by modern occultists can in some instances be a deliberate attempt to champion those areas of Western society which have traditionally been marginalised as a means of subverting dominant systems of power.[157] The influential American Wiccan and author Starhawk for instance stated that "Magic is another word that makes people uneasy, so I use it deliberately, because the words we are comfortable with, the words that sound acceptable, rational, scientific, and intellectually correct, are comfortable precisely because they are the language of estrangement."[158] In the present day, "among some countercultural subgroups the label is considered 'cool'"[159]

Conceptual development edit

According to anthropologist Edward Evan Evans-Pritchard, magic formed a rational framework of beliefs and knowledge in some cultures, like the Azande people of Africa.[160] The historian Owen Davies stated that the word magic was "beyond simple definition",[161] and had "a range of meanings".[162] Similarly, the historian Michael D. Bailey characterised magic as "a deeply contested category and a very fraught label";[163] as a category, he noted, it was "profoundly unstable" given that definitions of the term have "varied dramatically across time and between cultures".[164] Scholars have engaged in extensive debates as to how to define magic,[165] with such debates resulting in intense dispute.[166] Throughout such debates, the scholarly community has failed to agree on a definition of magic, in a similar manner to how they have failed to agree on a definition of religion.[166] According with scholar of religion Michael Stausberg the phenomenon of people applying the concept of magic to refer to themselves and their own practices and beliefs goes as far back as late antiquity. However, even among those throughout history who have described themselves as magicians, there has been no common ground of what magic is.[167]

In Africa, the word magic might simply be understood as denoting management of forces, which, as an activity, is not weighted morally and is accordingly a neutral activity from the start of a magical practice, but by the will of the magician, is thought to become and to have an outcome which represents either good or bad (evil).[168][169] Ancient African culture was in the habit customarily of always discerning difference between magic, and a group of other things, which are not magic, these things were medicine, divination, witchcraft and sorcery.[170] Opinion differs on how religion and magic are related to each other with respect development or to which developed from which, some think they developed together from a shared origin, some think religion developed from magic, and some, magic from religion.[171]

Anthropological and sociological theories of magic generally serve to sharply demarcate certain practices from other, otherwise similar practices in a given society.[98] According to Bailey: "In many cultures and across various historical periods, categories of magic often define and maintain the limits of socially and culturally acceptable actions in respect to numinous or occult entities or forces. Even more, basically, they serve to delineate arenas of appropriate belief."[172] In this, he noted that "drawing these distinctions is an exercise in power".[172] This tendency has had repercussions for the study of magic, with academics self-censoring their research because of the effects on their careers.[173]

Randall Styers noted that attempting to define magic represents "an act of demarcation" by which it is juxtaposed against "other social practices and modes of knowledge" such as religion and science.[174] The historian Karen Louise Jolly described magic as "a category of exclusion, used to define an unacceptable way of thinking as either the opposite of religion or of science".[175]

Modern scholarship has produced various definitions and theories of magic.[176] According to Bailey, "these have typically framed magic in relation to, or more frequently in distinction from, religion and science."[176] Since the emergence of the study of religion and the social sciences, magic has been a "central theme in the theoretical literature" produced by scholars operating in these academic disciplines.[165] Magic is one of the most heavily theorized concepts in the study of religion,[177] and also played a key role in early theorising within anthropology.[178] Styers believed that it held such a strong appeal for social theorists because it provides "such a rich site for articulating and contesting the nature and boundaries of modernity".[179] Scholars have commonly used it as a foil for the concept of religion, regarding magic as the "illegitimate (and effeminized) sibling" of religion.[180] Alternately, others have used it as a middle-ground category located between religion and science.[180]

The context in which scholars framed their discussions of magic was informed by the spread of European colonial power across the world in the modern period.[144] These repeated attempts to define magic resonated with broader social concerns,[8] and the pliability of the concept has allowed it to be "readily adaptable as a polemical and ideological tool".[131] The links that intellectuals made between magic and those they characterized as primitives helped to legitimise European and Euro-American imperialism and colonialism, as these Western colonialists expressed the view that those who believed in and practiced magic were unfit to govern themselves and should be governed by those who, rather than believing in magic, believed in science and/or (Christian) religion.[7] In Bailey's words, "the association of certain peoples [whether non-Europeans or poor, rural Europeans] with magic served to distance and differentiate them from those who ruled over them, and in large part to justify that rule."[5]

Many different definitions of magic have been offered by scholars, although—according to Hanegraaff—these can be understood as variations of a small number of heavily influential theories.[177]

Intellectualist approach edit
 
Edward Tylor, an anthropologist who used the term magic in reference to sympathetic magic, an idea that he associated with his concept of animism

The intellectualist approach to defining magic is associated with two British anthropologists, Edward Tylor and James G. Frazer.[181] This approach viewed magic as the theoretical opposite of science,[182] and came to preoccupy much anthropological thought on the subject.[183] This approach was situated within the evolutionary models which underpinned thinking in the social sciences during the early 19th century.[184] The first social scientist to present magic as something that predated religion in an evolutionary development was Herbert Spencer;[185] in his A System of Synthetic Philosophy, he used the term magic in reference to sympathetic magic.[186] Spencer regarded both magic and religion as being rooted in false speculation about the nature of objects and their relationship to other things.[187]

Tylor's understanding of magic was linked to his concept of animism.[188] In his 1871 book Primitive Culture, Tylor characterized magic as beliefs based on "the error of mistaking ideal analogy for real analogy". [189] In Tylor's view, "primitive man, having come to associate in thought those things which he found by experience to be connected in fact, proceeded erroneously to invert this action, and to conclude that association in thought must involve similar connection in reality. He thus attempted to discover, to foretell, and to cause events by means of processes which we can now see to have only an ideal significance".[190] Tylor was dismissive of magic, describing it as "one of the most pernicious delusions that ever vexed mankind".[191] Tylor's views proved highly influential,[192] and helped to establish magic as a major topic of anthropological research.[185]

 
James Frazer regarded magic as the first stage in human development, to be followed by religion and then science.

Tylor's ideas were adopted and simplified by James Frazer.[193] He used the term magic to mean sympathetic magic,[194] describing it as a practice relying on the magician's belief "that things act on each other at a distance through a secret sympathy", something which he described as "an invisible ether".[190] He further divided this magic into two forms, the "homeopathic (imitative, mimetic)" and the "contagious".[190] The former was the idea that "like produces like", or that the similarity between two objects could result in one influencing the other. The latter was based on the idea that contact between two objects allowed the two to continue to influence one another at a distance.[195] Like Taylor, Frazer viewed magic negatively, describing it as "the bastard sister of science", arising from "one great disastrous fallacy".[196]

Where Frazer differed from Tylor was in characterizing a belief in magic as a major stage in humanity's cultural development, describing it as part of a tripartite division in which magic came first, religion came second, and eventually science came third.[197] For Frazer, all early societies started as believers in magic, with some of them moving away from this and into religion.[198] He believed that both magic and religion involved a belief in spirits but that they differed in the way that they responded to these spirits. For Frazer, magic "constrains or coerces" these spirits while religion focuses on "conciliating or propitiating them".[198] He acknowledged that their common ground resulted in a cross-over of magical and religious elements in various instances; for instance he claimed that the sacred marriage was a fertility ritual which combined elements from both world-views.[199]

Some scholars retained the evolutionary framework used by Frazer but changed the order of its stages; the German ethnologist Wilhelm Schmidt argued that religion—by which he meant monotheism—was the first stage of human belief, which later degenerated into both magic and polytheism.[200] Others rejected the evolutionary framework entirely. Frazer's notion that magic had given way to religion as part of an evolutionary framework was later deconstructed by the folklorist and anthropologist Andrew Lang in his essay "Magic and Religion"; Lang did so by highlighting how Frazer's framework relied upon misrepresenting ethnographic accounts of beliefs and practiced among indigenous Australians to fit his concept of magic.[201]

Functionalist approach edit

The functionalist approach to defining magic is associated with the French sociologists Marcel Mauss and Emile Durkheim.[202] In this approach, magic is understood as being the theoretical opposite of religion.[203]

Mauss set forth his conception of magic in a 1902 essay, "A General Theory of Magic".[204] Mauss used the term magic in reference to "any rite that is not part of an organized cult: a rite that is private, secret, mysterious, and ultimately tending towards one that is forbidden".[202] Conversely, he associated religion with organised cult.[205] By saying that magic was inherently non-social, Mauss had been influenced by the traditional Christian understandings of the concept.[206] Mauss deliberately rejected the intellectualist approach promoted by Frazer, believing that it was inappropriate to restrict the term magic to sympathetic magic, as Frazer had done.[207] He expressed the view that "there are not only magical rites which are not sympathetic, but neither is sympathy a prerogative of magic, since there are sympathetic practices in religion".[205]

Mauss' ideas were adopted by Durkheim in his 1912 book The Elementary Forms of the Religious Life.[208] Durkheim was of the view that both magic and religion pertained to "sacred things, that is to say, things set apart and forbidden".[209] Where he saw them as being different was in their social organisation. Durkheim used the term magic to describe things that were inherently anti-social, existing in contrast to what he referred to as a Church, the religious beliefs shared by a social group; in his words, "There is no Church of magic."[210] Durkheim expressed the view that "there is something inherently anti-religious about the maneuvers of the magician",[203] and that a belief in magic "does not result in binding together those who adhere to it, nor in uniting them into a group leading a common life."[209] Durkheim's definition encounters problems in situations—such as the rites performed by Wiccans—in which acts carried out communally have been regarded, either by practitioners or observers, as being magical.[211]

Scholars have criticized the idea that magic and religion can be differentiated into two distinct, separate categories.[212] The social anthropologist Alfred Radcliffe-Brown suggested that "a simple dichotomy between magic and religion" was unhelpful and thus both should be subsumed under the broader category of ritual.[213] Many later anthropologists followed his example.[213] Nevertheless, this distinction is still often made by scholars discussing this topic.[212]

Emotionalist approach edit

The emotionalist approach to magic is associated with the English anthropologist Robert Ranulph Marett, the Austrian Sigmund Freud, and the Polish anthropologist Bronisław Malinowski.[214]

Marett viewed magic as a response to stress.[215] In a 1904 article, he argued that magic was a cathartic or stimulating practice designed to relieve feelings of tension.[215] As his thought developed, he increasingly rejected the idea of a division between magic and religion and began to use the term "magico-religious" to describe the early development of both.[215] Malinowski similarly understood magic to Marett, tackling the issue in a 1925 article.[216] He rejected Frazer's evolutionary hypothesis that magic was followed by religion and then science as a series of distinct stages in societal development, arguing that all three were present in each society.[217] In his view, both magic and religion "arise and function in situations of emotional stress" although whereas religion is primarily expressive, magic is primarily practical.[217] He therefore defined magic as "a practical art consisting of acts which are only means to a definite end expected to follow later on".[217] For Malinowski, magical acts were to be carried out for a specific end, whereas religious ones were ends in themselves.[211] He for instance believed that fertility rituals were magical because they were carried out with the intention of meeting a specific need.[217] As part of his functionalist approach, Malinowski saw magic not as irrational but as something that served a useful function, being sensible within the given social and environmental context.[218]

 
Ideas about magic were also promoted by Sigmund Freud.

The term magic was used liberally by Freud.[219] He also saw magic as emerging from human emotion but interpreted it very differently to Marett.[220] Freud explains that "the associated theory of magic merely explains the paths along which magic proceeds; it does not explain its true essence, namely the misunderstanding which leads it to replace the laws of nature by psychological ones".[221] Freud emphasizes that what led primitive men to come up with magic is the power of wishes: "His wishes are accompanied by a motor impulse, the will, which is later destined to alter the whole face of the earth to satisfy his wishes. This motor impulse is at first employed to give a representation of the satisfying situation in such a way that it becomes possible to experience the satisfaction by means of what might be described as motor hallucinations. This kind of representation of a satisfied wish is quite comparable to children's play, which succeeds their earlier purely sensory technique of satisfaction. [...] As time goes on, the psychological accent shifts from the motives for the magical act on to the measures by which it is carried out—that is, on to the act itself. [...] It thus comes to appear as though it is the magical act itself which, owing to its similarity with the desired result, alone determines the occurrence of that result."[222]

In the early 1960s, the anthropologists Murray and Rosalie Wax put forward the argument that scholars should look at the magical worldview of a given society on its own terms rather than trying to rationalize it in terms of Western ideas about scientific knowledge.[223] Their ideas were heavily criticised by other anthropologists, who argued that they had set up a false dichotomy between non-magical Western worldview and magical non-Western worldviews.[224] The concept of the magical worldview nevertheless gained widespread use in history, folkloristics, philosophy, cultural theory, and psychology.[225] The notion of magical thinking has also been utilised by various psychologists.[226] In the 1920s, the psychologist Jean Piaget used the concept as part of his argument that children were unable to clearly differentiate between the mental and the physical.[226] According to this perspective, children begin to abandon their magical thinking between the ages of six and nine.[226]

According to Stanley Tambiah, magic, science, and religion all have their own "quality of rationality", and have been influenced by politics and ideology.[227] As opposed to religion, Tambiah suggests that mankind has a much more personal control over events. Science, according to Tambiah, is "a system of behavior by which man acquires mastery of the environment."[228]

Ethnocentrism edit

The magic-religion-science triangle developed in European society based on evolutionary ideas i.e. that magic evolved into religion, which in turn evolved into science.[203] However using a Western analytical tool when discussing non-Western cultures, or pre-modern forms of Western society, raises problems as it may impose alien Western categories on them.[229] While magic remains an emic (insider) term in the history of Western societies, it remains an etic (outsider) term when applied to non-Western societies and even within specific Western societies. For this reason, academics like Michael D. Bailey suggest abandon the term altogether as an academic category.[230] During the twentieth century, many scholars focusing on Asian and African societies rejected the term magic, as well as related concepts like witchcraft, in favour of the more precise terms and concepts that existed within these specific societies like Juju.[231] A similar approach has been taken by many scholars studying pre-modern societies in Europe, such as Classical antiquity, who find the modern concept of magic inappropriate and favour more specific terms originating within the framework of the ancient cultures which they are studying.[232] Alternately, this term implies that all categories of magic are ethnocentric and that such Western preconceptions are an unavoidable component of scholarly research.[229] This century has seen a trend towards emic ethnographic studies by scholar practitioners that explicitly explore the emic/etic divide.[233]

Many scholars have argued that the use of the term as an analytical tool within academic scholarship should be rejected altogether.[234] The scholar of religion Jonathan Z. Smith for example argued that it had no utility as an etic term that scholars should use.[235] The historian of religion Wouter Hanegraaff agreed, on the grounds that its use is founded in conceptions of Western superiority and has "...served as a 'scientific' justification for converting non-European peoples from benighted superstitions..." stating that "the term magic is an important object of historical research, but not intended for doing research."[236]

Bailey noted that, as of the early 21st century, few scholars sought grand definitions of magic but instead focused with "careful attention to particular contexts", examining what a term like magic meant to a given society; this approach, he noted, "call[ed] into question the legitimacy of magic as a universal category".[237] The scholars of religion Berndt-Christian Otto and Michael Stausberg suggested that it would be perfectly possible for scholars to talk about amulets, curses, healing procedures, and other cultural practices often regarded as magical in Western culture without any recourse to the concept of magic itself.[238] The idea that magic should be rejected as an analytic term developed in anthropology, before moving into Classical studies and Biblical studies in the 1980s.[239] Since the 1990s, the term's usage among scholars of religion has declined.[235]

Witchcraft edit

The historian Ronald Hutton notes the presence of four distinct meanings of the term witchcraft in the English language. Historically, the term primarily referred to the practice of causing harm to others through supernatural or magical means. This remains, according to Hutton, "the most widespread and frequent" understanding of the term.[240] Moreover, Hutton also notes three other definitions in current usage; to refer to anyone who conducts magical acts, for benevolent or malevolent intent; for practitioners of the modern Pagan religion of Wicca; or as a symbol of women resisting male authority and asserting an independent female authority.[241] Belief in witchcraft is often present within societies and groups whose cultural framework includes a magical world view.[242]

Those regarded as being magicians have often faced suspicion from other members of their society.[243] This is particularly the case if these perceived magicians have been associated with social groups already considered morally suspect in a particular society, such as foreigners, women, or the lower classes.[244] In contrast to these negative associations, many practitioners of activities that have been labelled magical have emphasised that their actions are benevolent and beneficial.[245] This conflicted with the common Christian view that all activities categorised as being forms of magic were intrinsically bad regardless of the intent of the magician, because all magical actions relied on the aid of demons.[100] There could be conflicting attitudes regarding the practices of a magician; in European history, authorities often believed that cunning folk and traditional healers were harmful because their practices were regarded as magical and thus stemming from contact with demons, whereas a local community might value and respect these individuals because their skills and services were deemed beneficial.[246]

In Western societies, the practice of magic, especially when harmful, was usually associated with women.[247] For instance, during the witch trials of the early modern period, around three quarters of those executed as witches were female, to only a quarter who were men.[248] That women were more likely to be accused and convicted of witchcraft in this period might have been because their position was more legally vulnerable, with women having little or no legal standing that was independent of their male relatives.[248] The conceptual link between women and magic in Western culture may be because many of the activities regarded as magical—from rites to encourage fertility to potions to induce abortions—were associated with the female sphere.[249] It might also be connected to the fact that many cultures portrayed women as being inferior to men on an intellectual, moral, spiritual, and physical level.[250]

Magicians edit

 
The Magician card from a 15th-century tarot deck

Many of the practices which have been labelled magic can be performed by anyone.[251] For instance, some charms can be recited by individuals with no specialist knowledge nor any claim to having a specific power.[252] Others require specialised training in order to perform them.[251] Some of the individuals who performed magical acts on a more than occasional basis came to be identified as magicians, or with related concepts like sorcerers/sorceresses, witches, or cunning folk.[252] Identities as a magician can stem from an individual's own claims about themselves, or it can be a label placed upon them by others.[252] In the latter case, an individual could embrace such a label, or they could reject it, sometimes vehemently.[252]

Economic incentives can encourage individuals to identify as magicians.[143] In the cases of various forms of traditional healer, as well as the later stage magicians or illusionists, the label of magician could become a job description.[252] Others claim such an identity out of a genuinely held belief that they have specific unusual powers or talents.[253] Different societies have different social regulations regarding who can take on such a role; for instance, it may be a question of familial heredity, or there may be gender restrictions on who is allowed to engage in such practices.[254] A variety of personal traits may be credited with giving magical power, and frequently they are associated with an unusual birth into the world.[255] For instance, in Hungary it was believed that a táltos would be born with teeth or an additional finger.[256] In various parts of Europe, it was believed that being born with a caul would associate the child with supernatural abilities.[256] In some cases, a ritual initiation is required before taking on a role as a specialist in such practices, and in others it is expected that an individual will receive a mentorship from another specialist.[257]

Davies noted that it was possible to "crudely divide magic specialists into religious and lay categories".[258] He noted for instance that Roman Catholic priests, with their rites of exorcism, and access to holy water and blessed herbs, could be conceived as being magical practitioners.[259] Traditionally, the most common method of identifying, differentiating, and establishing magical practitioners from common people is by initiation. By means of rites the magician's relationship to the supernatural and his entry into a closed professional class is established (often through rituals that simulate death and rebirth into a new life).[260] However, Berger and Ezzy explain that since the rise of Neopaganism, "As there is no central bureaucracy or dogma to determine authenticity, an individual's self-determination as a Witch, Wiccan, Pagan or Neopagan is usually taken at face value".[261] Ezzy argues that practitioners' worldviews have been neglected in many sociological and anthropological studies and that this is because of "a culturally narrow understanding of science that devalues magical beliefs".[262]

Mauss argues that the powers of both specialist and common magicians are determined by culturally accepted standards of the sources and the breadth of magic: a magician cannot simply invent or claim new magic. In practice, the magician is only as powerful as his peers believe him to be.[263]

Throughout recorded history, magicians have often faced skepticism regarding their purported powers and abilities.[264] For instance, in sixteenth-century England, the writer Reginald Scot wrote The Discoverie of Witchcraft, in which he argued that many of those accused of witchcraft or otherwise claiming magical capabilities were fooling people using illusionism.[265]

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ "magic | Etymology, origin and meaning of magic by etymonline". www.etymonline.com. Retrieved 2022-10-13.
  2. ^ Hutton 2017, p. x.
  3. ^ Bailey 2018, pp. 1–5.
  4. ^ Bogdan 2012, p. 2; Graham 2018, p. 255.
  5. ^ a b Bailey 2018, p. 89.
  6. ^ a b c Davies 2012, p. 1.
  7. ^ a b c Styers 2004, p. 14.
  8. ^ a b Styers 2004, p. 8.
  9. ^ Crowley (1997), Introduction to Part III.
  10. ^ a b Bogdan 2012, p. 12; Bailey 2018, pp. 22–23.
  11. ^ Berger & Ezzy 2007, p. 24.
  12. ^ Hanegraaff 2012, p. 169; Otto & Stausberg 2013, p. 16.
  13. ^ Mair 2015, p. 47.
  14. ^ Mair 2015, p. 36.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g Otto & Stausberg 2013, p. 16.
  16. ^ Graf 1997, p. [page needed].
  17. ^ Davies 2007, p. xiii.
  18. ^ Miller 2010.
  19. ^ Petersen 2009, p. 220.
  20. ^ a b c Bailey 2018, p. 40.
  21. ^ a b Goos 2019, pp. 243–244.
  22. ^ Greenwood 2000, p. 7.
  23. ^ Russell 1972, pp. 6–7.
  24. ^ Greenwood 2000, p. 6.
  25. ^ Greenwood 2000, p. 89.
  26. ^ Sasson 1995, pp. 1896–1898.
  27. ^ Sasson 1995, p. 1897.
  28. ^ Sasson 1995, pp. 1898–1898.
  29. ^ a b c d e f g h Sasson 1995, p. 1898.
  30. ^ a b c Sasson 1995, p. 1899.
  31. ^ a b Sasson 1995, pp. 1900–1901.
  32. ^ Sasson 1995, p. 1901.
  33. ^ Sasson 1995, p. 1895.
  34. ^ a b c Abusch 2002, p. 56.
  35. ^ a b c Brown 1995, p. 42.
  36. ^ a b c Sasson 1995, pp. 1901–1902.
  37. ^ Kuiper 2010, p. 178.
  38. ^ a b Sasson 1995, pp. 1901–1904.
  39. ^ Sasson 1995, p. 1843.
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  • Nelson, Sarah M.; Matson, Rachel A.; Roberts, Rachel M.; Rock, Chris; Stencel, Robert E. (2006). Archaeoastronomical Evidence for Wuism at the Hongshan Site of Niuheliang. S2CID 6794721.
  • Otto, Berndt-Christian; Stausberg, Michael (2013). Defining Magic: A Reader. Durham: Equinox. ISBN 978-1908049803.
  • Petersen, Jesper Aagaard (2009). Contemporary religious Satanism: A Critical Anthology. Ashgate Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7546-5286-1.
  • Russell, Jeffrey Burton (1972). Witchcraft in the Middle Ages. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-0801492891.
  • Styers, Randall (2004). Making Magic: Religion, Magic, and Science in the Modern World. London: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195169416.
  • Tambiah, Stanley Jeyaraja (1991). Magic, Science, Religion, and the Scope of Rationality (Reprint ed.). Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521376310.
  • Sasson, Jack M. (1995). Civilizations of the ancient Near East. Scribner. ISBN 978-0-684-19722-7.
  • Waldau, Paul; Patton, Kimberley, eds. (2009). A Communion of Subjects: Animals in Religion, Science, and Ethics. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-13643-3.
  • Zhang, Hong; Hriskos, Constantine (June 2003). "Contemporary Chinese Shamanism:The Reinvention of Tradition". Cultural Survival Quarterly Magazine. 27 (2).

Further reading edit

  • Coleman, Simon (2008). "The Magic of Anthropology". Anthropology News. 45 (8): 8–11. doi:10.1111/an.2004.45.8.8.
  • Dickie, Matthew W. (2001). Magic and Magicians in the Greco-Roman World. London.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Gosden, Chris (2020). Magic: A History: From Alchemy to Witchcraft, from the Ice Age to the Present. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux.
  • Gusterson, Hugh (2004). "How Far Have We Traveled? Magic, Science and Religion Revisited". Anthropology News. 45 (8): 7–11. doi:10.1111/an.2004.45.8.7.1.
  • Hammond, Dorothy (1970). "Magic: A Problem in Semantics". American Anthropologist. 72 (6): 1349–1356. doi:10.1525/aa.1970.72.6.02a00080.
  • Helman-Ważny, Agnieszka; Ramble, Charles, eds. (2023). Bon and Naxi Manuscripts. De Gruyter. ISBN 978-3110776478.
  • Meyer, Marvin W.; Smith, Richard (1994). Ancient Christian Magic: Coptic Texts of Ritual Power. HarperSanFrancisco. ISBN 9780060655846. OCLC 28549170.
  • O'Keefe, Daniel (1982). Stolen Lightning: The Social Theory of Magic. Oxford.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • van Schaik, S. (2020). Buddhist Magic: Divination, Healing, and Enchantment Through the Age. Shambhala. ISBN 978-1611808254.
  • Wax, Murray; Wax, Rosalie (1963). "The Notion of Magic". Current Anthropology. 4 (5): 495–518. doi:10.1086/200420. S2CID 144182649.

External links edit

  •   Quotations related to Magic at Wikiquote
  •   Media related to Magic at Wikimedia Commons

magic, supernatural, this, article, about, beliefs, actions, employed, influence, supernatural, beings, forces, illusionism, stage, magic, magic, illusion, examples, perspective, this, article, represent, worldwide, view, subject, improve, this, article, discu. This article is about beliefs and actions employed to influence supernatural beings and forces For illusionism or stage magic see Magic illusion The examples and perspective in this article may not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this article discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new article as appropriate October 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Magic is an ancient practice rooted in rituals spiritual divinations and or cultural lineage with an intention to invoke manipulate or otherwise manifest supernatural forces beings or entities in the natural world 1 It is a categorical yet often ambiguous term which has been used to refer to a wide variety of beliefs and practices frequently considered separate from both religion and science 2 The Magician an illustration from the Rider Waite tarot deck first published in 1910Connotations have varied from positive to negative at times throughout history 3 Within Western culture magic has been linked to ideas of the Other 4 foreignness 5 and primitivism 6 indicating that it is a powerful marker of cultural difference 7 and likewise a non modern phenomenon 8 During the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries Western intellectuals perceived the practice of magic to be a sign of a primitive mentality and also commonly attributed it to marginalised groups of people 7 Aleister Crowley 1875 1947 a British occultist defined magick as the Science and Art of causing Change to occur in conformity with Will 9 adding a k to distinguish ceremonial or ritual magic from stage magic 10 In modern occultism and neopagan religions many self described magicians and witches regularly practice ritual magic 11 This view has been incorporated into chaos magic and the new religious movements of Thelema and Wicca Contents 1 Etymology 2 Branches or types 2 1 White gray and black 2 2 High and low 3 History 3 1 Mesopotamia 3 1 1 Incantation bowls 3 2 Egypt 3 2 1 Book of the Dead 3 2 2 Amulets 3 3 Judea 3 4 Asia 3 4 1 China 3 5 Greco Roman world 3 6 Middle Ages 3 7 The Renaissance 3 8 Baroque period 3 9 Modernity 3 9 1 Conceptual development 3 9 1 1 Intellectualist approach 3 9 1 2 Functionalist approach 3 9 1 3 Emotionalist approach 3 9 1 4 Ethnocentrism 4 Witchcraft 5 Magicians 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 Works cited 8 Further reading 9 External linksEtymology edit nbsp One of the earliest surviving accounts of the Persian magoi was provided by the Greek historian Herodotus The English words magic mage and magician come from the Latin term magus through the Greek magos which is from the Old Persian magus 𐎶𐎦𐎢𐏁 𐎶𐎦𐎢𐏁 magician 12 The Old Persian magu is derived from the Proto Indo European megʰ magh be able The Persian term may have led to the Old Sinitic Mgag mage or shaman 13 The Old Persian form seems to have permeated ancient Semitic languages as the Talmudic Hebrew magosh the Aramaic amgusha magician and the Chaldean maghdim wisdom and philosophy from the first century BCE onwards Syrian magusai gained notoriety as magicians and soothsayers 14 During the late sixth and early fifth centuries BCE the term goetia found its way into ancient Greek where it was used with negative connotations to apply to rites that were regarded as fraudulent unconventional and dangerous 15 in particular they dedicate themselves to the evocation and invocation of daimons lesser divinities or spirits to control and acquire powers This concept remained pervasive throughout the Hellenistic period when Hellenistic authors categorised a diverse range of practices such as enchantment witchcraft incantations divination necromancy and astrology under the label magic 16 The Latin language adopted this meaning of the term in the first century BCE Via Latin the concept became incorporated into Christian theology during the first century CE Early Christians associated magic with demons and thus regarded it as against Christian religion In early modern Europe Protestants often claimed that Roman Catholicism was magic rather than religion and as Christian Europeans began colonizing other parts of the world in the sixteenth century they labelled the non Christian beliefs they encountered as magical In that same period Italian humanists reinterpreted the term in a positive sense to express the idea of natural magic Both negative and positive understandings of the term recurred in Western culture over the following centuries citation needed Since the nineteenth century academics in various disciplines have employed the term magic but have defined it in different ways and used it in reference to different things One approach associated with the anthropologists Edward Tylor 1832 1917 and James G Frazer 1854 1941 uses the term to describe beliefs in hidden sympathies between objects that allow one to influence the other Defined in this way magic is portrayed as the opposite to science An alternative approach associated with the sociologist Marcel Mauss 1872 1950 and his uncle Emile Durkheim 1858 1917 employs the term to describe private rites and ceremonies and contrasts it with religion which it defines as a communal and organised activity By the 1990s many scholars were rejecting the term s utility for scholarship They argued that the label drew arbitrary lines between similar beliefs and practices that were alternatively considered religious and that it constituted ethnocentric to apply the connotations of magic rooted in Western and Christian history to other cultures citation needed Branches or types editWhite gray and black edit Main articles White magic Gray magic and Black magic Historian Owen Davies says the term white witch was rarely used before the 20th century 17 White magic is understood as the use of magic for selfless or helpful purposes while black magic was used for selfish harmful or evil purposes 18 Black magic is the malicious counterpart of the benevolent white magic There is no consensus as to what constitutes white gray or black magic as Phil Hine says like many other aspects of occultism what is termed to be black magic depends very much on who is doing the defining 19 Gray magic also called neutral magic is magic that is not performed for specifically benevolent reasons but is also not focused towards completely hostile practices citation needed High and low edit Historians and anthropologists have distinguished between practitioners who engage in high magic and those who engage in low magic 20 High magic also known as theurgy and ceremonial or ritual magic 21 is more complex involving lengthy and detailed rituals as well as sophisticated sometimes expensive paraphernalia 20 Low magic and natural magic 21 are associated with peasants and folklore 22 with simpler rituals such as brief spoken spells 20 Low magic is also closely associated with sorcery and witchcraft 23 Anthropologist Susan Greenwood writes that Since the Renaissance high magic has been concerned with drawing down forces and energies from heaven and achieving unity with divinity 24 High magic is usually performed indoors while witchcraft is often performed outdoors 25 History editMain article History of magic Mesopotamia edit See also Mesopotamian divination Enmerkar and En suhgir ana Maqlu and Zisurru nbsp Bronze protection plaque from the Neo Assyrian era showing the demon LamashtuMagic was invoked in many kinds of rituals and medical formulae and to counteract evil omens Defensive or legitimate magic in Mesopotamia asiputu or masmassutu in the Akkadian language were incantations and ritual practices intended to alter specific realities The ancient Mesopotamians believed that magic was the only viable defense against demons ghosts and evil sorcerers 26 To defend themselves against the spirits of those they had wronged they would leave offerings known as kispu in the person s tomb in hope of appeasing them 27 If that failed they also sometimes took a figurine of the deceased and buried it in the ground demanding for the gods to eradicate the spirit or force it to leave the person alone 28 The ancient Mesopotamians also used magic intending to protect themselves from evil sorcerers who might place curses on them 29 Black magic as a category did not exist in ancient Mesopotamia and a person legitimately using magic to defend themselves against illegitimate magic would use exactly the same techniques 29 The only major difference was that curses were enacted in secret 29 whereas a defense against sorcery was conducted in the open in front of an audience if possible 29 One ritual to punish a sorcerer was known as Maqlu or The Burning 29 The person viewed as being afflicted by witchcraft would create an effigy of the sorcerer and put it on trial at night 29 Then once the nature of the sorcerer s crimes had been determined the person would burn the effigy and thereby break the sorcerer s power over them 29 The ancient Mesopotamians also performed magical rituals to purify themselves of sins committed unknowingly 29 One such ritual was known as the Surpu or Burning 30 in which the caster of the spell would transfer the guilt for all their misdeeds onto various objects such as a strip of dates an onion and a tuft of wool 30 The person would then burn the objects and thereby purify themself of all sins that they might have unknowingly committed 30 A whole genre of love spells existed 31 Such spells were believed to cause a person to fall in love with another person restore love which had faded or cause a male sexual partner to be able to sustain an erection when he had previously been unable 31 Other spells were used to reconcile a man with his patron deity or to reconcile a wife with a husband who had been neglecting her 32 The ancient Mesopotamians made no distinction between rational science and magic 33 34 35 When a person became ill doctors would prescribe both magical formulas to be recited as well as medicinal treatments 34 35 36 Most magical rituals were intended to be performed by an asipu an expert in the magical arts 34 35 36 37 The profession was generally passed down from generation to generation 36 and was held in extremely high regard and often served as advisors to kings and great leaders 38 An asipu probably served not only as a magician but also as a physician a priest a scribe and a scholar 38 The Sumerian god Enki who was later syncretized with the East Semitic god Ea was closely associated with magic and incantations 39 he was the patron god of the barȗ and the asipu and was widely regarded as the ultimate source of all arcane knowledge 40 41 42 The ancient Mesopotamians also believed in omens which could come when solicited or unsolicited 43 Regardless of how they came omens were always taken with the utmost seriousness 43 Incantation bowls edit Main article Incantation bowl See also Jewish magical papyri nbsp Mandaic language incantation bowlA common set of shared assumptions about the causes of evil and how to avert it are found in a form of early protective magic called incantation bowl or magic bowls The bowls were produced in the Middle East particularly in Upper Mesopotamia and Syria what is now Iraq and Iran and fairly popular during the sixth to eighth centuries 44 45 The bowls were buried face down and were meant to capture demons They were commonly placed under the threshold courtyards in the corner of the homes of the recently deceased and in cemeteries 46 A subcategory of incantation bowls are those used in Jewish magical practice Aramaic incantation bowls are an important source of knowledge about Jewish magical practices 47 48 49 50 51 Egypt edit nbsp Ancient Egyptian Eye of Horus amuletIn ancient Egypt Kemet in the Egyptian language Magic personified as the god heka was an integral part of religion and culture which is known to us through a substantial corpus of texts which are products of the Egyptian tradition 52 While the category magic has been contentious for modern Egyptology there is clear support for its applicability from ancient terminology 53 The Coptic term hik is the descendant of the pharaonic term heka which unlike its Coptic counterpart had no connotation of impiety or illegality and is attested from the Old Kingdom through to the Roman era 53 heka was considered morally neutral and was applied to the practices and beliefs of both foreigners and Egyptians alike 54 The Instructions for Merikare informs us that heka was a beneficence gifted by the creator to humanity in order to be weapons to ward off the blow of events 55 Magic was practiced by both the literate priestly hierarchy and by illiterate farmers and herdsmen and the principle of heka underlay all ritual activity both in the temples and in private settings 56 The main principle of heka is centered on the power of words to bring things into being 57 54 Karenga explains the pivotal power of words and their vital ontological role as the primary tool used by the creator to bring the manifest world into being 58 Because humans were understood to share a divine nature with the gods snnw ntr images of the god the same power to use words creatively that the gods have is shared by humans 59 Book of the Dead edit Main article Book of the Dead nbsp Illustration from the Book of the Dead of Hunefer showing the Opening of the Mouth ceremony being performed before the tombThe interior walls of the pyramid of Unas the final pharaoh of the Egyptian Fifth Dynasty are covered in hundreds of magical spells and inscriptions running from floor to ceiling in vertical columns 57 54 These inscriptions are known as the Pyramid Texts 57 54 and they contain spells needed by the pharaoh in order to survive in the Afterlife 57 54 The Pyramid Texts were strictly for royalty only 57 56 the spells were kept secret from commoners and were written only inside royal tombs 57 56 During the chaos and unrest of the First Intermediate Period however tomb robbers broke into the pyramids and saw the magical inscriptions 57 56 Commoners began learning the spells and by the beginning of the Middle Kingdom commoners began inscribing similar writings on the sides of their own coffins hoping that doing so would ensure their own survival in the afterlife 57 56 These writings are known as the Coffin Texts 57 56 After a person died his or her corpse would be mummified and wrapped in linen bandages to ensure that the deceased s body would survive for as long as possible 60 because the Egyptians believed that a person s soul could only survive in the afterlife for as long as his or her physical body survived here on earth 60 The last ceremony before a person s body was sealed away inside the tomb was known as the Opening of the Mouth 60 In this ritual the priests would touch various magical instruments to various parts of the deceased s body thereby giving the deceased the ability to see hear taste and smell in the afterlife 60 Amulets edit Main article Amulet The use of amulets meket was widespread among both living and dead ancient Egyptians 61 57 66 They were used for protection and as a means of reaffirming the fundamental fairness of the universe 62 The oldest amulets found are from the predynastic Badarian Period and they persisted through to Roman times 63 Judea edit Main article Witchcraft in the Middle East In the Mosaic Law practices such as witchcraft Heb ק ס מ ים being a soothsayer מ עו נ ן or a sorcerer ו מ כ ש ף or one who conjures spells ו ח ב ר ח ב ר or one who calls up the dead ו ד ר ש א ל ה מ ת ים are specifically forbidden as abominations to the Lord 64 Halakha Jewish religious law forbids divination and other forms of soothsaying and the Talmud lists many persistent yet condemned divining practices 65 Practical Kabbalah in historical Judaism is a branch of the Jewish mystical tradition that concerns the use of magic It was considered permitted white magic by its practitioners reserved for the elite who could separate its spiritual source from qlippothic realms of evil if performed under circumstances that were holy Q D S and pure טומאה וטהרה tvmh vthrh 66 The concern of overstepping Judaism s strong prohibitions of impure magic ensured it remained a minor tradition in Jewish history Its teachings include the use of Divine and angelic names for amulets and incantations 67 These magical practices of Judaic folk religion which became part of practical Kabbalah date from Talmudic times 67 The Talmud mentions the use of charms for healing and a wide range of magical cures were sanctioned by rabbis It was ruled that any practice actually producing a cure was not to be regarded superstitiously and there has been the widespread practice of medicinal amulets and folk remedies segullot in Jewish societies across time and geography 68 Although magic was forbidden by Levitical law in the Hebrew Bible it was widely practised in the late Second Temple period and particularly well documented in the period following the destruction of the temple into the 3rd 4th and 5th centuries CE 69 70 71 Asia edit Further information Asian witchcraft This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it August 2023 China edit Main article Chinese shamanism Chinese shamanism alternatively called Wuism Chinese 巫教 pinyin wu jiao lit wu religion shamanism witchcraft alternatively 巫觋宗教 wu xi zōngjiao refers to the shamanic religious tradition of China 72 73 Its features are especially connected to the ancient Neolithic cultures such as the Hongshan culture 74 Chinese shamanic traditions are intrinsic to Chinese folk religion 75 Various ritual traditions are rooted in original Chinese shamanism contemporary Chinese ritual masters are sometimes identified as wu by outsiders 76 though most orders do not self identify as such Also Taoism has some of its origins from Chinese shamanism 72 77 it developed around the pursuit of long life shou 壽 寿 or the status of a xian 仙 mountain man holy man 72 Taoism in ancient times until the modern day has used rituals mantras and amulets with godly or supernatural powers Taoist worldviews were thought of as magical or alchemical 78 Greco Roman world edit nbsp Hecate the ancient Greek goddess of magicMain articles Magic in the Greco Roman world and Sorcery goetia During the late sixth and early fifth centuries BCE the Persian magus was Graecicized and introduced into the ancient Greek language as magos and mageia 15 In doing so it transformed meaning gaining negative connotations with the magos being regarded as a charlatan whose ritual practices were fraudulent strange unconventional and dangerous 15 As noted by Davies for the ancient Greeks and subsequently for the ancient Romans magic was not distinct from religion but rather an unwelcome improper expression of it the religion of the other 79 The historian Richard Gordon suggested that for the ancient Greeks being accused of practicing magic was a form of insult 80 This change in meaning was influenced by the military conflicts that the Greek city states were then engaged in against the Persian Empire 15 In this context the term makes appearances in such surviving text as Sophocles Oedipus Rex Hippocrates De morbo sacro and Gorgias Encomium of Helen 15 In Sophocles play for example the character Oedipus derogatorily refers to the seer Tiresius as a magos in this context meaning something akin to quack or charlatan reflecting how this epithet was no longer reserved only for Persians 81 In the first century BCE the Greek concept of the magos was adopted into Latin and used by a number of ancient Roman writers as magus and magia 15 The earliest known Latin use of the term was in Virgil s Eclogue written around 40 BCE which makes reference to magicis sacris magic rites 82 The Romans already had other terms for the negative use of supernatural powers such as veneficus and saga 82 The Roman use of the term was similar to that of the Greeks but placed greater emphasis on the judicial application of it 15 Within the Roman Empire laws would be introduced criminalising things regarded as magic 83 In ancient Roman society magic was associated with societies to the east of the empire the first century CE writer Pliny the Elder for instance claimed that magic had been created by the Iranian philosopher Zoroaster and that it had then been brought west into Greece by the magician Osthanes who accompanied the military campaigns of the Persian King Xerxes 84 Ancient Greek scholarship of the 20th century almost certainly influenced by Christianising preconceptions of the meanings of magic and religion and the wish to establish Greek culture as the foundation of Western rationality developed a theory of ancient Greek magic as primitive and insignificant and thereby essentially separate from Homeric communal polis religion Since the last decade of the century however recognising the ubiquity and respectability of acts such as katadesmoi binding spells described as magic by modern and ancient observers alike scholars have been compelled to abandon this viewpoint 85 90 95 The Greek word mageuo practice magic itself derives from the word Magos originally simply the Greek name for a Persian tribe known for practicing religion 86 Non civic mystery cults have been similarly re evaluated 85 97 98 the choices which lay outside the range of cults did not just add additional options to the civic menu but sometimes incorporated critiques of the civic cults and Panhellenic myths or were genuine alternatives to them Simon Price Religions of the Ancient Greeks 1999 87 Katadesmoi Latin defixiones curses inscribed on wax or lead tablets and buried underground were frequently executed by all strata of Greek society sometimes to protect the entire polis 85 95 96 Communal curses carried out in public declined after the Greek classical period but private curses remained common throughout antiquity 88 They were distinguished as magical by their individualistic instrumental and sinister qualities 85 96 These qualities and their perceived deviation from inherently mutable cultural constructs of normality most clearly delineate ancient magic from the religious rituals of which they form a part 85 102 103 A large number of magical papyri in Greek Coptic and Demotic have been recovered and translated 89 They contain early instances of the use of magic words said to have the power to command spirits 90 the use of mysterious symbols or sigils which are thought to be useful when invoking or evoking spirits 91 The practice of magic was banned in the late Roman world and the Codex Theodosianus 438 AD states 92 If any wizard therefore or person imbued with magical contamination who is called by custom of the people a magician should be apprehended in my retinue or in that of the Caesar he shall not escape punishment and torture by the protection of his rank Middle Ages edit Further information Medieval European magic and Sorcery goetia Magic practices such as divination interpretation of omens sorcery and use of charms had been specifically forbidden in Mosaic Law 93 and condemned in Biblical histories of the kings 94 Many of these practices were spoken against in the New Testament as well 95 96 Some commentators say that in the first century CE early Christian authors absorbed the Greco Roman concept of magic and incorporated it into their developing Christian theology 83 and that these Christians retained the already implied Greco Roman negative stereotypes of the term and extented them by incorporating conceptual patterns borrowed from Jewish thought in particular the opposition of magic and miracle 83 Some early Christian authors followed the Greek Roman thinking by ascribing the origin of magic to the human realm mainly to Zoroaster and Osthanes The Christian view was that magic was a product of the Babylonians Persians or Egyptians 97 The Christians shared with earlier classical culture the idea that magic was something distinct from proper religion although drew their distinction between the two in different ways 98 nbsp A 17th century depiction of the medieval writer Isidore of Seville who provided a list of activities he regarded as magicalFor early Christian writers like Augustine of Hippo magic did not merely constitute fraudulent and unsanctioned ritual practices but was the very opposite of religion because it relied upon cooperation from demons the henchmen of Satan 83 In this Christian ideas of magic were closely linked to the Christian category of paganism 99 and both magic and paganism were regarded as belonging under the broader category of superstitio superstition another term borrowed from pre Christian Roman culture 98 This Christian emphasis on the inherent immorality and wrongness of magic as something conflicting with good religion was far starker than the approach in the other large monotheistic religions of the period Judaism and Islam 100 For instance while Christians regarded demons as inherently evil the jinn comparable entities in Islamic mythology were perceived as more ambivalent figures by Muslims 100 The model of the magician in Christian thought was provided by Simon Magus Simon the Magician a figure who opposed Saint Peter in both the Acts of the Apostles and the apocryphal yet influential Acts of Peter 101 The historian Michael D Bailey stated that in medieval Europe magic was a relatively broad and encompassing category 102 Christian theologians believed that there were multiple different forms of magic the majority of which were types of divination for instance Isidore of Seville produced a catalogue of things he regarded as magic in which he listed divination by the four elements i e geomancy hydromancy aeromancy and pyromancy as well as by observation of natural phenomena e g the flight of birds and astrology He also mentioned enchantment and ligatures the medical use of magical objects bound to the patient as being magical 103 Medieval Europe also saw magic come to be associated with the Old Testament figure of Solomon various grimoires or books outlining magical practices were written that claimed to have been written by Solomon most notably the Key of Solomon 104 In early medieval Europe magia was a term of condemnation 105 In medieval Europe Christians often suspected Muslims and Jews of engaging in magical practices 106 in certain cases these perceived magical rites including the alleged Jewish sacrifice of Christian children resulted in Christians massacring these religious minorities 107 Christian groups often also accused other rival Christian groups such as the Hussites which they regarded as heretical of engaging in magical activities 101 108 Medieval Europe also saw the term maleficium applied to forms of magic that were conducted with the intention of causing harm 102 The later Middle Ages saw words for these practitioners of harmful magical acts appear in various European languages sorciere in French Hexe in German strega in Italian and bruja in Spanish 109 The English term for malevolent practitioners of magic witch derived from the earlier Old English term wicce 109 Ars Magica or magic is a major component and supporting contribution to the belief and practice of spiritual and in many cases physical healing throughout the Middle Ages Emanating from many modern interpretations lies a trail of misconceptions about magic one of the largest revolving around wickedness or the existence of nefarious beings who practice it These misinterpretations stem from numerous acts or rituals that have been performed throughout antiquity and due to their exoticism from the commoner s perspective the rituals invoked uneasiness and an even stronger sense of dismissal 110 111 nbsp An excerpt from Sefer Raziel HaMalakh featuring various magical sigils סגולות segulot in Hebrew In the Medieval Jewish view the separation of the mystical and magical elements of Kabbalah dividing it into speculative theological Kabbalah Kabbalah Iyyunit with its meditative traditions and theurgic practical Kabbalah Kabbalah Ma asit had occurred by the beginning of the 14th century 112 One societal force in the Middle Ages more powerful than the singular commoner the Christian Church rejected magic as a whole because it was viewed as a means of tampering with the natural world in a supernatural manner associated with the biblical verses of Deuteronomy 18 9 12 further explanation needed Despite the many negative connotations which surround the term magic there exist many elements that are seen in a divine or holy light 113 The divine right of kings in England was thought to be able to give them sacred magic power to heal thousands of their subjects from sicknesses 114 Diversified instruments or rituals used in medieval magic include but are not limited to various amulets talismans potions as well as specific chants dances and prayers Along with these rituals are the adversely imbued notions of demonic participation which influence of them The idea that magic was devised taught and worked by demons would have seemed reasonable to anyone who read the Greek magical papyri or the Sefer ha Razim and found that healing magic appeared alongside rituals for killing people gaining wealth or personal advantage and coercing women into sexual submission 115 Archaeology is contributing to a fuller understanding of ritual practices performed in the home on the body and in monastic and church settings 116 117 The Islamic reaction towards magic did not condemn magic in general and distinguished between magic which can heal sickness and possession and sorcery The former is therefore a special gift from God while the latter is achieved through help of Jinn and devils Ibn al Nadim held that exorcists gain their power by their obedience to God while sorcerers please the devils by acts of disobedience and sacrifices and they in return do him a favor 118 According to Ibn Arabi Al Ḥajjaj ibn Yusuf al Shubarbuli was able to walk on water due to his piety 119 According to the Quran 2 102 magic was also taught to humans by devils and the angels Harut and Marut 120 The influence of Arab Islamic magic in medieval and Renaissance Europe was very notable Some magic books such as Picatrix and Al Kindi s De Radiis were the basis for much of medieval magic in Europe and for subsequent developments in the Renaissance Another Arab Muslim author fundamental to the developments of medieval and Renaissance European magic was Ahmad al Buni with his books such as the Shams al Ma arif which deal above all with the evocation and invocation of spirits or jinn to control them obtain powers and make wishes come true 121 These books are still important to the Islamic world specifically in Simiyya a doctrine found commonly within Sufi occult traditions 122 nbsp Frontispiece of an English translation of Natural Magick published in London in 1658During the early modern period the concept of magic underwent a more positive reassessment through the development of the concept of magia naturalis natural magic 83 This was a term introduced and developed by two Italian humanists Marsilio Ficino and Giovanni Pico della Mirandola 83 For them magia was viewed as an elemental force pervading many natural processes 83 and thus was fundamentally distinct from the mainstream Christian idea of demonic magic 123 Their ideas influenced an array of later philosophers and writers among them Paracelsus Giordano Bruno Johannes Reuchlin and Johannes Trithemius 83 According to the historian Richard Kieckhefer the concept of magia naturalis took firm hold in European culture during the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries 124 attracting the interest of natural philosophers of various theoretical orientations including Aristotelians Neoplatonists and Hermeticists 125 Adherents of this position argued that magia could appear in both good and bad forms in 1625 the French librarian Gabriel Naude wrote his Apology for all the Wise Men Falsely Suspected of Magic in which he distinguished Mosoaicall Magick which he claimed came from God and included prophecies miracles and speaking in tongues from geotick magic caused by demons 126 While the proponents of magia naturalis insisted that this did not rely on the actions of demons critics disagreed arguing that the demons had simply deceived these magicians 127 By the seventeenth century the concept of magia naturalis had moved in increasingly naturalistic directions with the distinctions between it and science becoming blurred 128 The validity of magia naturalis as a concept for understanding the universe then came under increasing criticism during the Age of Enlightenment in the eighteenth century 129 Despite the attempt to reclaim the term magia for use in a positive sense it did not supplant traditional attitudes toward magic in the West which remained largely negative 129 At the same time as magia naturalis was attracting interest and was largely tolerated Europe saw an active persecution of accused witches believed to be guilty of maleficia 125 Reflecting the term s continued negative associations Protestants often sought to denigrate Roman Catholic sacramental and devotional practices as being magical rather than religious 130 Many Roman Catholics were concerned by this allegation and for several centuries various Roman Catholic writers devoted attention to arguing that their practices were religious rather than magical 131 At the same time Protestants often used the accusation of magic against other Protestant groups which they were in contest with 132 In this way the concept of magic was used to prescribe what was appropriate as religious belief and practice 131 Similar claims were also being made in the Islamic world during this period The Arabian cleric Muhammad ibn Abd al Wahhab founder of Wahhabism for instance condemned a range of customs and practices such as divination and the veneration of spirits as sihr which he in turn claimed was a form of shirk the sin of idolatry 133 The Renaissance edit Main article Renaissance magic Renaissance humanism saw a resurgence in hermeticism and Neo Platonic varieties of ceremonial magic The Renaissance on the other hand saw the rise of science in such forms as the dethronement of the Ptolemaic theory of the universe the distinction of astronomy from astrology and of chemistry from alchemy 134 page needed There was great uncertainty in distinguishing practices of superstition occultism and perfectly sound scholarly knowledge or pious ritual The intellectual and spiritual tensions erupted in the Early Modern witch craze further reinforced by the turmoil of the Protestant Reformation especially in Germany England and Scotland 134 page needed In Hasidism the displacement of practical Kabbalah using directly magical means by conceptual and meditative trends gained much further emphasis while simultaneously instituting meditative theurgy for material blessings at the heart of its social mysticism 135 Hasidism internalised Kabbalah through the psychology of deveikut cleaving to God and cleaving to the Tzadik Hasidic Rebbe In Hasidic doctrine the tzaddik channels Divine spiritual and physical bounty to his followers by altering the Will of God uncovering a deeper concealed Will through his own deveikut and self nullification Dov Ber of Mezeritch is concerned to distinguish this theory of the Tzadik s will altering and deciding the Divine Will from directly magical process 136 nbsp In the nineteenth century the Haitian government began to legislate against Vodou describing it as a form of witchcraft this conflicted with Vodou practitioners own understanding of their religion 137 In the sixteenth century European societies began to conquer and colonise other continents around the world and as they did so they applied European concepts of magic and witchcraft to practices found among the peoples whom they encountered 138 Usually these European colonialists regarded the natives as primitives and savages whose belief systems were diabolical and needed to be eradicated and replaced by Christianity 139 Because Europeans typically viewed these non European peoples as being morally and intellectually inferior to themselves it was expected that such societies would be more prone to practicing magic 140 Women who practiced traditional rites were labelled as witches by the Europeans 140 In various cases these imported European concepts and terms underwent new transformations as they merged with indigenous concepts 141 In West Africa for instance Portuguese travellers introduced their term and concept of the feiticaria often translated as sorcery and the feitico spell to the native population where it was transformed into the concept of the fetish When later Europeans encountered these West African societies they wrongly believed that the fetiche was an indigenous African term rather than the result of earlier inter continental encounters 141 Sometimes colonised populations themselves adopted these European concepts for their own purposes In the early nineteenth century the newly independent Haitian government of Jean Jacques Dessalines began to suppress the practice of Vodou and in 1835 Haitian law codes categorised all Vodou practices as sortilege sorcery witchcraft suggesting that it was all conducted with harmful intent whereas among Vodou practitioners the performance of harmful rites was already given a separate and distinct category known as maji 137 Baroque period edit Further information Isaac Newton s occult studies During the Baroque era several intriguing figures engaged with occult and magical themes that went beyond conventional thinking Michael Sendivogius 1566 1636 a Polish alchemist emphasized empirical experimentation in alchemy and made notable contributions to early chemistry Tommaso Campanella 1568 1639 an Italian philosopher blended Christianity with mysticism in works like The City of the Sun envisioning an ideal society governed by divine principles Jakob Bohme 1575 1624 a German mystic explored the relationship between the divine and human experience influencing later mystical movements Jan Baptist van Helmont a Flemish chemist coined the term gas and conducted experiments on plant growth expanding the understanding of chemistry Sir Kenelm Digby known for his diverse interests created the Sympathetic Powder believed to have mystical healing properties Isaac Newton famous for his scientific achievements also delved into alchemy and collected esoteric manuscripts revealing his fascination with hidden knowledge These individuals collectively embody the curiosity and exploration characteristic of the Baroque period Modernity edit Main article Ceremonial magic By the nineteenth century European intellectuals no longer saw the practice of magic through the framework of sin and instead regarded magical practices and beliefs as an aberrational mode of thought antithetical to the dominant cultural logic a sign of psychological impairment and marker of racial or cultural inferiority 142 As educated elites in Western societies increasingly rejected the efficacy of magical practices legal systems ceased to threaten practitioners of magical activities with punishment for the crimes of diabolism and witchcraft and instead threatened them with the accusation that they were defrauding people through promising to provide things which they could not 143 This spread of European colonial power across the world influenced how academics would come to frame the concept of magic 144 In the nineteenth century several scholars adopted the traditional negative concept of magic 129 That they chose to do so was not inevitable for they could have followed the example adopted by prominent esotericists active at the time like Helena Blavatsky who had chosen to use the term and concept of magic in a positive sense 129 Various writers also used the concept of magic to criticise religion by arguing that the latter still displayed many of the negative traits of the former An example of this was the American journalist H L Mencken in his polemical 1930 work Treatise on the Gods he sought to critique religion by comparing it to magic arguing that the division between the two was misplaced 145 The concept of magic was also adopted by theorists in the new field of psychology where it was often used synonymously with superstition although the latter term proved more common in early psychological texts 146 In the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries folklorists examined rural communities across Europe in search of magical practices which at the time they typically understood as survivals of ancient belief systems 147 It was only in the 1960s that anthropologists like Jeanne Favret Saada also began looking in depth at magic in European contexts having previously focused on examining magic in non Western contexts 148 In the twentieth century magic also proved a topic of interest to the Surrealists an artistic movement based largely in Europe the Surrealism Andre Breton for instance published L Art magique in 1957 discussing what he regarded as the links between magic and art 149 The scholarly application of magic as a sui generis category that can be applied to any socio cultural context was linked with the promotion of modernity to both Western and non Western audiences 150 The term magic has become pervasive in the popular imagination and idiom 6 In contemporary contexts the word magic is sometimes used to describe a type of excitement of wonder or sudden delight and in such a context can be a term of high praise 151 Despite its historical contrast against science scientists have also adopted the term in application to various concepts such as magic acid magic bullets and magic angles 6 nbsp Many concepts of modern ceremonial magic are heavily influenced by the ideas of Aleister Crowley Modern Western magic has challenged widely held preconceptions about contemporary religion and spirituality 152 The polemical discourses about magic influenced the self understanding of modern magicians several whom such as Aleister Crowley were well versed in academic literature on the subject 153 According to scholar of religion Henrik Bogdan arguably the best known emic definition of the term magic was provided by Crowley 153 Crowley who favoured the spelling magick over magic to distinguish it from stage illusionism 10 was of the view that Magick is the Science and Art of causing Change to occur in conformity with Will 153 Crowley s definition influenced that of subsequent magicians 153 Dion Fortune of the Fraternity of the Inner Light for instance stated that Magic is the art of changing consciousness according to Will 153 Gerald Gardner the founder of Gardnerian Wicca stated that magic was attempting to cause the physically unusual 153 while Anton LaVey the founder of LaVeyan Satanism described magic as the change in situations or events in accordance with one s will which would using normally acceptable methods be unchangeable 153 The chaos magic movement emerged during the late 20th century as an attempt to strip away the symbolic ritualistic theological or otherwise ornamental aspects of other occult traditions and distill magic down to a set of basic techniques 154 These modern Western concepts of magic rely on a belief in correspondences connected to an unknown occult force that permeates the universe 155 As noted by Hanegraaff this operated according to a new meaning of magic which could not possibly have existed in earlier periods precisely because it is elaborated in reaction to the disenchantment of the world 155 For many and perhaps most modern Western magicians the goal of magic is deemed to be personal spiritual development 156 The perception of magic as a form of self development is central to the way that magical practices have been adopted into forms of modern Paganism and the New Age phenomenon 156 One significant development within modern Western magical practices has been sex magic 156 This was a practice promoted in the writings of Paschal Beverly Randolph and subsequently exerted a strong interest on occultist magicians like Crowley and Theodor Reuss 156 The adoption of the term magic by modern occultists can in some instances be a deliberate attempt to champion those areas of Western society which have traditionally been marginalised as a means of subverting dominant systems of power 157 The influential American Wiccan and author Starhawk for instance stated that Magic is another word that makes people uneasy so I use it deliberately because the words we are comfortable with the words that sound acceptable rational scientific and intellectually correct are comfortable precisely because they are the language of estrangement 158 In the present day among some countercultural subgroups the label is considered cool 159 Conceptual development edit According to anthropologist Edward Evan Evans Pritchard magic formed a rational framework of beliefs and knowledge in some cultures like the Azande people of Africa 160 The historian Owen Davies stated that the word magic was beyond simple definition 161 and had a range of meanings 162 Similarly the historian Michael D Bailey characterised magic as a deeply contested category and a very fraught label 163 as a category he noted it was profoundly unstable given that definitions of the term have varied dramatically across time and between cultures 164 Scholars have engaged in extensive debates as to how to define magic 165 with such debates resulting in intense dispute 166 Throughout such debates the scholarly community has failed to agree on a definition of magic in a similar manner to how they have failed to agree on a definition of religion 166 According with scholar of religion Michael Stausberg the phenomenon of people applying the concept of magic to refer to themselves and their own practices and beliefs goes as far back as late antiquity However even among those throughout history who have described themselves as magicians there has been no common ground of what magic is 167 In Africa the word magic might simply be understood as denoting management of forces which as an activity is not weighted morally and is accordingly a neutral activity from the start of a magical practice but by the will of the magician is thought to become and to have an outcome which represents either good or bad evil 168 169 Ancient African culture was in the habit customarily of always discerning difference between magic and a group of other things which are not magic these things were medicine divination witchcraft and sorcery 170 Opinion differs on how religion and magic are related to each other with respect development or to which developed from which some think they developed together from a shared origin some think religion developed from magic and some magic from religion 171 Anthropological and sociological theories of magic generally serve to sharply demarcate certain practices from other otherwise similar practices in a given society 98 According to Bailey In many cultures and across various historical periods categories of magic often define and maintain the limits of socially and culturally acceptable actions in respect to numinous or occult entities or forces Even more basically they serve to delineate arenas of appropriate belief 172 In this he noted that drawing these distinctions is an exercise in power 172 This tendency has had repercussions for the study of magic with academics self censoring their research because of the effects on their careers 173 Randall Styers noted that attempting to define magic represents an act of demarcation by which it is juxtaposed against other social practices and modes of knowledge such as religion and science 174 The historian Karen Louise Jolly described magic as a category of exclusion used to define an unacceptable way of thinking as either the opposite of religion or of science 175 Modern scholarship has produced various definitions and theories of magic 176 According to Bailey these have typically framed magic in relation to or more frequently in distinction from religion and science 176 Since the emergence of the study of religion and the social sciences magic has been a central theme in the theoretical literature produced by scholars operating in these academic disciplines 165 Magic is one of the most heavily theorized concepts in the study of religion 177 and also played a key role in early theorising within anthropology 178 Styers believed that it held such a strong appeal for social theorists because it provides such a rich site for articulating and contesting the nature and boundaries of modernity 179 Scholars have commonly used it as a foil for the concept of religion regarding magic as the illegitimate and effeminized sibling of religion 180 Alternately others have used it as a middle ground category located between religion and science 180 The context in which scholars framed their discussions of magic was informed by the spread of European colonial power across the world in the modern period 144 These repeated attempts to define magic resonated with broader social concerns 8 and the pliability of the concept has allowed it to be readily adaptable as a polemical and ideological tool 131 The links that intellectuals made between magic and those they characterized as primitives helped to legitimise European and Euro American imperialism and colonialism as these Western colonialists expressed the view that those who believed in and practiced magic were unfit to govern themselves and should be governed by those who rather than believing in magic believed in science and or Christian religion 7 In Bailey s words the association of certain peoples whether non Europeans or poor rural Europeans with magic served to distance and differentiate them from those who ruled over them and in large part to justify that rule 5 Many different definitions of magic have been offered by scholars although according to Hanegraaff these can be understood as variations of a small number of heavily influential theories 177 Intellectualist approach edit nbsp Edward Tylor an anthropologist who used the term magic in reference to sympathetic magic an idea that he associated with his concept of animismThe intellectualist approach to defining magic is associated with two British anthropologists Edward Tylor and James G Frazer 181 This approach viewed magic as the theoretical opposite of science 182 and came to preoccupy much anthropological thought on the subject 183 This approach was situated within the evolutionary models which underpinned thinking in the social sciences during the early 19th century 184 The first social scientist to present magic as something that predated religion in an evolutionary development was Herbert Spencer 185 in his A System of Synthetic Philosophy he used the term magic in reference to sympathetic magic 186 Spencer regarded both magic and religion as being rooted in false speculation about the nature of objects and their relationship to other things 187 Tylor s understanding of magic was linked to his concept of animism 188 In his 1871 book Primitive Culture Tylor characterized magic as beliefs based on the error of mistaking ideal analogy for real analogy 189 In Tylor s view primitive man having come to associate in thought those things which he found by experience to be connected in fact proceeded erroneously to invert this action and to conclude that association in thought must involve similar connection in reality He thus attempted to discover to foretell and to cause events by means of processes which we can now see to have only an ideal significance 190 Tylor was dismissive of magic describing it as one of the most pernicious delusions that ever vexed mankind 191 Tylor s views proved highly influential 192 and helped to establish magic as a major topic of anthropological research 185 nbsp James Frazer regarded magic as the first stage in human development to be followed by religion and then science Tylor s ideas were adopted and simplified by James Frazer 193 He used the term magic to mean sympathetic magic 194 describing it as a practice relying on the magician s belief that things act on each other at a distance through a secret sympathy something which he described as an invisible ether 190 He further divided this magic into two forms the homeopathic imitative mimetic and the contagious 190 The former was the idea that like produces like or that the similarity between two objects could result in one influencing the other The latter was based on the idea that contact between two objects allowed the two to continue to influence one another at a distance 195 Like Taylor Frazer viewed magic negatively describing it as the bastard sister of science arising from one great disastrous fallacy 196 Where Frazer differed from Tylor was in characterizing a belief in magic as a major stage in humanity s cultural development describing it as part of a tripartite division in which magic came first religion came second and eventually science came third 197 For Frazer all early societies started as believers in magic with some of them moving away from this and into religion 198 He believed that both magic and religion involved a belief in spirits but that they differed in the way that they responded to these spirits For Frazer magic constrains or coerces these spirits while religion focuses on conciliating or propitiating them 198 He acknowledged that their common ground resulted in a cross over of magical and religious elements in various instances for instance he claimed that the sacred marriage was a fertility ritual which combined elements from both world views 199 Some scholars retained the evolutionary framework used by Frazer but changed the order of its stages the German ethnologist Wilhelm Schmidt argued that religion by which he meant monotheism was the first stage of human belief which later degenerated into both magic and polytheism 200 Others rejected the evolutionary framework entirely Frazer s notion that magic had given way to religion as part of an evolutionary framework was later deconstructed by the folklorist and anthropologist Andrew Lang in his essay Magic and Religion Lang did so by highlighting how Frazer s framework relied upon misrepresenting ethnographic accounts of beliefs and practiced among indigenous Australians to fit his concept of magic 201 Functionalist approach edit The functionalist approach to defining magic is associated with the French sociologists Marcel Mauss and Emile Durkheim 202 In this approach magic is understood as being the theoretical opposite of religion 203 Mauss set forth his conception of magic in a 1902 essay A General Theory of Magic 204 Mauss used the term magic in reference to any rite that is not part of an organized cult a rite that is private secret mysterious and ultimately tending towards one that is forbidden 202 Conversely he associated religion with organised cult 205 By saying that magic was inherently non social Mauss had been influenced by the traditional Christian understandings of the concept 206 Mauss deliberately rejected the intellectualist approach promoted by Frazer believing that it was inappropriate to restrict the term magic to sympathetic magic as Frazer had done 207 He expressed the view that there are not only magical rites which are not sympathetic but neither is sympathy a prerogative of magic since there are sympathetic practices in religion 205 Mauss ideas were adopted by Durkheim in his 1912 book The Elementary Forms of the Religious Life 208 Durkheim was of the view that both magic and religion pertained to sacred things that is to say things set apart and forbidden 209 Where he saw them as being different was in their social organisation Durkheim used the term magic to describe things that were inherently anti social existing in contrast to what he referred to as a Church the religious beliefs shared by a social group in his words There is no Church of magic 210 Durkheim expressed the view that there is something inherently anti religious about the maneuvers of the magician 203 and that a belief in magic does not result in binding together those who adhere to it nor in uniting them into a group leading a common life 209 Durkheim s definition encounters problems in situations such as the rites performed by Wiccans in which acts carried out communally have been regarded either by practitioners or observers as being magical 211 Scholars have criticized the idea that magic and religion can be differentiated into two distinct separate categories 212 The social anthropologist Alfred Radcliffe Brown suggested that a simple dichotomy between magic and religion was unhelpful and thus both should be subsumed under the broader category of ritual 213 Many later anthropologists followed his example 213 Nevertheless this distinction is still often made by scholars discussing this topic 212 Emotionalist approach edit Further information Magical thinking and Psychological theories of magic The emotionalist approach to magic is associated with the English anthropologist Robert Ranulph Marett the Austrian Sigmund Freud and the Polish anthropologist Bronislaw Malinowski 214 Marett viewed magic as a response to stress 215 In a 1904 article he argued that magic was a cathartic or stimulating practice designed to relieve feelings of tension 215 As his thought developed he increasingly rejected the idea of a division between magic and religion and began to use the term magico religious to describe the early development of both 215 Malinowski similarly understood magic to Marett tackling the issue in a 1925 article 216 He rejected Frazer s evolutionary hypothesis that magic was followed by religion and then science as a series of distinct stages in societal development arguing that all three were present in each society 217 In his view both magic and religion arise and function in situations of emotional stress although whereas religion is primarily expressive magic is primarily practical 217 He therefore defined magic as a practical art consisting of acts which are only means to a definite end expected to follow later on 217 For Malinowski magical acts were to be carried out for a specific end whereas religious ones were ends in themselves 211 He for instance believed that fertility rituals were magical because they were carried out with the intention of meeting a specific need 217 As part of his functionalist approach Malinowski saw magic not as irrational but as something that served a useful function being sensible within the given social and environmental context 218 nbsp Ideas about magic were also promoted by Sigmund Freud The term magic was used liberally by Freud 219 He also saw magic as emerging from human emotion but interpreted it very differently to Marett 220 Freud explains that the associated theory of magic merely explains the paths along which magic proceeds it does not explain its true essence namely the misunderstanding which leads it to replace the laws of nature by psychological ones 221 Freud emphasizes that what led primitive men to come up with magic is the power of wishes His wishes are accompanied by a motor impulse the will which is later destined to alter the whole face of the earth to satisfy his wishes This motor impulse is at first employed to give a representation of the satisfying situation in such a way that it becomes possible to experience the satisfaction by means of what might be described as motor hallucinations This kind of representation of a satisfied wish is quite comparable to children s play which succeeds their earlier purely sensory technique of satisfaction As time goes on the psychological accent shifts from the motives for the magical act on to the measures by which it is carried out that is on to the act itself It thus comes to appear as though it is the magical act itself which owing to its similarity with the desired result alone determines the occurrence of that result 222 In the early 1960s the anthropologists Murray and Rosalie Wax put forward the argument that scholars should look at the magical worldview of a given society on its own terms rather than trying to rationalize it in terms of Western ideas about scientific knowledge 223 Their ideas were heavily criticised by other anthropologists who argued that they had set up a false dichotomy between non magical Western worldview and magical non Western worldviews 224 The concept of the magical worldview nevertheless gained widespread use in history folkloristics philosophy cultural theory and psychology 225 The notion of magical thinking has also been utilised by various psychologists 226 In the 1920s the psychologist Jean Piaget used the concept as part of his argument that children were unable to clearly differentiate between the mental and the physical 226 According to this perspective children begin to abandon their magical thinking between the ages of six and nine 226 According to Stanley Tambiah magic science and religion all have their own quality of rationality and have been influenced by politics and ideology 227 As opposed to religion Tambiah suggests that mankind has a much more personal control over events Science according to Tambiah is a system of behavior by which man acquires mastery of the environment 228 Ethnocentrism edit The magic religion science triangle developed in European society based on evolutionary ideas i e that magic evolved into religion which in turn evolved into science 203 However using a Western analytical tool when discussing non Western cultures or pre modern forms of Western society raises problems as it may impose alien Western categories on them 229 While magic remains an emic insider term in the history of Western societies it remains an etic outsider term when applied to non Western societies and even within specific Western societies For this reason academics like Michael D Bailey suggest abandon the term altogether as an academic category 230 During the twentieth century many scholars focusing on Asian and African societies rejected the term magic as well as related concepts like witchcraft in favour of the more precise terms and concepts that existed within these specific societies like Juju 231 A similar approach has been taken by many scholars studying pre modern societies in Europe such as Classical antiquity who find the modern concept of magic inappropriate and favour more specific terms originating within the framework of the ancient cultures which they are studying 232 Alternately this term implies that all categories of magic are ethnocentric and that such Western preconceptions are an unavoidable component of scholarly research 229 This century has seen a trend towards emic ethnographic studies by scholar practitioners that explicitly explore the emic etic divide 233 Many scholars have argued that the use of the term as an analytical tool within academic scholarship should be rejected altogether 234 The scholar of religion Jonathan Z Smith for example argued that it had no utility as an etic term that scholars should use 235 The historian of religion Wouter Hanegraaff agreed on the grounds that its use is founded in conceptions of Western superiority and has served as a scientific justification for converting non European peoples from benighted superstitions stating that the term magic is an important object of historical research but not intended for doing research 236 Bailey noted that as of the early 21st century few scholars sought grand definitions of magic but instead focused with careful attention to particular contexts examining what a term like magic meant to a given society this approach he noted call ed into question the legitimacy of magic as a universal category 237 The scholars of religion Berndt Christian Otto and Michael Stausberg suggested that it would be perfectly possible for scholars to talk about amulets curses healing procedures and other cultural practices often regarded as magical in Western culture without any recourse to the concept of magic itself 238 The idea that magic should be rejected as an analytic term developed in anthropology before moving into Classical studies and Biblical studies in the 1980s 239 Since the 1990s the term s usage among scholars of religion has declined 235 Witchcraft editMain articles Witchcraft and Sorcery goetia The historian Ronald Hutton notes the presence of four distinct meanings of the term witchcraft in the English language Historically the term primarily referred to the practice of causing harm to others through supernatural or magical means This remains according to Hutton the most widespread and frequent understanding of the term 240 Moreover Hutton also notes three other definitions in current usage to refer to anyone who conducts magical acts for benevolent or malevolent intent for practitioners of the modern Pagan religion of Wicca or as a symbol of women resisting male authority and asserting an independent female authority 241 Belief in witchcraft is often present within societies and groups whose cultural framework includes a magical world view 242 Those regarded as being magicians have often faced suspicion from other members of their society 243 This is particularly the case if these perceived magicians have been associated with social groups already considered morally suspect in a particular society such as foreigners women or the lower classes 244 In contrast to these negative associations many practitioners of activities that have been labelled magical have emphasised that their actions are benevolent and beneficial 245 This conflicted with the common Christian view that all activities categorised as being forms of magic were intrinsically bad regardless of the intent of the magician because all magical actions relied on the aid of demons 100 There could be conflicting attitudes regarding the practices of a magician in European history authorities often believed that cunning folk and traditional healers were harmful because their practices were regarded as magical and thus stemming from contact with demons whereas a local community might value and respect these individuals because their skills and services were deemed beneficial 246 In Western societies the practice of magic especially when harmful was usually associated with women 247 For instance during the witch trials of the early modern period around three quarters of those executed as witches were female to only a quarter who were men 248 That women were more likely to be accused and convicted of witchcraft in this period might have been because their position was more legally vulnerable with women having little or no legal standing that was independent of their male relatives 248 The conceptual link between women and magic in Western culture may be because many of the activities regarded as magical from rites to encourage fertility to potions to induce abortions were associated with the female sphere 249 It might also be connected to the fact that many cultures portrayed women as being inferior to men on an intellectual moral spiritual and physical level 250 Magicians edit nbsp The Magician card from a 15th century tarot deckMany of the practices which have been labelled magic can be performed by anyone 251 For instance some charms can be recited by individuals with no specialist knowledge nor any claim to having a specific power 252 Others require specialised training in order to perform them 251 Some of the individuals who performed magical acts on a more than occasional basis came to be identified as magicians or with related concepts like sorcerers sorceresses witches or cunning folk 252 Identities as a magician can stem from an individual s own claims about themselves or it can be a label placed upon them by others 252 In the latter case an individual could embrace such a label or they could reject it sometimes vehemently 252 Economic incentives can encourage individuals to identify as magicians 143 In the cases of various forms of traditional healer as well as the later stage magicians or illusionists the label of magician could become a job description 252 Others claim such an identity out of a genuinely held belief that they have specific unusual powers or talents 253 Different societies have different social regulations regarding who can take on such a role for instance it may be a question of familial heredity or there may be gender restrictions on who is allowed to engage in such practices 254 A variety of personal traits may be credited with giving magical power and frequently they are associated with an unusual birth into the world 255 For instance in Hungary it was believed that a taltos would be born with teeth or an additional finger 256 In various parts of Europe it was believed that being born with a caul would associate the child with supernatural abilities 256 In some cases a ritual initiation is required before taking on a role as a specialist in such practices and in others it is expected that an individual will receive a mentorship from another specialist 257 Davies noted that it was possible to crudely divide magic specialists into religious and lay categories 258 He noted for instance that Roman Catholic priests with their rites of exorcism and access to holy water and blessed herbs could be conceived as being magical practitioners 259 Traditionally the most common method of identifying differentiating and establishing magical practitioners from common people is by initiation By means of rites the magician s relationship to the supernatural and his entry into a closed professional class is established often through rituals that simulate death and rebirth into a new life 260 However Berger and Ezzy explain that since the rise of Neopaganism As there is no central bureaucracy or dogma to determine authenticity an individual s self determination as a Witch Wiccan Pagan or Neopagan is usually taken at face value 261 Ezzy argues that practitioners worldviews have been neglected in many sociological and anthropological studies and that this is because of a culturally narrow understanding of science that devalues magical beliefs 262 Mauss argues that the powers of both specialist and common magicians are determined by culturally accepted standards of the sources and the breadth of magic a magician cannot simply invent or claim new magic In practice the magician is only as powerful as his peers believe him to be 263 Throughout recorded history magicians have often faced skepticism regarding their purported powers and abilities 264 For instance in sixteenth century England the writer Reginald Scot wrote The Discoverie of Witchcraft in which he argued that many of those accused of witchcraft or otherwise claiming magical capabilities were fooling people using illusionism 265 See also edit nbsp Religion portalBooks about magic Body of light Hermetic starfire body Clarke s three laws Three axioms proposed by British science fiction writer Arthur C Clarke Isaac Newton s occult studies Works by Newton now seen as non scientific Juju West African spiritual belief system Magic in fiction Magic depicted in fictional stories Magical organization Organization for the practice of occult magic Psionics Science fiction theme of 1950s and 1960s Runic magic Ancient or modern magic performed with runes or runestones Scrying Practice of seeking visions in a reflective surface Shamanism Religious practice Thaumaturgy The working of miracles by an individualReferences editThis article has an unclear citation style The references used may be made clearer with a different or consistent style of citation and footnoting November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Citations edit magic Etymology origin and meaning of magic by etymonline www etymonline com Retrieved 2022 10 13 Hutton 2017 p x Bailey 2018 pp 1 5 Bogdan 2012 p 2 Graham 2018 p 255 a b Bailey 2018 p 89 a b c Davies 2012 p 1 a b c Styers 2004 p 14 a b Styers 2004 p 8 Crowley 1997 Introduction to Part III a b Bogdan 2012 p 12 Bailey 2018 pp 22 23 Berger amp Ezzy 2007 p 24 Hanegraaff 2012 p 169 Otto amp Stausberg 2013 p 16 Mair 2015 p 47 Mair 2015 p 36 a b c d e f g Otto amp Stausberg 2013 p 16 Graf 1997 p page needed Davies 2007 p xiii Miller 2010 Petersen 2009 p 220 a b c Bailey 2018 p 40 a b Goos 2019 pp 243 244 Greenwood 2000 p 7 Russell 1972 pp 6 7 Greenwood 2000 p 6 Greenwood 2000 p 89 Sasson 1995 pp 1896 1898 Sasson 1995 p 1897 Sasson 1995 pp 1898 1898 a b c d e f g h Sasson 1995 p 1898 a b c Sasson 1995 p 1899 a b Sasson 1995 pp 1900 1901 Sasson 1995 p 1901 Sasson 1995 p 1895 a b c Abusch 2002 p 56 a b c Brown 1995 p 42 a b c Sasson 1995 pp 1901 1902 Kuiper 2010 p 178 a b Sasson 1995 pp 1901 1904 Sasson 1995 p 1843 Sasson 1995 p 1866 Delaporte 2013 p 152 Abusch I Tzvi Toorn Karel Van Der 1999 Mesopotamian Magic Textual Historical and Interpretative Perspectives Brill ISBN 978 90 5693 033 2 Retrieved 15 May 2020 a b Sasson 1995 pp 1899 1900 Noegel Scott Walker Joel Walker 2010 Prayer Magic and the Stars in the Ancient and Late Antique World Penn State Press p 83 ISBN 978 0 271 04600 6 Birmingham Museums and Art Gallery Incantation bowls Birmingham Museums and Art Gallery Retrieved 2013 09 06 Babylonian Demon Bowls Michigan Library Lib umich edu Retrieved 2013 09 06 C H Gordon Aramaic Incantation Bowls in Orientalia Rome 1941 Vol X pp 120ff Text 3 Orientalia 65 3 4 Pontificio Istituto biblico Pontificio Istituto biblico Facolta di studi dell antico oriente 1996 may have been Jewish but Aramaic incantation bowls also commonly circulated in pagan communities Lilith was of course the frequent subject of concern in incantation bowls and amulets since her presence was J A Montgomery A Syriac Incantation Bowl with Christian Formula AJSLL 34 The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia p 217 Geoffrey W Bromiley 1986 2007 D Aramaic Incantation Bowls One important source of knowledge about Jewish magical practices is the nearly eighty extant incantation bowls made by Jews in Babylonia during the Sassanian period ad 226 636 Though the exact use of the bowls is disputed their function is clearly apotrapaic in that they are meant to ward off the evil effects of several malevolent supernatural beings and influences e g the evil eye Lilith and Bagdana A Dictionary of biblical tradition in English literature p 454 David L Jeffrey 1992 Aramaic incantation bowls of the 6th cent show her with disheveled hair and tell how Bell H I Nock A D Thompson H Magical Texts From A Bilingual Papyrus In The British Museum Proceedings of The British Academy Vol XVII London p 24 a b Ritner R K Magic An Overview in Redford D B Oxford Encyclopedia Of Ancient Egypt Oxford University Press 2001 p 321 Ritner R K Magic An Overview in Redford D B Oxford Encyclopedia Of Ancient Egypt Oxford University Press 2001 pp 321 322 Ritner R K Magic An Overview in Redford D B Oxford Encyclopedia Of Ancient Egypt Oxford University Press 2001 p 322 Ritner R K Magic An Overview in Redford D B Oxford Encyclopedia Of Ancient Egypt Oxford University Press 2001 p 323 a b c d e f g h i j Brier Bob Hobbs Hoyt 2009 Ancient Egypt Everyday Life in the Land of the Nile New York Sterling ISBN 978 1 4549 0907 1 Karenga 2006 p 187 Karenga 2006 p 216 a b c d Mark Joshua 2017 Magic in Ancient Egypt World History Encyclopedia Teeter E 2011 Religion and Ritual in Ancient Egypt Cambridge University Press p 170 Teeter E 2011 Religion and Ritual in Ancient Egypt Cambridge University Press p 118 Andrews C 1994 Amulets of Ancient Egypt University of Texas Press p 1 Deuteronomy 18 9 18 14 Bible Hub provides an interlinear translation of the verses W Gunther Plaut David E Stein The Torah A Modern Commentary Union for Reform Judaism 2004 ISBN 0 8074 0883 2 A Little Hebrew Retrieved 2014 03 26 a b Elber Mark The Everything Kabbalah Book Explore This Mystical Tradition From Ancient Rituals to Modern Day Practices p 137 Adams Media 2006 ISBN 1 59337 546 8 Person Hara E The Mitzvah of Healing An Anthology of Jewish Texts Meditations Essays Personal Stories and Rituals pp 4 6 Union for Reform Judaism 2003 ISBN 0 8074 0856 5 Belser Julia Watts Book Review Gideon Bohak Ancient Jewish Magic Academia Retrieved 9 July 2021 Bohak Gideon 2011 2 Ancient Jewish Magic A History Cambridge University Press pp 70 142 ISBN 978 0 521 18098 6 Retrieved 15 May 2020 Clinton Wahlen Jesus and the impurity of spirits in the Synoptic Gospels 2004 p 19 The Jewish magical papyri and incantation bowls may also shed light on our investigation However the fact that all of these sources are generally dated from the third to fifth centuries and beyond requires us to exercise particular a b c Libbrecht 2007 p 43 Eichhorn 1973 pp 55 70 Nelson et al 2006 Zhang amp Hriskos 2003 Nadeau 2012 p 140 Waldau amp Patton 2009 p 280 Carrasco David Warmind Morten Hawley John Stratton Reynolds Frank Giarardot Norman Neusner Jacob Pelikan Jaroslav Campo Juan Penner Hans et al Authors 1999 Merriam Webster s Encyclopedia of World Religions Edited by Wendy Doniger United States Merriam Webster p 1064 ISBN 9780877790440 Davies 2012 p 41 Gordon 1999 p 163 Gordon 1999 pp 163 164 Bremmer 2002 pp 2 3 Bailey 2018 p 19 a b Gordon 1999 p 165 a b c d e f g h Otto amp Stausberg 2013 p 17 Davies 2012 pp 32 33 a b c d e Kindt Julia 2012 Rethinking Greek Religion Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521110921 Copenhaver Brian P 2015 Magic in Western Culture From Antiquity to the Enlightenment Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 6 ISBN 9781107070523 Price Simon 1999 Religions of the Ancient Greeks Reprint ed Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press p 115 ISBN 978 0521388672 Hinnells John 2009 The Penguin Handbook of Ancient Religions London Penguin p 313 ISBN 978 0141956664 Betz Hans Dieter 1986 The Greek Magical Papyri in Translation Including the Demotic Spells Chicago University of Chicago Press pp xii xlv ISBN 978 0226044446 Lewy Hans 1978 Oracles and Theurgy Mysticism Magic and Platonism in the Later Roman Empire Paris Etudes Augustiniennes p 439 ISBN 9782851210258 Betz Hans 1996 The Greek Magical Papyri in Translation Chicago University of Chicago Press p 34 ISBN 978 0226044477 Drijvers Jan Willem Hunt David 1999 The Late Roman World and Its Historian Interpreting Ammianus Marcellinus 1st ed London Routledge pp 208 ISBN 9780415202718 Retrieved 22 August 2010 Deuteronomy 18 9 18 14 2 Chronicles 33 1 33 9 Acts 13 6 13 12 Galatians 5 16 5 26 Davies 2012 pp 33 34 a b c Bailey 2006 p 8 Davies 2012 pp 41 42 a b c Bailey 2018 p 72 a b Bailey 2018 p 99 a b Bailey 2018 p 21 Kieckhefer 2000 pp 10 11 Davies 2012 p 35 Flint 1991 p 5 Davies 2012 p 6 Bailey 2018 p 88 Davies 2012 p 6 Johnson T Scribner R W 1996 Popular Religion in Germany and Central Europe 1400 1800 Themes in Focus Bloomsbury Publishing p 47 ISBN 978 1 349 24836 0 Retrieved 2023 04 02 a b Bailey 2018 p 22 Flint 1991 pp 4 12 406 Kieckhefer Richard June 1994 The Specific Rationality of Medieval Magic The American Historical Review 99 3 813 818 doi 10 2307 2167771 JSTOR 2167771 PMID 11639314 Josephy Marcia Reines 1975 Magic amp Superstition in the Jewish Tradition An Exhibition Organized by the Maurice Spertus Museum of Judaica Spertus College of Judaica Press p 18 Retrieved 15 May 2020 Lindberg David C 2007 The Beginnings of Western Science The European Scientific Tradition in Philosophical Religious and Institutional Context 600 B C to A D 1450 2nd ed Chicago University of Chicago Press p 20 ISBN 978 0226482057 Schama Simon 2003 A History of Britain 1 3000 BC AD 1603 At the Edge of the World Paperback 2003 ed London BBC Worldwide pp 193 194 ISBN 978 0 563 48714 2 Kieckhefer 1994 p 818 Gilchrist Roberta 1 November 2008 Magic for the Dead The Archaeology of Magic in Later Medieval Burials PDF Medieval Archaeology 52 1 119 159 doi 10 1179 174581708x335468 ISSN 0076 6097 S2CID 162339681 Archived PDF from the original on 2015 05 14 Gilchrist Roberta 2012 Medieval Life Archaeology and the Life Course Reprint ed Woodbridge Boydell Press p xii ISBN 9781843837220 Retrieved 8 March 2017 El Zein Amira 2009 Islam Arabs and the Intelligent World of the Jinn Syracuse New York Syracuse University Press p 77 ISBN 9780815650706 Lebling Robert 2010 Legends of the Fire Spirits Jinn and Genies from Arabia to Zanzibar I B Tauris p 51 ISBN 9780857730633 Nasr Seyyed Hossein Dagli Caner K Dakake Maria Massi Lumbard Joseph E B Rustom Mohammed 2015 The Study Quran A New Translation and Commentary Harper Collins p 25 ISBN 9780062227621 Owen Davies Grimoires A History of Magic Books Oxford University Press 2009 p 27 Eric Geoffroy Introduction to Sufism The Inner Path of Islam World Wisdom 2010 p 21 Kieckhefer 2000 p 12 Hanegraaff 2012 p 170 Kieckhefer 2000 p 12 a b Styers 2004 p 35 Davies 2012 pp 35 36 Hanegraaff 2006b p 739 Hanegraaff 2006b p 738 a b c d Otto amp Stausberg 2013 p 18 Styers 2004 pp 9 36 37 Davies 2012 p 7 a b c Styers 2004 p 9 Styers 2004 p 37 Davies 2012 p 9 a b Kieckhefer Richard 2002 Forbidden Rites A Necromancer s Manual of the Fifteenth Century 2nd ed University Park Pennsylvania Pennsylvania State University Press ISBN 978 0271017518 Hasidism Between Ecstasy and Magic Moshe Idel SUNY Press 1995 pp 72 74 The term magic used here to denote divine theurgy affecting material blessing rather than directly talismanic practical Kabbalah magic Studies in East European Jewish Mysticism and Hasidism Joseph Weiss Littman Library chapter The Saddik Altering the Divine Will p 192 a b Bailey 2018 p 25 Styers 2004 p 60 Bailey 2018 p 23 Bailey 2018 p 23 a b Bailey 2018 p 98 a b Bailey 2018 p 24 Styers 2004 p 27 a b Bailey 2018 p 103 a b Styers 2004 p 61 Styers 2004 pp 9 10 Davies 2012 pp 63 64 Davies 2012 p 29 Davies 2012 pp 30 31 Davies 2012 p 101 Hanegraaff 2012 p 167 Flint 1991 p 3 Bogdan 2012 pp 1 2 a b c d e f g Bogdan 2012 p 11 Urban Hugh 2006 Magia Sexualis Sex Magic and Liberation in Modern Western Esotericism University of California Press pp 240 243 ISBN 978 0520932883 a b Hanegraaff 2006b p 741 a b c d Hanegraaff 2006b p 743 Styers 2004 p 19 Styers 2004 pp 19 20 Berger amp Ezzy 2007 p 27 Hum Lynne L Drury Nevill 2013 The Varieties of Magical Experience Indigenous Medieval and Modern Magic ABC CLIO p 9 ISBN 978 1 4408 0419 9 Retrieved 14 May 2020 Davies 2012 p 2 Davies 2012 p 113 Bailey 2018 p 8 Bailey 2006 p 2 a b Styers 2004 p 3 a b Otto amp Stausberg 2013 p 1 Otto amp Stausberg 2013 p 7 J Ki Zerbo 1990 Methodology and African Prehistory Volume 92 Issues 3 102588 James Currey Publishers p 63 ISBN 085255091X Retrieved 2015 12 26 Molefi Kete Asanti 2008 11 26 Encyclopedia of African Religion SAGE Publications ISBN 978 1506317861 Retrieved 2015 12 26 Dr M Labahn Martin Luther University 2007 A Kind of Magic Understanding Magic in the New Testament and Its Religious Environment A amp C Black p 28 ISBN 978 0567030757 Retrieved 2015 12 26 Volume 306 of European studies on Christian origins M Konate Deme Western Michigan University 2010 Heroism and the Supernatural in the African Epic Routledge p 38 ISBN 978 1136932649 Retrieved 2015 12 26 African Studies a b Bailey 2006 p 9 Blain Ezzy amp Harvey 2004 pp 118 119 Styers 2004 p 25 Jolly 1996 p 17 a b Bailey 2006 p 3 a b Hanegraaff 2012 p 164 Davies 2012 p 21 Styers 2004 p 21 a b Styers 2004 p 6 Hanegraaff 2012 pp 164 165 Hanegraaff 2012 p 165 Otto amp Stausberg 2013 p 4 Otto amp Stausberg 2013 p 4 Davies 2012 pp 14 15 a b Davies 2012 p 15 Cunningham 1999 pp 16 17 Cunningham 1999 p 17 Davies 2012 p 15 Bailey 2018 p 15 Hanegraaff 2006 p 716 Hanegraaff 2012 p 164 a b c Hanegraaff 2006 p 716 Cunningham 1999 p 18 Davies 2012 p 16 Davies 2012 p 16 Hanegraaff 2006 p 716 Davies 2012 p 16 Hanegraaff 2006 p 716 Bailey 2018 pp 15 16 Cunningham 1999 p 19 Hanegraaff 2006 p 716 Cunningham 1999 p 19 Cunningham 1999 p 19 Hanegraaff 2006 p 716 Davies 2012 p 16 Bailey 2018 pp 15 16 a b Cunningham 1999 p 20 Cunningham 1999 pp 20 21 Davies 2012 pp 18 19 Davies 2012 p 17 a b Hanegraaff 2006 p 716 Hanegraaff 2012 p 165 a b c Hanegraaff 2012 p 165 Davies 2012 p 18 Bailey 2018 p 16 a b Cunningham 1999 p 47 Hanegraaff 2006 p 717 Cunningham 1999 p 47 Hanegraaff 2006 p 716 Hanegraaff 2006 p 716 Davies 2012 p 17 a b Cunningham 1999 p 44 Hanegraaff 2012 p 165 Davies 2012 pp 17 18 a b Bailey 2006 p 4 a b Otto amp Stausberg 2013 pp 5 6 a b Cunningham 1999 p 49 Cunningham 1999 p 23 a b c Cunningham 1999 p 24 Cunningham 1999 pp 28 29 a b c d Cunningham 1999 p 29 Davies 2012 p 22 Davies 2012 p 61 Cunningham 1999 p 25 Freud amp Strachey 1950 p 83 Freud amp Strachey 1950 p 84 Davies 2012 pp 25 26 Davies 2012 p 26 Davies 2012 p 27 a b c Davies 2012 p 107 Tambiah 1991 p 2 Tambiah 1991 p 8 a b Otto amp Stausberg 2013 p 6 Bailey 2018 p 27 Bailey 2018 p 19 Hutton 2003 p 104 Bailey 2018 p 20 Blain Ezzy amp Harvey 2004 p 125 Hutton 2003 p 103 Styers 2004 p 7 Otto amp Stausberg 2013 p 1 Bailey 2018 p 3 a b Hanegraaff 2012 p 166 Hanegraaff 2012 pp 167 168 Bailey 2006 p 5 Otto amp Stausberg 2013 p 11 Hutton 2003 p 100 Hutton 2017 p ix Hutton 2017 pp ix x Russell 1972 pp 4 10 Bailey 2018 p 68 Bailey 2018 p 71 Bailey 2018 pp 71 72 Bailey 2018 p 90 Bailey 2018 p 92 a b Bailey 2018 p 93 Bailey 2018 p 94 Bailey 2018 p 96 a b Davies 2012 p 82 Bailey 2018 p 85 a b c d e Bailey 2018 p 85 Bailey 2018 p 105 Davies 2012 p 90 Glucklich Ariel 1997 The End of Magic New York Oxford University Press p 87 ISBN 978 0195355239 a b Davies 2012 p 92 Davies 2012 p 93 Davies 2012 p 88 Davies 2012 p 89 Mauss Bain amp Pocock 2007 pp 41 44 Berger amp Ezzy 2007 pp 24 25 Blain Ezzy amp Harvey 2004 p 120 Mauss Bain amp Pocock 2007 pp 33 40 Davies 2012 p 49 Davies 2012 p 51 Works cited edit Abusch Tzvi 2002 Mesopotamian Witchcraft Towards a History and Understanding of Babylonian Witchcraft Beliefs and Literature Leiden Netherlands Brill ISBN 978 9004123878 Bailey Michael D 2006 The Meanings of Magic Magic Ritual and Witchcraft 1 1 1 23 doi 10 1353 mrw 0 0052 Bailey Michael D 2018 Magic The Basics Abingdon and New York Routledge ISBN 978 1 138 80961 1 Berger H A Ezzy D 2007 Teenage Witches Magical Youth and the Search for the Self Rutgers University Press ISBN 978 0813541365 Blain J Ezzy D Harvey G 2004 Researching Paganisms AltaMira Press Bogdan Henrik 2012 Introduction Modern Western Magic Aries 12 1 1 16 doi 10 1163 147783512X614812 Bremmer Jan N 2002 The Birth of the Term Magic In Jan N Bremmer Jan R Veenstra eds The Metamorphosis of Magic from Late Antiquity to the Early Modern Period Leuven Peeters pp 1 2 ISBN 9789042912274 Brown Michael 1995 Israel s Divine Healer Grand Rapids Michigan Zondervan ISBN 978 0310200291 Classen Albrecht 2017 Magic in the Middle Ages and the Early Modern Age Literature Science Religion Philosophy Music and Art An Introduction In Classen Albrecht ed Magic and Magicians in the Middle Ages and the Early Modern Time The Occult in Pre Modern Sciences Medicine Literature Religion and Astrology Fundamentals of Medieval and Early Modern Culture Vol 20 Berlin and Boston De Gruyter pp 1 108 doi 10 1515 9783110557725 001 ISBN 9783110556070 ISSN 1864 3396 Crowley Aleister 1997 Magick Liber ABA Book 4 Parts I IV Second revised ed Boston Weiser ISBN 0877289190 Cunningham Graham 1999 Religion and Magic Approaches and Theories Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 9780748610136 Davies Owen 2007 Popular Magic Cunning folk in English History Bloomsbury Academic ISBN 978 1847250360 Davies Owen 2012 Magic A Very Short Introduction Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199588022 Delaporte Louis Joseph 2013 Mesopotamia Routledge ISBN 978 1 136 19924 0 Eichhorn Werner 1973 Die Religionen Chinas Die Religionen der Menschheit W Kohlhammer ISBN 978 3 17 216031 4 Flint Valerie I J 1991 The Rise of Magic in Early Medieval Europe Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691031651 Freud Sigmund Strachey James 1950 Totem and Taboo Some Points of Agreement Between the Mental Lives of Savages and Neurotics Repint ed New York W W Norton amp Co ISBN 978 0393001433 Goos Gunivortus 2019 Germanic Magic Runes Their History Mythology and Use in Modern Magical Practice Norderstedt ISBN 978 3749497942 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Gordon Richard 1999 Imagining Greek and Roman Magic In Bengt Ankarloo Stuart Clark eds The Athlone History of Witchcraft and Magic in Europe Vol 2 Ancient Greece and Rome London Athlone Press pp 159 275 ISBN 978 0485890020 Graf Fritz 1997 Magic in the Ancient World Cambridge Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0674541511 Graham Elizabeth 2018 Do You Believe in Magic Material Religion The Journal of Objects Art and Belief 14 2 255 257 doi 10 1080 17432200 2018 1443843 S2CID 195037024 Greenwood Susan 2000 Magic Witchcraft and the Otherworld An Anthropology Berg Publishing ISBN 978 1859734506 Hanegraaff Wouter J 2006 Magic I Introduction In Wouter J Hanegraaff ed Dictionary of Gnosis and Western Esotericism Brill pp 716 719 ISBN 9789004152311 Hanegraaff Wouter J 2006b Magic V 18th 20th Century In Wouter J Hanegraaff ed Dictionary of Gnosis and Western Esotericism Brill pp 738 744 ISBN 978 9004152311 Hanegraaff Wouter 2012 Esotericism and the Academy Rejected Knowledge in Western Culture Cambridge England Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521196215 Hutton Ronald 2003 Witches Druids and King Arthur London and New York Hambledon and London ISBN 9781852853976 Hutton Ronald 2017 The Witch A History of Fear from Ancient Times to the Present Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 22904 2 Jolly Karen Louise 1996 Popular Religion in Late Saxon England Elf Charms in Context Chapel Hill and London University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0807845653 Karenga Maulana 2006 Maat the Moral Ideal in Ancient Egypt A Study in Classical African Ethics University of Sankore Press ISBN 978 0943412252 Kieckhefer Richard 2000 Magic in the Middle Ages 2nd ed Cambridge England Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521785761 Kuiper Kathleen 2010 Mesopotamia The World s Earliest Civilization The Rosen Publishing Group ISBN 978 1615301126 Libbrecht Ulrich 2007 Within the Four Seas Introduction to Comparative Philosophy Peeters Publishers ISBN 978 90 429 1812 2 Mair Victor H 2015 Old Sinitic Mgag Old Persian Magus and English Magician Early China 15 27 47 doi 10 1017 S0362502800004995 ISSN 0362 5028 S2CID 192107986 Mauss Marcel Bain Robert Pocock D F 2007 A General Theory of Magic Reprint ed London Routledge ISBN 978 0415253963 Miller J L 2010 Practice and perception of black magic among the Hittites Altorientalische Forschungen 37 2 doi 10 1524 aofo 2010 0015 S2CID 162843793 Nadeau Randall L ed 2012 The Wiley Blackwell Companion to Chinese Religions John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 1 4051 9031 2 Nelson Sarah M Matson Rachel A Roberts Rachel M Rock Chris Stencel Robert E 2006 Archaeoastronomical Evidence for Wuism at the Hongshan Site of Niuheliang S2CID 6794721 Otto Berndt Christian Stausberg Michael 2013 Defining Magic A Reader Durham Equinox ISBN 978 1908049803 Petersen Jesper Aagaard 2009 Contemporary religious Satanism A Critical Anthology Ashgate Publishing ISBN 978 0 7546 5286 1 Russell Jeffrey Burton 1972 Witchcraft in the Middle Ages Ithaca New York Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0801492891 Styers Randall 2004 Making Magic Religion Magic and Science in the Modern World London Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195169416 Tambiah Stanley Jeyaraja 1991 Magic Science Religion and the Scope of Rationality Reprint ed Cambridge England Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521376310 Sasson Jack M 1995 Civilizations of the ancient Near East Scribner ISBN 978 0 684 19722 7 Waldau Paul Patton Kimberley eds 2009 A Communion of Subjects Animals in Religion Science and Ethics Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 13643 3 Zhang Hong Hriskos Constantine June 2003 Contemporary Chinese Shamanism The Reinvention of Tradition Cultural Survival Quarterly Magazine 27 2 Further reading editFurther information Aleister Crowley bibliography Coleman Simon 2008 The Magic of Anthropology Anthropology News 45 8 8 11 doi 10 1111 an 2004 45 8 8 Dickie Matthew W 2001 Magic and Magicians in the Greco Roman World London a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Gosden Chris 2020 Magic A History From Alchemy to Witchcraft from the Ice Age to the Present New York Farrar Straus and Giroux Gusterson Hugh 2004 How Far Have We Traveled Magic Science and Religion Revisited Anthropology News 45 8 7 11 doi 10 1111 an 2004 45 8 7 1 Hammond Dorothy 1970 Magic A Problem in Semantics American Anthropologist 72 6 1349 1356 doi 10 1525 aa 1970 72 6 02a00080 Helman Wazny Agnieszka Ramble Charles eds 2023 Bon and Naxi Manuscripts De Gruyter ISBN 978 3110776478 Meyer Marvin W Smith Richard 1994 Ancient Christian Magic Coptic Texts of Ritual Power HarperSanFrancisco ISBN 9780060655846 OCLC 28549170 O Keefe Daniel 1982 Stolen Lightning The Social Theory of Magic Oxford a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link van Schaik S 2020 Buddhist Magic Divination Healing and Enchantment Through the Age Shambhala ISBN 978 1611808254 Wax Murray Wax Rosalie 1963 The Notion of Magic Current Anthropology 4 5 495 518 doi 10 1086 200420 S2CID 144182649 External links edit nbsp Look up Magic magic magically magick or majick in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Quotations related to Magic at Wikiquote nbsp Media related to Magic at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Magic supernatural amp oldid 1201562171, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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