Darrera modificació: 2010-11-09 Bases de dades: Sciència.cat
Butler, Elizabeth M., Ritual Magic, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1949, x + 329 pp. + [8] làm.
- Resum
- Occult knowledge and practice can be divided into three main branches: Astrology, which aims to guide human fortune by means of foreknowledge; Alchemy, which tries to secure power through the agency of the philosopher's stone; and Ritual Magic, which seeks to control the spirit world. In this classic book (first published in 1949), Butler explores ritual magic using a wide range of texts from the pre-Christian rites of the Akkadians and Chaldeans to the Solomonic Clavicles of medieval Europe. Throughout, there is extensive quotation from the documents themselves, providing the reader with an authentic sense of the richness and power of these texts. Butler also examines the careers of noted magicians of the fifteenth to nineteenth centuries, the history of ceremonial magic in England, the myth of Satanism, and the rituals involved in the Faustian pact with the devil. Ritual Magic is essential reading for all interested in the history of magic and in the way magic traditions have altered as they move from culture to culture and from century to century.
- Matèries
- Màgia
- Notes
- Reimpr.: Hollywood, Ca., Newcastle Publ., 1971; Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1979; San Bernardino, Ca., R. Reginald-Borgo Press, 1980; Stroud-University Park, Pa., Sutton-Pennsylvania State University Press, 1998.
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