{"id":3079,"date":"2010-01-01T01:10:53","date_gmt":"2010-01-01T06:10:53","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/paganpages.org\/content\/?p=3132"},"modified":"2009-12-28T15:48:12","modified_gmt":"2009-12-28T20:48:12","slug":"pagan-theology-14","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/paganpages.org\/emagazine\/2010\/01\/01\/pagan-theology-14\/","title":{"rendered":"Pagan Theology"},"content":{"rendered":"<div style=\"margin: 1ex;\">\n<div>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Cambria; font-size: small;\"><strong>Magic:\u00a0  Made up Explanations<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Cambria; font-size: small;\">Before I got busy and started to talk  about other things I was working on a series of columns devoted to understanding  magic.\u00a0 The question that I am trying to answer is \u201chow does  magic work?\u201d\u00a0 In a previous column I developed a typology for  how you might go about answering that question, with explanations dividing  up into three categories:\u00a0 systematic, individual, and theistic.\u00a0  Systematic explanations develop some sort of system that, if followed,  results in magic.\u00a0 This ranges from science, to sort of science,  to just plain made up systems.\u00a0 Individual and theistic explanations  appeal to something other than a system, like yourself or your Gods,  to explain how magic works.\u00a0\u00a0 Of course most real-world magical  practices syncretically combine all three approaches.\u00a0 I guess  they assume that if you throw enough stuff at the problem you will solve  it through the sheer number of arguments. <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Cambria; font-size: small;\">In the last few columns on this subject  I talked about scientific and sort-of-scientific explanations.\u00a0  Neither of those systems are sufficient to explain why magic works.\u00a0  At the most basic level you cannot take the structure and methods of  science and use it to describe something that does not follow the same  laws of evidence and cause and affect that science requires.\u00a0 Fuzzing  up science as a way to explaining magic just results in bad science,  and no really effective explanation.\u00a0 If we are serious about explaining  magic we\u2019re going to have to do better than misapplying science, or  applying misunderstood science. <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Cambria; font-size: small;\">The most common way to explain how  magic works gets around this problem completely.\u00a0 You just make  up a new system, and new set of \u201csupernatural laws\u201d that you must  conform to in order for science to work.\u00a0 Magic doesn\u2019t have  to worry about science and its requirements because it does not follow  the laws of nature.\u00a0 Supernatural systems incorporate their own  set of rules for cause and effect, rules that don\u2019t apply in normal  situations.\u00a0 Because these rules are separate from the natural  systems that science deals with, the whole problem of rules of evidence  and consensus can be avoided.\u00a0 Of course the temptation still exists  to start making empirical claims using supernatural laws, which inevitably  runs afoul of the traffic cops of science who are just waiting to bust  you when you make claims that can be objectively validated. <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Cambria; font-size: small;\">In order to understand what I will  call, for lack of a better term, supernatural systems, you have to understand  the long history of magic in the Western Occult tradition.\u00a0 To  be honest I don\u2019t have the knowledge, skills, or time to review the  long trajectory of magic in the West.\u00a0 Nor do you probably have  the time to read it all.\u00a0 Instead I\u2019ll make some broad generalizations  and historical summaries. <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Cambria; font-size: small;\">Magic in the western tradition can  be divided up into several interconnected systems.\u00a0 Broadly speaking  these are the Hermetic, grimoire or Kabala influenced magic, and angelic  or deistic magic.\u00a0 The oldest [1] attributed system is Hermeticism.\u00a0  Hermetic magic is based on the writings of Hermes Trismegistrus, a notional  mage of Egyptian origin [2].\u00a0 The <em>Corpus Heremeticum<\/em> lays  out the basic ideas of the elements (earth, air, fire, water), \u201cas  above, so below\u201d or the idea that the macrocosm is reflected in the  microcosm [3].\u00a0 This has formed the basis of much of the Western  magical practice, and has followed through to today in many of our magical  practices. <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Cambria; font-size: small;\">In the Middle Ages the Hermetic system  combined with the Jewish mystical system, the Kabala, and various other  varieties of magic [4] to establish a set of procedures, correspondences,  and theories that formed the grimoire tradition.\u00a0 Grimoires were  all the rage in the Middle Ages and slightly thereafter, and they have  had a profound affect on modern Witchcraft and folk magical practices.\u00a0  Grimoires were books created by magicians or those associated with the  Church and contained a variety of activities involving invoking angels  and daemons, correspondences, astrological information, and charms and  spells.\u00a0 At a time when books were rare, and reading mostly controlled  by a few, the idea of a special book that could hold the secrets to  control of fate was a powerful tool.\u00a0 Grimoires were used by court  and other magicians affiliated with the church (many of whom were not  prosecuted by the church due to their standing in the community) and  by local Cunning Men and other folk-magicians.\u00a0 A Cunning Man could  make a good living with a Grimoire and a rudimentary reading ability  [5].\u00a0 The concepts and correspondences in the grimoires eventually  made their way into folk traditions of witchcraft, and come down to  us through Gardner and others in our modern magical systems.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Cambria; font-size: small;\">During and after the Renaissance there  were a variety of individuals that attempted to bring together material  from the Hermetic, folk, and grimoire traditions into comprehensive  systems.\u00a0 Examples include Eliphas Levi\u2019s willpower focused system,  Waite\u2019s Golden Dawn system, Crowley\u2019s Thelema, and others.\u00a0  Underlying all of these systems is the desire for a unified, complete,  magical system that brings together past information into a more effective  and comprehensive practice.\u00a0 In addition these systems represent  a migration away from the more practical folk and grimoire systems where  the primary goal was to change the world, and now the focus was increasingly  on inner change within the practitioner. <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Cambria; font-size: small;\">The two key things I want to highlight  in all this rather gratuitous historical discussion is that two themes  in the history of ritual magic stand out.\u00a0 The first is a desire  for a system, something that provides an overall construct that explains  how you do the magic and why it works (angels, celestial mechanics,  or individual will).\u00a0 This movement from magic\u2019s origins as a  folk and philosophical explanation of the world to a formalized system  of rules and ideas occurred over the entire history of Western civilization.\u00a0  But it really got started in the Renaissance and 18<sup>th<\/sup> century  Enlightenment as science began threatening both magic and religion as  a way of understanding the world.\u00a0 Eventually this trend peaked  in the modern day Golden Dawn and Thelema traditions. <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Cambria; font-size: small;\">The second theme is the tension between  \u201clow\u201d or folk magic and \u201chigh\u201d ritual magic.\u00a0 Ritual magic  with its origins in neo-Platonism and Hermetics was historically an  intellectual pursuit of the elite.\u00a0 Folk magic was more of an everyday  practice, related to blessings and curses well removed from the high-minded  philosophy of the ritualists.\u00a0 This tension was present in the  earliest practice of magic.\u00a0 Greek and Roman Hermetic and neo-Platonic  forms of magic focused on enlightenment, while at the same time ordinary  citizens were scripting spells and curses on tablets to drop into wells. <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Cambria; font-size: small;\">Both of these trends are really about  the distinction between the metaphysical and the empirical.\u00a0 Folk  magic tends to be focused on the practical, with the spiritual intruding  simply through the use of religious imagery [6].\u00a0 Ritual magic  tends to be the opposite, with great emphasis placed on the spiritual  progress of the magician, with the practical effects as secondary outcomes.\u00a0  Likewise the desire for a system has taken magical practice away from  the more empirical place it occupied during the Middle Ages, into a  more Platonic practice that is focused on systems of progressive magical  enlightenment. <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Cambria; font-size: small;\">This, of course, does not mean that  practical systems don\u2019t exist, what we are talking about are general  trends and paths, not every byway and cul-de-sac that is out there.\u00a0  In fact neo-Pagan Witchcraft often combines both enlightenment and practice,  and is a representation of a modern, practical, magical system.\u00a0  We are ignoring modern neo-Pagan magical practices mainly because their  theoretical underpinnings are either derived from ritual magic, or fall  into one of the other categories we have discussed or will discuss in  other columns. <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Cambria; font-size: small;\">What this means is that explanations  also follow this same trend, with a division between explanations having  either a practical, empirical, basis, or a metaphysical one.\u00a0\u00a0  When it comes to explaining why magic works these two trends can be  seen as either assuming some sort of casual equation (this then that)  or providing an allegorical path to enlightenment. <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Cambria; font-size: small;\">The casual proposition is pretty straightforward:\u00a0  if something happens then it causes another result.\u00a0 The simplest  casual rule is the Hermetic \u201cas above, so below\u201d or that the microcosm  is related to the macrocosm.\u00a0 Ignoring for a minute exactly how  you would empirically verify this, what is important is the fact that  an empirical claim is made.\u00a0 The law of magic as laid down implies  something will happen in the physical world as a result of my relation  to the unseen work and the actions I take to establish that relationship. <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Cambria; font-size: small;\">This, of course, opens the entire argument  to empirical verification.\u00a0 This has been the bane of astrology  where astrological claims have been attacked several different ways  by astronomy and the scientific community [7].\u00a0 I choose astrology  because there is a straightforward application of \u201cthis then that\u201d  when it comes to astrology, and astrological correspondences make up  an important component of some forms of ritual magic.\u00a0 In this  case making up a rule set is kind of like creating an alternative science.\u00a0  Unfortunately because the original science does a pretty good job of  evaluating evidence and describing how the world works, you end up with  having to play by the same set of rules that science does.\u00a0 Again,  if you claim that your system actually works in the real world, you  set yourself up for empirical verification, which almost always results  in tears. <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Cambria; font-size: small;\">Because of the problem of empirical  verification, the allegorical interpretation of the systems is superficially  attractive. If what is really happening when you follow the rules of  magic is spiritual progress, then empirical verification becomes moot  (unless you\u2019re a psychologist).\u00a0 This focus on internal transformation  has led to a strong link between magic and psychology in Jung and others.\u00a0  If \u201cas above, so below\u201d really refers to spiritual enlightenment,  then the work done through the magical system is really designed to  draw down the enlightenment that exists \u201cabove\u201d into the human spirit  that is practicing the magic. <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Cambria; font-size: small;\">Just as astrology is the poster child  for the empirical approach, alchemy is a good example of the allegorical  approach.\u00a0 While alchemy started off as a quasi-philosophical pursuit  with the Greeks, it quickly became divided between those who pursued  the practical application (i.e. chemists) and those that pursued the  inner transformation.\u00a0 It is not surprising that the practical  application of transmutation and change in matter branched off and became  an accepted science; after all it worked in a reproducible, empirical,  sense and could be codified into a scientific discipline.\u00a0 The  mystical and occult aspects of alchemy retained the inner work, because  that was less susceptible to being adopted by science.\u00a0\u00a0 In  the inner work of alchemy it is not the materials that are being changed,  but rather the practitioner who is seeking to refine their inner essence  or soul.\u00a0 Just like the Masonic tradition, the perfection and purification  of the individual is the end objective, not a practical working in the  world.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Cambria; font-size: small;\">There are many systems in addition  to alchemy that pursue the inner path toward occult enlightenment.\u00a0  The Golden Dawn and Thelema (OTO and A:A:) traditions all practice different  versions of the inner path, or theurgy, the uniting of the magician  with the divine [8].\u00a0 The argument that the primary focus of magic  is inner enlightenment or unification of the magician with a supernatural  power or spirit is the first example we have seen that avoids the problem  of empirical verification.\u00a0 If magic only has effects on the individual  and their inner psychology and spiritual development then no one can  challenge its validity.\u00a0 Except perhaps those who try it and fail  to seen any improvement in their condition. <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Cambria; font-size: small;\">Now I am setting up a bit of an extreme  argument here, claiming that the inner working is the only purpose of  magic is not a claim made by most magical traditions, even the decidedly  Gnostic ones.\u00a0 As I said at the beginning of the article most traditions  are syncretic, using a wide range of arguments and justifications for  their magical workings.\u00a0 However figuring out how magic works when  all of the arguments are being made at the same time is like trying  to figure out your favorite color from a bucket of black paint.\u00a0  They\u2019re all in there, but it\u2019s hard to see any one of them. <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Cambria; font-size: small;\">The problem that I have with an exclusively  inner argument is that it is unsatisfying in its lack of distinction  between magic and religion.\u00a0 If magic becomes a system of practice,  particularly group practice, which brings about gnosis or the realization  of a higher reality, then it begins to look a lot like many religions.\u00a0  Only with better stuff, fancier rituals, and the threat that some of  the practical stuff might actually work.\u00a0\u00a0 This argument also  leads along the lines of magic being a type of prayer, or a way to connect  with the divine. <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Cambria; font-size: small;\">The loss of distinction between magic  and religion begins to make magic a meaningless appendage to religion.\u00a0  If magical practice is wholly theurgic, or linked to a union with the  divine, then magic becomes particular to the Gods and Goddesses, or  spirits, involved in its practice.\u00a0 No longer is magic a universal  practice independent of religion: the practical craft to religion\u2019s  high art.\u00a0 Rather it in itself becomes dependent on spirits or  the divine for its success.\u00a0 Thus magic becomes more or less a  narcissistic, self-focused, brand of religion.\u00a0 I say \u201cnarcissistic\u201d  because the focus of the workings tends to be on gnosis, not social  justice or charity [9]. <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Cambria; font-size: small;\">This line of magical working is not  wrong or somehow invalid.\u00a0 Rather I am claiming that any argument  that does not somehow tie magic to practical outcomes loses what it  is that makes magic unique.\u00a0 Magic is not only connection with  the divine, but also the affect of our actions, will, and intentions  on the world.\u00a0 Without a claim that the world has changed, magic  loses its unique character.\u00a0 It simply becomes yet another path  to enlightenment like Yoga, Kabala, or Christian spiritual practices  [10]. <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Cambria; font-size: small;\">No matter how you look at it, systemic  explanations for magic working boil down to \u201cbecause I said so.\u201d\u00a0  The ones that establish practical laws of magic that parallel science  fail in their explanation because scientific laws actually do explain  how things work, and magical ones don\u2019t.\u00a0 Indeed in the past  magical laws that actually did work, like alchemy, went on to be adopted  by science and transitioned from a magical practice to a scientific  one.\u00a0 Systematic explanations of inner change in the magician amount  to either a slightly different type of religion, or a set of rules for  enhanced mental and psychological functioning.\u00a0 These make magic  into something else, either a religion or a mental discipline, cutting  magic off from its relationship to the real world.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Cambria; font-size: small;\">All of the explanations that we have  covered so far have been rules based.\u00a0 Either using the rule set  we call science to explain how magic works, or some form of hybrid or  constructed rules set.\u00a0 None of these explanations have been satisfying,  they have not given us something that cannot either be attacked from  an empiricist or theological viewpoint.\u00a0 They haven\u2019t really  explained anything, only asked us to trust that the rules we are using  do apply, and that they do what the practitioners claim that they do.\u00a0  There must be something better.\u00a0 But finding it means we must thread  our way between the rocks of science and the shoals of religion.\u00a0  However unless we are able to do that, magic will simply disappear into  one or the other practice. <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Cambria; font-size: small;\">In the next couple of columns on this  subject we will move from rules based explanations to those that claim  magic works by either tying into to the divine powers, or our own internal  will.\u00a0\u00a0 We will abandon our focus on systems as a way for  magic to work, instead looking at things like the intent and focus of  the practitioner as ways to find firm footing for magical practice away  from either religion or science. <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Cambria; font-size: small;\">[1]\u00a0 One thing you have to be  very careful about is confusing attribution with reality in the history  of magic.\u00a0 While there may be many claims for ancestry going back  to the \u201coriginal\u201d sorcerer King Solomon, in reality the idea of  Solomon as occult magician may have been introduced at a much later  date.\u00a0 Just like you can\u2019t really use scientific analysis to  understand magic, its difficult to use historical analysis to explain  how magic has developed.\u00a0 Also, I\u2019m interested in systems here,  not necessarily the history of magic. <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Cambria; font-size: small;\">[2]\u00a0 He is also seen as the combination  of the Greek and Egyptian Gods Hermes and Thoth. <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Cambria; font-size: small;\">[3]\u00a0 And thus establishing one  of the first and most essential rules for magic.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Cambria; font-size: small;\">[4] For example Arabic, folk and traditional,  and angelic magic.\u00a0 There are few really good histories of ritual  magic.\u00a0 They either focus on individuals, or they focus on academic  issues such as the relationship between the development of science and  magic.\u00a0 There are few that actually focus on magic as an object  in itself, tracing the ideas and concepts in a serious scholarly way.\u00a0  In fact the best, and shortest, description of magical history as a  history of magical ideas, is the introductions to Stephen Skinner\u2019s  books.\u00a0 While he is focused on ritual magic, the history of ritual  magic is really the history of magic theory up till modern times.\u00a0  Stephen Skinner.\u00a0 <em>The Complete Magician\u2019s Tables<\/em>, Llewellyn,  2006 and Stephen Skinner and David Rankine.\u00a0 <em>Practical Angel  Magic of Dr. John Dee\u2019s Enochian Tables<\/em>, Golden Hoard, 2006.\u00a0  If you have any interest in magic the <em>Complete Magician\u2019s Tables<\/em> is a must-have. <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Cambria; font-size: small;\">[5] See, for example, Owen Davies.\u00a0 <em> Cunning-Folk Popular Magic in English History<\/em>, Hambledon and London,  2003. <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Cambria; font-size: small;\">[6]\u00a0 Remember the vast majority  of magical practitioners in the West, for the vast majority of recorded  history, have been Christian and practicing a magic steeped in Christian  metaphor and culture.\u00a0 Invoking Pagan deities in a magical context  either occurs in ancient or modern neo-Pagan practice.\u00a0 Unless  you count the use of Pagan deities as stand-ins for Christian daemons. <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Cambria; font-size: small;\">[7]\u00a0 In addition to the straightforward  attack of \u201cyou predict this, it doesn\u2019t happen\u201d it can also be  attacked through the calculation of forces and influences on individuals  and systems.\u00a0 It turns out the overall force exerted by planets  and other bodies is miniscule (other than the moon where there is some  evidence for influence on behavior), so the burden is places on astrologers  to come up with a way in which planets and other objects could actually  influence behavior.\u00a0 Something they have not been able to do without  making something up.\u00a0 While this doesn\u2019t mean that astrology  is invalid, it does mean that they have not been able to prove it is  valid to the satisfaction of the scientific community. <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Cambria; font-size: small;\">[8]\u00a0 Golden Dawn: <\/span><a href=\"http:\/\/www.hermeticgoldendawn.org\/\" target=\"_blank\"><span style=\"font-family: Cambria; color: #0000ff; font-size: small;\"><span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\">http:\/\/www.hermeticgoldendawn.org\/<\/span><\/span><\/a><span style=\"font-family: Cambria; font-size: small;\"> OTO: <\/span><a href=\"http:\/\/www.oto-usa.org\/\" target=\"_blank\"><span style=\"font-family: Cambria; color: #0000ff; font-size: small;\"><span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\">http:\/\/www.oto-usa.org\/<\/span><\/span><\/a><span style=\"font-family: Cambria; font-size: small;\"> Thelema (A:A:): <\/span><a href=\"http:\/\/www.ordoaa.org\/\" target=\"_blank\"><span style=\"font-family: Cambria; color: #0000ff; font-size: small;\"><span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\">http:\/\/www.ordoaa.org\/<\/span><\/span><\/a><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Cambria; font-size: small;\">[9]\u00a0 Nothing wrong with that,  but I will point out that the most popular religious teachings very  much focus on issues of poverty, social justice, charity, and how we  treat others.\u00a0 While enlightenment and justice may be separated,  there are a whole lot of religious teachings that suggest they shouldn\u2019t. <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Cambria; font-size: small;\">[10]\u00a0 Which goes a long way to  explaining why various Gnostic or mystical practices became increasingly  popular as science began to assert itself in the Renaissance and Enlightenment. <\/span><\/div>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Magic:\u00a0 Made up Explanations Before I got busy and started to talk about other things I was working on a series of columns devoted to understanding magic.\u00a0 The question that I am trying to answer is \u201chow does magic work?\u201d\u00a0 In a previous column I developed a typology for how you might go about answering that question, with explanations dividing up into three categories:\u00a0 systematic, individual, and theistic.\u00a0 Systematic explanations develop some sort of system that, if followed, results in magic.\u00a0 This ranges from science, to sort of science, to just plain made up systems.\u00a0 Individual and theistic explanations appeal to something other than a system, like yourself or your Gods, to explain how magic works.\u00a0\u00a0 Of course most real-world magical practices syncretically combine all three approaches.\u00a0 I guess they assume that if you throw enough stuff at the problem you will solve it through the sheer number of arguments. In the last few columns on this subject I talked about scientific and sort-of-scientific explanations.\u00a0 Neither of those systems are sufficient to explain why magic works.\u00a0 At the most basic level you cannot take the structure and methods of science and use it to describe something that does not follow the same laws of evidence and cause and affect that science requires.\u00a0 Fuzzing up science as a way to explaining magic just results in bad science, and no really effective explanation.\u00a0 If we are serious about explaining magic we\u2019re going to have to do better than misapplying science, or applying misunderstood science. The most common way to explain how magic works gets around this problem completely.\u00a0 You just make up a new system, and new set of \u201csupernatural laws\u201d that you must conform to in order for science to work.\u00a0 Magic doesn\u2019t have to worry about science and its requirements because it does not follow the laws of nature.\u00a0 Supernatural systems incorporate their own set of rules for cause and effect, rules that don\u2019t apply in normal situations.\u00a0 Because these rules are separate from the natural systems that science deals with, the whole problem of rules of evidence and consensus can be avoided.\u00a0 Of course the temptation still exists to start making empirical claims using supernatural laws, which inevitably runs afoul of the traffic cops of science who are just waiting to bust you when you make claims that can be objectively validated. In order to understand what I will call, for lack of a better term, supernatural systems, you have to understand the long history of magic in the Western Occult tradition.\u00a0 To be honest I don\u2019t have the knowledge, skills, or time to review the long trajectory of magic in the West.\u00a0 Nor do you probably have the time to read it all.\u00a0 Instead I\u2019ll make some broad generalizations and historical summaries. Magic in the western tradition can be divided up into several interconnected systems.\u00a0 Broadly speaking these are the Hermetic, grimoire or Kabala influenced magic, and angelic or deistic magic.\u00a0 The oldest [1] attributed system is Hermeticism.\u00a0 Hermetic magic is based on the writings of Hermes Trismegistrus, a notional mage of Egyptian origin [2].\u00a0 The Corpus Heremeticum lays out the basic ideas of the elements (earth, air, fire, water), \u201cas above, so below\u201d or the idea that the macrocosm is reflected in the microcosm [3].\u00a0 This has formed the basis of much of the Western magical practice, and has followed through to today in many of our magical practices. In the Middle Ages the Hermetic system combined with the Jewish mystical system, the Kabala, and various other varieties of magic [4] to establish a set of procedures, correspondences, and theories that formed the grimoire tradition.\u00a0 Grimoires were all the rage in the Middle Ages and slightly thereafter, and they have had a profound affect on modern Witchcraft and folk magical practices.\u00a0 Grimoires were books created by magicians or those associated with the Church and contained a variety of activities involving invoking angels and daemons, correspondences, astrological information, and charms and spells.\u00a0 At a time when books were rare, and reading mostly controlled by a few, the idea of a special book that could hold the secrets to control of fate was a powerful tool.\u00a0 Grimoires were used by court and other magicians affiliated with the church (many of whom were not prosecuted by the church due to their standing in the community) and by local Cunning Men and other folk-magicians.\u00a0 A Cunning Man could make a good living with a Grimoire and a rudimentary reading ability [5].\u00a0 The concepts and correspondences in the grimoires eventually made their way into folk traditions of witchcraft, and come down to us through Gardner and others in our modern magical systems. During and after the Renaissance there were a variety of individuals that attempted to bring together material from the Hermetic, folk, and grimoire traditions into comprehensive systems.\u00a0 Examples include Eliphas Levi\u2019s willpower focused system, Waite\u2019s Golden Dawn system, Crowley\u2019s Thelema, and others.\u00a0 Underlying all of these systems is the desire for a unified, complete, magical system that brings together past information into a more effective and comprehensive practice.\u00a0 In addition these systems represent a migration away from the more practical folk and grimoire systems where the primary goal was to change the world, and now the focus was increasingly on inner change within the practitioner. The two key things I want to highlight in all this rather gratuitous historical discussion is that two themes in the history of ritual magic stand out.\u00a0 The first is a desire for a system, something that provides an overall construct that explains how you do the magic and why it works (angels, celestial mechanics, or individual will).\u00a0 This movement from magic\u2019s origins as a folk and philosophical explanation of the world to a formalized system of rules and ideas occurred over the entire history of Western civilization.\u00a0 But it really got started in the Renaissance and 18th century Enlightenment as science began threatening both magic and religion as a way of understanding the world.\u00a0 Eventually this trend peaked in the modern day Golden Dawn and Thelema traditions. The second theme is the tension between \u201clow\u201d or folk magic and \u201chigh\u201d ritual magic.\u00a0 Ritual magic with its origins in neo-Platonism and Hermetics was historically an intellectual pursuit of the elite.\u00a0 Folk magic was more of an everyday practice, related to blessings and curses well removed from the high-minded philosophy of the ritualists.\u00a0 This tension was present in the earliest practice of magic.\u00a0 Greek and Roman Hermetic and neo-Platonic forms of magic focused on enlightenment, while at the same time ordinary citizens were scripting spells and curses on tablets to drop into wells. Both of these trends are really about the distinction between the metaphysical and the empirical.\u00a0 Folk magic tends to be focused on the practical, with the spiritual intruding simply through the use of religious imagery [6].\u00a0 Ritual magic tends to be the opposite, with great emphasis placed on the spiritual progress of the magician, with the practical effects as secondary outcomes.\u00a0 Likewise the desire for a system has taken magical practice away from the more empirical place it occupied during the Middle Ages, into a more Platonic practice that is focused on systems of progressive magical enlightenment. This, of course, does not mean that practical systems don\u2019t exist, what we are talking about are general trends and paths, not every byway and cul-de-sac that is out there.\u00a0 In fact neo-Pagan Witchcraft often combines both enlightenment and practice, and is a representation of a modern, practical, magical system.\u00a0 We are ignoring modern neo-Pagan magical practices mainly because their theoretical underpinnings are either derived from ritual magic, or fall into one of the other categories we have discussed or will discuss in other columns. What this means is that explanations also follow this same trend, with a division between explanations having either a practical, empirical, basis, or a metaphysical one.\u00a0\u00a0 When it comes to explaining why magic works these two trends can be seen as either assuming some sort of casual equation (this then that) or providing an allegorical path to enlightenment. The casual proposition is pretty straightforward:\u00a0 if something happens then it causes another result.\u00a0 The simplest casual rule is the Hermetic \u201cas above, so below\u201d or that the microcosm is related to the macrocosm.\u00a0 Ignoring for a minute exactly how you would empirically verify this, what is important is the fact that an empirical claim is made.\u00a0 The law of magic as laid down implies something will happen in the physical world as a result of my relation to the unseen work and the actions I take to establish that relationship. This, of course, opens the entire argument to empirical verification.\u00a0 This has been the bane of astrology where astrological claims have been attacked several different ways by astronomy and the scientific community [7].\u00a0 I choose astrology because there is a straightforward application of \u201cthis then that\u201d when it comes to astrology, and astrological correspondences make up an important component of some forms of ritual magic.\u00a0 In this case making up a rule set is kind of like creating an alternative science.\u00a0 Unfortunately because the original science does a pretty good job of evaluating evidence and describing how the world works, you end up with having to play by the same set of rules that science does.\u00a0 Again, if you claim that your system actually works in the real world, you set yourself up for empirical verification, which almost always results in tears. Because of the problem of empirical verification, the allegorical interpretation of the systems is superficially attractive. If what is really happening when you follow the rules of magic is spiritual progress, then empirical verification becomes moot (unless you\u2019re a psychologist).\u00a0 This focus on internal transformation has led to a strong link between magic and psychology in Jung and others.\u00a0 If \u201cas above, so below\u201d really refers to spiritual enlightenment, then the work done through the magical system is really designed to draw down the enlightenment that exists \u201cabove\u201d into the human spirit that is practicing the magic. Just as astrology is the poster child for the empirical approach, alchemy is a good example of the allegorical approach.\u00a0 While alchemy started off as a quasi-philosophical pursuit with the Greeks, it quickly became divided between those who pursued the practical application (i.e. chemists) and those that pursued the inner transformation.\u00a0 It is not surprising that the practical application of transmutation and change in matter branched off and became an accepted science; after all it worked in a reproducible, empirical, sense and could be codified into a scientific discipline.\u00a0 The mystical and occult aspects of alchemy retained the inner work, because that was less susceptible to being adopted by science.\u00a0\u00a0 In the inner work of alchemy it is not the materials that are being changed, but rather the practitioner who is seeking to refine their inner essence or soul.\u00a0 Just like the Masonic tradition, the perfection and purification of the individual is the end objective, not a practical working in the world. There are many systems in addition to alchemy that pursue the inner path toward occult enlightenment.\u00a0 The Golden Dawn and Thelema (OTO and A:A:) traditions all practice different versions of the inner path, or theurgy, the uniting of the magician with the divine [8].\u00a0 The argument that the primary focus of magic is inner enlightenment or unification of the magician with a supernatural power or spirit is the first example we have seen that avoids the problem of empirical verification.\u00a0 If magic only has effects on the individual and their inner psychology and spiritual development then no one can challenge its validity.\u00a0 Except perhaps those who try it and fail to seen any improvement in their condition. Now I am setting up a bit of an extreme argument here, claiming that the inner working is the only purpose of magic is not a claim made by most magical traditions, even the decidedly Gnostic ones.\u00a0 As I said at the beginning of&#8230;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":5,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"iawp_total_views":0,"footnotes":""},"categories":[],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-3079","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry"],"acf":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/paganpages.org\/emagazine\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/3079","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/paganpages.org\/emagazine\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/paganpages.org\/emagazine\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/paganpages.org\/emagazine\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/5"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/paganpages.org\/emagazine\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=3079"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/paganpages.org\/emagazine\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/3079\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/paganpages.org\/emagazine\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=3079"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/paganpages.org\/emagazine\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=3079"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/paganpages.org\/emagazine\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=3079"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}