All Words
Exact Phrase
Title Search Only
advanced search
Digital Archives Initiative
Memorial University - Electronic Theses and Dissertations 3
Anthropology
Aquaculture
Archaeology
Biochemistry
Biology
Biopsychology
Chemistry
Classics
Community Health
Computational Science
Computer Science
Counselling Centre
Earth Sciences
Economics
Education
Educational Administration
Educational Psychology
Engineering
English
Environmental Science
Folklore
French and Spanish
Geography
German and Russian
History
Human Kinetics and Recreation
Linguistics
Marine Studies
Mathematics and Statistics
Medicine
Nursing
Pharmacy
Philosophy
Physics and Physical Oceanography
Political Science
Psychology
Religious Studies
Social Work
Sociology
Toxicology
Women's Studies
home
browse
preferences
my favorites
about/feedback
recent uploads
help/search tips
Français
menu off
add document to favorites
:
add page to favorites
:
reference url
back to results
:
previous
:
next
Search this object:
0
hit(s) ::
previous hit
:
next hit
View:
document description
page description
page & text
previous page
:
next page
Document Description
Title
The
revival
of the
occult
philosophy
:
cabalistic
magic
and the
Hermetic
Order
of the
Golden
Dawn
Author
Butler
,
Alison
L.
,
1972-
Description
Thesis
(M.A.)--Memorial
University
of
Newfoundland
,
2000.
Religious
Studies
Date
2000
Pagination
v, 136 leaves
Subject
Hermetic
Order
of the
Golden
Dawn;
Magic--Religious
aspects;
Cabala
and
Christianity;
Hermetism
Degree
M.A.
Degree Grantor
Memorial University of Newfoundland. Dept. of Religious Studies
Discipline
Religious Studies
Language
eng
Notes
Bibliography:
leaves
132-136.
Abstract
It
is
essential
that
we
include
the
history
of the
western
magical
tradition
in any
study
of
intellectual
history.
The
belief
in and
practice
of
magic
is
part
of an
interpretation
of
existence
with a
long
history.
That
humanity
continues
to
turn
to
magic
for
answers
about
the
universe
,
human
beings
, and their
interaction
with the
world
demonstrates
that
it
is
not a
mode
of
thinking
which
can
be
dated
to a
certain
time
period.
The
history
of the
western
magical
tradition
defied
the
existence
of a
world
process
of
rationalisation.
This
thesis
will
show
how the
tradition
did
so
in the
Renaissance
and
continued
to
do
so
in a
revival
of that
same
magical
system
in
nineteenth-century
England.
Specifically
, in this
study
we
will
focus
on the
establishment
and
development
of
cabalistic
magic
and how
it
provided
the
ideal
system
in
which
many
currents
of
esotericism
could
be
assimilated.
We
will
show
how this
synthesis
began
in the
Renaissance
by
scholars
such
as
Pico
della
Mirandola
,
Johannes
Reuchlin
and
Heinrich
Cornelius
Agrippa
von
Nettesheim
, and
we
will
show
how the
process
was
concluded
by
Samuel
Liddell
MacGregor
Mathers
, a
co-founder
of a
nineteenth-century
English
magical
society
, The
Hermetic
Order
of the
Golden
Dawn.
Along
the
way
we
will
discuss
the
contributions
of
various
scholars
and
occultists
and
demonstrate
their
roles
in
either
maintaining
and
, or
expanding
the
system
of
cabalistic
magic.
--
This
dissertation
builds
upon
the
work
of
Dame
Frances
Yates
and her
study
of
cabalistic
magic
in her
book
, The
Occult
Philosophy
in the
Elizabethan
Age.
The
conclusion
reached
in this
thesis
is
that the
revival
of
cabalistic
magic
in
nineteenth-century
England
was not
merely
a
restatement
of the
theories
and
ritual
formulated
by the
Renaissance
magi
but was also a
restatement
of their
intellectual
processes.
The
members
of the
Hermetic
Order
of the
Golden
Dawn
took
the
magical
material
passed
down
through
the
ages
and
applied
the
same
process
of
synthesis
,
thus
expanding
the
magical
tradition
and
fulfilling
the
potential
of the
cabalistic
magical
system.
This
revival
and
expansion
of the
western
magical
tradition
in an
era
of
scientific
advancement
and
secularisation
is
but
one
example
of the
eternal
relevance
of
magic
to
intellectual
history
as a
valid
and
popular
interpretation
of the
world
in
which
we
exist.
Type
Text
Resource Type
Electronic
thesis
or
dissertation
Format
Image/jpeg;
Application/pdf
Source
Paper copy kept in the Centre for Newfoundland Studies, Memorial University Libraries
Local Identifier
a1492129
Rights
The author retains copyright ownership and moral rights in this thesis. Neither the thesis nor substantial extracts from it may be printed or otherwise reproduced without the author's permission.
Collection
Electronic
Theses
and
Dissertations
Scanning Status
Completed
PDF File
(40.26
MB)
--
http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/theses/Butler_AlisonL.pdf
CONTENTdm file name
181860.cpd