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The Caretaker
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RENAISSANCE MAGIC - Jan/24/2023

RENAISSANCE NEOPLATONISTS

It is may 29th, 1453. You are Sultan Mehmed the Conqueror, and you have just taken the city of Constantinople. You’ve been scaring the daylights out of the Christian world for a while now, but now you’ve really gone and done it. Your little jaunt through Asia Minor is causing a bunch of greek theologians to pull up and run further west into europe. The catholic church already has their hands full with a whole mess of internal conflicts. You wonder how they’re gonna handle this influx of new ideas. Sure would be a shame if you accidentally contributed to some sort of protestant reformation or something. You can’t think about that right now though, you’ve got to think of a better name for your cool new city.

Meanwhile, back in the Catholic Church, a sin is being committed. A sin so grievous and dangerous that it will eventually tear the Christian world as we know it in two: people are translating the Bible into dutch.

This may not seem like the biggest deal, but back then, the Bible wasn't something you just read. Books were expensive to make! You couldn't just let any shit-shoveling peasant pick up and read the Good Book. The Bible was printed in Latin. Masses were conducted in Latin. If you had a question, you asked your priest what the words meant.

"But doesn't that give the church fairly significant social and political control over a basic facet of life for medieval Europeans?" Why yes it does. Some people were quite upset about this. On the other hand, this isn't any ordinary book. This is the Good Book. Is the word of god something that can even be translated? Some in the church argued “sure, why not? If we translate the bible into other languages, it would probably help with conversion right?” Others argued “Not only will translating the bible into the common vernacular significantly erode our control, but it isn’t theologically possible. Latin is the oldest, most pure, most proper form of the word of god and that’s that.”

We are approaching the magic, I promise. This is a notoriously difficult era of magical history to summarize.. Not only was it a period of significant and explosive change for the theological landscape of Europe, but the printing press was just invented. Writing, printing, selling, and translating books is now significantly cheaper, so everyone and their cousin wants to print one.

NOMINALISM VS REALISM

Here’s a question: What’s the relationship between a thing, and its name? For a while, medieval world was split on this question.

Common knowledge has changed. Nowadays, we are nominalists. When we say the word “dog” we know that the word “dog” is just a series of noises we use to represent the animal, the word has no real effect on the furry creature known as a dog. This was not always the case. The vast majority of medieval thinkers were realists. They believed that “dog” meant “the furry animal with four legs that barks” in the same sense that one plus one equals two.

For a moment, we must put ourselves in the jingly little shoes of a medieval person. For them, this debate had widespread consequences for the nature of reality. We know humans exist, but does the category “human” exist as a privileged part of the fabric of reality? If it does, how is it defined? What is it made of? If it doesn't, how can we be humans?

Practically, if everything in the universe has a True Name, that brings up the problem of how there are many languages on earth. If dogs have a True Name, how do we know which word is the true one? This becomes a real problem if you’re the Catholic Church and you need to translate the bible. If God wants to talk about a dog, what language does she speak?

AD FONTES!

If the renaissance had a war cry, it would be this: Ad Fontes! Back to the Sources! In many ways, the entire renaissance was built on the influx of classical texts slowly being translated into Latin at the library of Baghdad. By the 15th century, Europe found itself swimming in copies of Plato, Aristotle, Epicurus, and dozens of other sources of ancient knowledge.

Up until recently, the Iberian peninsula (Spain and Portugal) was controlled by the Ummayad Caliphate. Generally when Christians reconquer a place, they demand conversion from the populace. “Convert or we kill you” is a dreadful choice to make. For some Rabbis and Imams, conversion meant they would be able to stay with communities they had been leading for their entire lives. This gave the Christian world access to something rare for the time: Christians who spoke Hebrew.

NOTES

Ad Fontes - Back to the source

Where does knowledge come from? Well, it comes from Hermes trismegistus.

Last quarter of the 15th century = Platonic + Orphic + Hermetic + Kabbalistic work

Assembled by Ficicno, Pico, and Bruno

Syncretized by Agrippa, and extrapolated by Dee

Hermes trismegistus

1433 - 1499 Marsilio Ficino

1463 - 1494 Giovanni Pico della Mirandola

1447 - 1500 Lodovico Lazzarelli

1548 - 1600 Giordano Bruno

1455 - 1522 Reuchlin

The aspiring hermetic mage would have built everything off Iamblichus’s De Mysteriis

Proclus: On Sacrifices in Magic

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kMREGOVqxZ4&ab_channel=ESOTERICA

Reuchlin and the Wonder-Working Word

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MmhmzERU84g&ab_channel=ESOTERICA

Hermetic Philosophy, Earlies European Hermeticism - Crater Hermetis

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yG7U_3OA868&ab_channel=ESOTERICA

Resistance is Futile: Perennialism, Platonism, and Hegemony - 1 of 2

Marsillo Ficino has a deep reverence and appreciation for Judaism as a religion, but he describes actual Jewish people as "uncultivated" and "venal." In his mind, Judaism has a sort of natural theological endpoint, as if its a seed that will inevitably sprout into Christianity. He interprets Kabbalah as "proof" that Judaism will become obsolete. His interpretation of Kabbalah is notably supersessionist and anti-Jewish, but also aggressively antisemitic. De Christiana Religione trades in some pretty awful stereotypes.

Pico de Mirandola seems to interpret Judaism as a sort of necessary root structure for Christianity. He interprets Kabbalah as evidence of some deeper truth underlying both religions, heavily implying that he thinks both Jews and Christians are doing religion wrong. Rather than supersesionism, his interpretation of Kabbalah leans into a sort of proto-theosophical stance, as if both Christianity and Judaism hold fragments of some deeper truth that must be reconstructed.

Part 2

Prisca Theologia, the Six Sages

If the hebrews agree with us anywhere, we shall order them to stand by the ancient traditions of their fathers; if anywhere they disagree, then drawn up in Catholic legions we shall make an attack upon them. In short, whatever we detect foreign to the truth of the Gospels we shall refute to the extent of our power, while whatever we find holy and true we shall bear off from the synagogue as from a wrongful possessor to ourselves, the legitimate Israelites.

-Pico della Mirandola

Pico thought that Neoplatonists were appropriating the ideas of Christians, and not the other way around 17:46

Pico is trying to reconcile Aristotle and Plato, but his solution is very aristotelian. Ficino was a platonist. Ficino said that The One is above and outside of being. For Pico, The One IS being.

Pico is all about Averroes and merging with the Active intellect. Pico wants to annihilate himself in The One, become one with the Good. The soul merges with god.

Ficino, the soul is immortal, but goes to be with god in eternal beatitude but never fully merges.

Pico got this from Averroists like aliah del Medico

Dr. Sledge emphasizes the importance of Averroes

Pico’s Jewish Teachers

Elia del Medigo

Flavius Mithridates

Yohannan Alemanno

Wonder working word was probably the big influence on John Dee

Agrippa is getting his Kabbala from Francesco giorgi, a fransiscan, and Giorgi is getting his shit from Pico

The Last Gasp of Platonic Realism. By the time that all this was going on, the late 15th century, Nominalism had already won the day

Pico believed in the fundamental interconnectedness of all things. He conceptualized magic as playing the strings between objects, and he did so with hebrew. He believed that Hebrew was the fundamentally primordial language, the language that god taught to Moses

Figura: Diagram to explain things. Very common medieval thing to try and summarize everything in a single diagram.

Joacim of Fiore, John dee calls him Joachim the prophicizer

The thing that unites the three realms is number

42:17

From the wikipedia for the problem of universals

Nominalism arose in reaction to the problem of universals, specifically accounting for the fact that some things are of the same type. For example, Fluffy and Kitzler are both cats, or, the fact that certain properties are repeatable, such as: the grass, the shirt, and Kermit the Frog are green. One wants to know by virtue of what are Fluffy and Kitzler both cats, and what makes the grass, the shirt, and Kermit green.

The Platonist answer is that all the green things are green in virtue of the existence of a universal: a single abstract thing that, in this case, is a part of all the green things. With respect to the color of the grass, the shirt and Kermit, one of their parts is identical. In this respect, the three parts are literally one. Greenness is repeatable because there is one thing that manifests itself wherever there are green things.

Nominalism denies the existence of universals. The motivation for this flows from several concerns, the first one being where they might exist. Plato famously held, on one interpretation, that there is a realm of abstract forms or universals apart from the physical world (see theory of the forms). Particular physical objects merely exemplify or instantiate the universal. But this raises the question: Where is this universal realm? One possibility is that it is outside space and time. A view sympathetic with this possibility holds that, precisely because some form is immanent in several physical objects, it must also transcend each of those physical objects; in this way, the forms are "transcendent" only insofar as they are "immanent" in many physical objects. In other words, immanence implies transcendence; they are not opposed to one another. (Nor, in this view, would there be a separate "world" or "realm" of forms that is distinct from the physical world, thus shirking much of the worry about where to locate a "universal realm".) However, naturalists assert that nothing is outside of space and time. Some Neoplatonists, such as the pagan philosopher Plotinus and the Christian philosopher Augustine, imply (anticipating conceptualism) that universals are contained within the mind of God. To complicate things, what is the nature of the instantiation or exemplification relation?


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