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Books > Religion & Spirituality > Alternative belief systems
A step-by-step guide to the Tree of Life and the Four Worlds of the
Qabalists. Gray is the foremost authority on magic and the Qabalah.
From the very beginning James Joyce's readers have considered him
as a Catholic or an anti-Catholic writer, and in recent years the
tendency has been to recuperate him for an alternative and
decidedly liberal form of Catholicism. However, a careful study of
Joyce's published and unpublished writings reveals that throughout
his career as a writer he rejected the church in which he had grown
up. As a result, Geert Lernout argues that it is misleading to
divorce his work from that particular context, which was so
important to his decision to become a writer in the first place.
Arguing that Joyce's unbelief is critical for a fuller
understanding of his work, Lernout takes his title from Ulysses, "I
believe, O Lord, help my unbelief. That is, help me to believe or
help me to unbelieve?," itself a quote from Mark 9: 24. This
incisive study will be of interest to all readers of Joyce and to
anyone interested in the relationship between religion and
literature. >
Blending the allure of the supernatural with keen historical insights
and more than 500 photos, this enchanting chronicle of magic around the
world will bewitch skeptics and true believers alike. Magic and the
occult have held humanity in their thrall for thousands of years. This
sweeping history traces its origins across time and culture—from the
protective amulets of ancient Egypt to ceremonial magic in India,
Celtic paganism to modern magic tricks. National Geographic Book of
Magic and the Occult illuminates this enthralling world across more
than 90,000 years of history. You’ll meet witches and wizards, healers
and alchemists, discovering the legends behind them and how they have
enriched modern culture. You’ll also encounter a host of spellbinding
subjects, including: Mystical moments, including spooky gatherings,
strange happenings, and ghost stories Magic in pop culture, from Harry
Houdini to Harry Potter Places of power, from Mount Fuji to “phantom”
islands like Hy-Brasil Magical creatures like dragons and the Loch Ness
Monster The art of divination, including the Chinese Zodiac,
numerology, and tarot Modern magic, from neopaganism to astrology and
herbalism Filled with more than 500 vivid illustrations and dynamic
maps, this bewitching book is the true story of magical beliefs around
the world.
A perfect entry point for anyone interested in green magick, this
all-in-one guide explains everything you need to know before
beginning your own nature-inspired practice. Author Annabel
Margaret runs the popular YouTube channel, The Green Witch, where
she teaches everyday tools and techniques for leading a more
magickal life. In this must-have handbook, she'll guide your on
your green witchcraft journey from embracing intent and intuition
to creating and casting spells, all utilizing easy-to-find items
and simple methods. Ward the home with protective herbs; bake love,
abundance or luck into tasty treats; create purpose-infused spell
bags or craft soothing salves, energizing sprays and cleansing
infusions. With clear instruction, straightforward information on
foundational principles and tons of witchy wisdom, the magickal
opportunities are endless.
Noted historian John Chasteen traces the global history of
marijuana, exploring its rich heritage with captivating insight.
Among the first domesticated plants, Surprisingly, though, only
infrequently has it been used as a recreational drug. Instead,
there is a vibrant spiritual dimension to its long history that has
been continually ignored.
Recent years have seen a significant shift in the study of new
religious movements. In Satanism studies, interest has moved to
anthropological and historical work on groups and inviduals.
Self-declared Satanism, especially as a religion with cultural
production and consumption, history, and organization, has largely
been neglected by academia. This volume, focused on modern Satanism
as a practiced religion of life-style, attempts to reverse that
trend with 12 cutting-edge essays from the emerging field of
Satanism studies. Topics covered range from early literary
Satanists like Blake and Shelley, to the Californian Church of
Satan of the 1960s, to the radical developments that have taken
place in the Satanic milieu in recent decades. The contributors
analyze such phenomena as conversion to Satanism, connections
between Satanism and political violence, 19th-century decadent
Satanism, transgression, conspiracy theory, and the construction of
Satanic scripture. A wide array of methods are employed to shed
light on the Devil's disciples: statistical surveys,
anthropological field studies, philological examination of The
Satanic Bible, contextual analysis of literary texts, careful
scrutiny of obscure historical records, and close readings of key
Satanic writings. The book will be an invaluable resource for
everyone interested in Satanism as a philosophical or religious
position of alterity rather than as an imagined other.
National Book Award Finalist
National Book Critics Circle Award Finalist
A "New York Times" Notable Book
A Best Book of the Year: "The Washington Post," "The Boston Globe,"
"New York" magazine, "Slate," "Chicago Tribune," "Huffington Post,"
"Newsday," "Entertainment Weekly," "People," "The Week,"
"Publishers Weekly, Kirkus Reviews
"A GoodReads Reader's Choice
Scientology presents itself as a scientific approach to spiritual
enlightenment, but its practices have long been shrouded in
mystery. Now Lawrence Wright--armed with his investigative talents,
years of archival research, and more than two hundred personal
interviews with current and former Scientologists--uncovers the
inner workings of the church. We meet founder L. Ron Hubbard, the
highly imaginative but mentally troubled science-fiction writer,
and his tough, driven successor, David Miscavige. We go inside
their specialized cosmology and language. We learn about the
church's legal attacks on the IRS, its vindictive treatment of
critics, and its phenomenal wealth. We see the church court
celebrities such as Tom Cruise while consigning its clergy to hard
labor under billion-year contracts. Through it all, Wright asks
what fundamentally comprises a religion, and if Scientology in fact
merits this Constitutionally-protected label. Brilliantly
researched, compellingly written, "Going Clear" pulls back the
curtain on one of the most secretive organizations at work today.
Discover your fortune, change your destiny. Use your star sign to
reach your fitness goals, kickstart your career with crystal
energy, sort out of your love life with tarot or embark on some
deep self-reflection with palmistry. With expert guidance from a
Romany-Gypsy psychic and diviner, The Modern Oracle will teach you
the key methods of fortune telling and divination, helping you
answer life's big questions and solve everyday dramas. Find out
what your future holds.
Henrik Bogdan and Martin P. Starr offer the first comprehensive
examination of one of the twentieth century's most distinctive
occult iconoclasts. Aleister Crowley (1875-1947) was a study in
contradictions. He was born into a Fundamentalist Christian family,
then educated at Cambridge where he experienced both an
intellectual liberation from his religious upbringing and a psychic
awakening that led him into the study of magic. He was a stock
figure in the tabloid press of his day, vilified during his life as
a traitor, drug addict and debaucher; yet he became known as the
perhaps most influential thinker in contemporary esotericism. The
practice of the occult arts was understood in the light of
contemporary developments in psychology, and its advocates, such as
William Butler Yeats, were among the intellectual avant-garde of
the modernist project. Crowley took a more drastic step and
declared himself the revelator of a new age of individualism.
Crowley's occult bricolage, Magick, was a thoroughly eclectic
combination of spiritual exercises drawing from Western European
ceremonial magical traditions as practiced in the
nineteenth-century Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. Crowley also
pioneered in his inclusion of Indic sources for the parallel
disciplines of meditation and yoga. The summa of this journey of
self-liberation was harnessing the power of sexuality as a magical
discipline, an instance of the "sacrilization of the self " as
practiced in his co-masonic magical group, the Ordo Templi
Orientis. The religion Crowley created, Thelema, legitimated his
role as a charismatic revelator and herald of a new age of freedom
under the law of ''Do what thou wilt.'' The influence of Aleister
Crowley is not only to be found in contemporary esotericism-he was,
for instance, a major influence on Gerald Gardner and the modern
witchcraft movement-but can also be seen in the counter-culture
movement of the late 1960s and early 1970s, and in many forms of
alternative spirituality and popular culture. This anthology, which
features essays by leading scholars of Western esotericism across a
wide array of disciplines, provides much-needed insight into
Crowley's critical role in the study of western esotericism, new
religious movements, and sexuality.
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The Duality of Being
(Hardcover)
Susan I Nicholas; Edited by Stephanie Gunning; Illustrated by David Provolo
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R665
R599
Discovery Miles 5 990
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Mystery. Manipulation. Murder. Cults are associated with all of
these. But what really goes on inside them? More specifically, what
goes on inside the minds of cult leaders and the people who join
them? Based on the hit podcast Cults, this is essential reading for
any true crime fan. Cults prey on the very attributes that make us
human: our desire to belong, to find a deeper meaning in life, to
live everyday with divine purpose. Their existence creates a sense
that any one of us, at any time, could step off the cliff's edge
and fall into that daunting abyss of manipulation and unhinged
dedication to a misplaced cause. Perhaps it's this mindset that
keeps us so utterly obsessed and desperate to learn more, or it's
that the stories are so bizarre and unsettling that we are simply
in awe of the mechanics that make these infamous groups tick. The
premier storytelling podcast studio Parcast has been focusing on
unearthing these mechanics--the cult leaders and followers, and the
world and culture that gave birth to both. Parcast's work in
analyzing dozens of case studies has revealed patterns: distinct
ways that cult leaders from different generations resemble one
another. What links the ten notorious figures profiled in Cults are
as disturbing as they are stunning--from Manson to Applewhite,
Koresh to Rael, the stories woven here are both spellbinding and
disturbing. Cults is more than just a compilation of grisly
biographies, however. In these pages, Parcast's founder Max Cutler
and national bestselling author Kevin Conley look closely at the
lives of some of the most disreputable cult figures and tell the
stories of their rise to power and fall from grace, sanity, and
decency. Beyond that, it is a study of humanity, an unflinching
look at what happens when the most vulnerable recesses of the mind
are manipulated and how the things we hold most sacred can be
twisted into the lowest form of malevolence.
In The Atheist's Primer, a prominent philosopher, Dr Michael
Palmer, reinstates the importance of philosophy in the debate about
God's existence. The 'new atheism' of Richard Dawkins and others
has been driven by largely Darwinian objections to God's existence,
limiting the debate to within a principally scientific framework.
This has obscured the philosophical tradition of atheism, in which
the main intellectual landmarks in atheism's history are to be
found. With an analysis of atheistic thought from the Ancient
Greeks to the present day, Palmer explains and comments on the
philosophical arguments warranting atheism, discussing issues such
as evil, morality, miracles, and the motivations for belief. The
emphasis placed on materialism and the limitations of our knowledge
might seem disheartening to some; but Palmer concludes on a
positive note, arguing alongside Nietzsche, Marx and Freud and many
others that happiness and personal fulfilment are to be found in
the very materialism that religious belief rejects. Michael Palmer
first addressed these issues in his student-oriented edition, The
Atheist's Creed, of which The Atheist's Primer is a revised
abridgement for the general reader. Palmer has now stripped out the
primary texts and expanded his commentaries into fluent and concise
analyses of the arguments. Free of philosophical jargon and
assumptions of prior knowledge, this is an important introduction
to a major cultural debate."
This new edition introduces the reader to the philosophy of early
Christianity in the second to fourth centuries AD, and
contextualizes the philosophical contributions of early Christians
in the framework of the ancient philosophical debates. It examines
the first attempts of Christian thinkers to engage with issues such
as questions of cosmogony and first principles, freedom of choice,
concept formation, and the body-soul relation, as well as later
questions like the status of the divine persons of the Trinity. It
also aims to show that the philosophy of early Christianity is part
of ancient philosophy as a distinct school of thought, being in
constant dialogue with the ancient philosophical schools, such as
Platonism, Aristotelianism, Stoicism, and even Epicureanism and
Scepticism. This book examines in detail the philosophical views of
Christian thinkers such as Justin Martyr, Clement of Alexandria,
Irenaeus, Tertullian, Origen, Basil, and Gregory of Nyssa, and
sheds light in the distinct ways they conceptualized traditional
philosophical issues and made some intriguing contributions. The
book's core chapters survey the central philosophical concerns of
the early Christian thinkers and examines their contributions.
These range across natural philosophy, metaphysics, logic and
epistemology, psychology, and ethics, and include such questions as
how the world came into being, how God relates to the world, the
status of matter, how we can gain knowledge, in what sense humans
have freedom of choice, what the nature of soul is and how it
relates to the body, and how we can attain happiness and salvation.
This revised edition takes into account the recent developments in
the area of later ancient philosophy, especially in the philosophy
of Early Christianity, and integrates them in the relevant
chapters, some of which are now heavily expanded. The Philosophy of
Early Christianity remains a crucial introduction to the subject
for undergraduate and postgraduate students of ancient philosophy
and early Christianity, across the disciplines of classics,
history, and theology.
This collection of essays presents groundbreaking work from an
interdisciplinary group of leading theorists and scholars
representing the fields of history, philosophy, political science,
sociology, and anthropology. The volume will introduce readers to
some of the most compelling new conceptual and theoretical
understandings of secularism and the secular, while also examining
socio-political trends involving the relationship between the
religious and the secular from a variety of locations across the
globe.
In recent decades, the public has become increasingly aware of the
important role religious commitments play in the cultural, social,
and political dynamics of domestic and world affairs. This so
called ''resurgence'' of religion in the public sphere has elicited
a wide array of responses, including vehement opposition to the
very idea that religious reasons should ever have a right to
expression in public political debate. The current global landscape
forces scholars to reconsider not only once predominant
understandings of secularization, but also the definition and
implications of secular assumptions and secularist positions. The
notion that there is no singular secularism, but rather a range of
multiple secularisms, is one of many emerging efforts to
reconceptualize the meanings of religion and the secular.
Rethinking Secularism surveys these efforts and helps to reframe
discussions of religion in the social sciences by drawing attention
to the central issue of how ''the secular'' is constituted and
understood. It provides valuable insight into how new
understandings of secularism and religion shape analytic
perspectives in the social sciences, politics, and international
affairs.
'The God Delusion Revisited' is an ordinary Christian's review of
Richard Dawkins' recent polemic on religion, 'The God Delusion'. It
specifically and comprehensively targets the views expounded in
'The God Delusion' and questions the credibility that Dawkins
enjoys through his scientific writings, a credibility that is not
based on his 'religious' expertise but on his work in the field of
zoology. 'The God Delusion Revisited' highlights this undeserved
prominence and provides balance in the current growing debate on
religion. Mike King is a Christian and has written 'The God
Delusion Revisited' from a Christian perspective. He was born and
raised as a Roman Catholic and attended schools run by Benedictine
monks. He lost his faith in his mid-teens and for most of his life
has regarded himself as somewhere between atheism and agnosticism.
He became a Christian in 2002. He is married with two children and
has also written 'In the blink of an eye', an autobiographical
work.
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