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Books > Health, Home & Family > Mind, body & spirit > Fortune-telling & divination > General
What do dice and gods have in common? What is the relationship
between dice divination and dice gambling? This interdisciplinary
collaboration situates the tenth-century Chinese Buddhist
"Divination of Mahesvara" within a deep Chinese backstory of
divination with dice and numbers going back to at least the 4th
century BCE. Simultaneously, the authors track this specific method
of dice divination across the Silk Road and into ancient India
through a detailed study of the material culture, poetics, and
ritual processes of dice divination in Chinese, Tibetan, and Indian
contexts. The result is an extended meditation on the unpredictable
movements of gods, dice, divination books, and divination users
across the various languages, cultures, and religions of the Silk
Road.
In times of crises, be it about climate change, the pandemic corona
virus, or democratic struggles, there is an unwaning interest
worldwide in the end of times and related themes such as
apocalypticism, messianism, and utopianism. This concerns
scholarship and society alike, and is by no means limited to the
religious field. The present volume collates essays from
specialists in the study of apocalyptic and eschatological
subjects. With its interdisciplinary approach, it is designed to
overcome the existing Euro-centrism and incorporate a broader
perspective to the topic of end time expectations in the Christian
Middle Ages as well as in East Asia and Africa. Contributors
include: Gaelle Bosseman, Wolfram Brandes, Matthias Gebauer, Jurgen
Gebhardt, Vincent Goossaert, Klaus Herbers, Matthias Kaup, Bernardo
Bertholin Kerr, Thomas Krumpel, Richard Landes, Zhao Lu, Rolf
Scheuermann, and Julia Eva Wannenmacher.
In Unveiling the Hidden-Anticipating the Future: Divinatory
Practices Among Jews Between Qumran and the Modern Period, Josefina
Rodriguez-Arribas and Dorian Gieseler Greenbaum collect ten studies
based on primary sources ranging from Qumran to the modern period
and covering Europe and the Mediterranean basin. The studies show
Jews practising divination (astrology, bibliomancy, physiognomy,
dream requests, astral magic, etc.) and implementing the study and
practice of the prognostic arts in ways that allowed Jews to make
them "Jewish," by avoiding any conflict with Jewish law or
halakhah. These studies focus on the Jewish components of this
divination, providing specific firsthand details about the
practices and their practitioners within their cultural and
intellectual contexts-as well as their fears, wishes, and
anxieties-using ancient scrolls and medieval manuscripts in Hebrew,
Aramaic, and Judaeo-Arabic. Contributors are Michael D. Swartz,
Helen R. Jacobus, Alessia Bellusci, Blanca Villuendas Sabate,
Shraga Bar-On, Josefina Rodriguez-Arribas, Amos Geula, Dov
Schwartz, Joseph Ziegler, and Charles Burnett.
Old Moore's forecasts focus not only on the 12 zodiac signs, but
also on how to define the influence of the Moon and Venus. The
diaries help people better understand themselves and their
relationships. Old Moore identifies key days - weeks in advance. He
also advises what to plan into them, so you get the most out of
their active influences. Over a million readers trust Old Moore -
Britain's Top astrologer. In 2017, Old Moore's Almanack will be 321
years old and deserves its world record-beating inclusion in the
Guinness Book of Records. With accurate predictions, including the
2001 terrorist attacks, everyone agrees that Old Moore is the No. 1
Seer, with the best prediction record. Accurate, fascinating and
appropriate, Old Moore plots the future of the world's ups and
downs for the year ahead.
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