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The magic of the magic lantern (1660–1700): on analogical demonstration and the visualization of the invisible

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 May 2005

KOEN VERMEIR
Affiliation:
Institute of Philosophy, University of Leuven, Kard. Mercierplein 2, B-3000 Leuven, Belgium.

Abstract

The history of the magic lantern provides a privileged case study with which to explore the histories of projection, demonstration, illusion and the occult, and their different intersections. I focus on the role of the magic lantern in the work of the Jesuit Athanasius Kircher and the French Cartesian Abbé de Vallemont. After explaining the various meanings of the seventeenth-century concept of illusio, I propose a new solution for the long-standing problem that Kircher added the ‘wrong’ illustrations to his description of the lantern. The complex interaction between text, image and performance was crucial in Kircher's work and these ‘wrong’ figures provide us with a key to interpreting his Ars Magna. I argue that Vallemont used the magic lantern in a similar rhetorical way in a crucial phase of his argument. The magic lantern should not be understood merely as an illustrative image or an item of demonstration apparatus; rather the instrument is employed as part of a performance which is not meant simply to be entertaining. Both authors used a special form of scientific demonstration, which I will term ‘analogical demonstration’, to bolster their world view. This account opens new ways to think about the relation between instruments and the occult.

Sol fons lucis universi, vas admirabile, opus Excelsi, divinitatis thalamus, risus coeli, decor, & pulchritudo mundiA. Kircher

For one of those Gnostics, the visible universe was an illusion or, more precisely, a sophism. Mirrors and fatherhood are abominable because they multiply it and extend it.J. L. Borges

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2005 British Society for the History of Science

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Footnotes

Many thanks to Nick Dew, Frank Scheppers, Jutta Schickore, Liba Taub and Nick Wilding for their encouraging comments, and especially to Lauren Kassell for her support and to Simon Schaffer for his imaginative remarks. I would also like to thank both anonymous referees for their constructive criticism. Different aspects of this paper were presented at the 11th Quadrennial ISECS Conference, Los Angeles, 2003; the Visual Knowledges Conference, Edinburgh, 2003; and the HSS Annual Meeting, Boston, 2003; and I would like to thank the participants of these conferences for their criticism. This research was funded by the Fund of Scientific Research, Flanders. All translations are my own.