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WHY THE MARGINS MATTER: OCCULTISM AND THE MAKING OF MODERNITY

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 April 2006

THOMAS LAQUEUR
Affiliation:
Department of History, University of California, Berkeley

Extract

“Occult,” a 1902 international encyclopedia of religion tells us, is derived “from Latin occultus—Hidden,” and is applied to the assumption that insight into and control over nature is to be obtained by mysterious or magical procedures and by long apprenticeship in secret lore. The physical science of the middle ages, alchemy and astrology, and in modern times spiritualism, theosophy, and palmistry contain various factors of occult lore. Such doctrines, known as occultism, fall outside the realm of modern science. See MAGIC.

Type
Essays
Copyright
© 2006 Cambridge University Press

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Footnotes

I want to thank Carla Hesse, Alexander Nehamas, my colleagues at the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton during the Spring 2005—Caroline Bynum, Glen Bowersock, Christopher Jones, Joel Kaye, Daryn Lehoux, Marek Wieczorek—and the editors of this journal for their help with this essay.