EtuMalku wrote:I was wondering if someone would explain to me how Magick & Spirituality are actually separate...
The idea that the "supernatural" is involved in magic is a
recent one.
Originally, the term magic simply referred to power, and
ability.
Magic and mechanism are cognate terms:
" The word 'Magic' is a derivation from a Latin term
Magia [Greek Mageía, Iranian Persian form Magu(s)].
The word is also related to the Greek notions Mechos,
Mechane, the Gothic Mahts, German Macht; the Indo-
European verb stem -Magh signifies 'to be able, to help'. "
~ Dieter Harmening, citing the entries by Kluges
and Mackensen on the subject of Magic in the
Etymologisches Worterbuch der Deutschen
Sprache.
Which is why at least one meaning of the old term
'Magike Techne' can be Mechanical Technology.
And here is a pertinent quote from Mary Ellen Pitts :
"The Greek magike is tekne, referring to the sorcerer's
art, related to the Persian magus and the Indo-European
root magh-', meaning "to be able" or "to have power."
Closely related is the root magh-os-, meaning "that which
enables" and becoming the Doric makhos, "device,"
"machine," "mechanism."
Tekne, as art or skill, is also related to weaving and
textiles and to technology. <note the etymological
relationship with "tantra">
Magic thus belongs to a family of words to which both art
and technology belong.
As Heidegger notes, there was a time when tekne
incorporated art, not exclusively technology.
In magic the two come together, as technology and art,
science and Heidegger's "saving power" of reflection. "
~ from :
Toward a Dialogue of Understandings:
Loren Eiseley and the Critique of Science
by Mary Ellen Pitts
"The mathematical disciplines are so necessary and
cognate to magic that if anyone should profess the
latter without the former, he would wander totally
from the path and attain the least desired result.
For whatever things are or are effected in the
inferior or natural virtues are all effected and
governed by number, harmony, motion and light,
and have their root and foundation in these."
~ Henry Cornelius Agrippa
Three Books of Occult Philosophy
"Nature is a magician, as Plotinus and Synesius say,
everywhere baiting traps with particular foods for
particular objects...
The farmer prepares his field and seeds for gifts from
heaven and uses various grafts to prolong life in his
plant and change it to a new and better species. The
physician, the scientist and the surgeon bring about
similar effects in our bodies...
The philosopher, who is learned in natural science
and astronomy and whom we are wont rightly to call a
magician, likewise implants heavenly things in earthly
objects by means of certain alluring charms used at
the right moment."
~ Marsilio Ficino
See also :
The History Of Western Magic :
Some Considerations
by Dieter Harmening
Folklore Volume 17 ( .PDF )
http://tinyurl.com/c9qrh3
Journal For The Academic Study Of Magic 2
edited by Alison Butler, Dave Evans
Indo-European *mag(h)
http://tinyurl.com/dflp8a