Earth Divination, Earth Magic: A Practical Guide to Geomancy - Softcover

Greer, John Michael

 
9781912807079: Earth Divination, Earth Magic: A Practical Guide to Geomancy

Inhaltsangabe

An in-depth guide to the history, theory, and practice of the divinatory art of geomancy.

Here is a complete guide to the lost art of geomancy - one of the major divination systems that are part of the Western magical tradition.Geomancy is simple, quick, and direct - anyone can get answers to any question in a matter of moments by learning how to read the patterns revealed by the 16 symbolic figures formed of single and double points. During the Middle Ages and Renaissance, geomancy was used by everyone from popes to peasants because it provided practical, useful results.Often mistaken for feng shui or ley lines, or hidden within poorly explained tables and charts, geomancy has become something of a lost art - until now. Earth Divination, Earth Magic provides a fascinating look into the history, theory, and practice of geomancy, including a thorough set of instructions for both casting and interpreting a chart for yourself, or a friend.

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Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

John Michael Greer is the award-winning author of more than fifty books, including The New Encyclopedia of the Occult, The Druidry Handbook, The Celtic Golden Dawn and Circles of Power: An Introduction to Hermetic Magic. An initiate in Freemasonry, the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, the Martinist Order, and three Druid traditions, Greer served as the Grand Archdruid of the Ancient Order of Druids in America (AODA) for twelve years. He is also the author of seventeen fantasy and science fiction novels and ten nonfiction books on peak oil and the future of industrial society. He lives in Rhode Island and blogs weekly on politics, magic, and the future at www.ecosophia.net.

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Earth Divination, Earth Magic

A Practical Guide to Geomancy

By John Michael Greer

Aeon Books Ltd

Copyright © 2019 John Michael Greer
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-912807-07-9

Contents

ABOUT THE AUTHOR,
PART I: EARTH DIVINATION,
CHAPTER ONE The forgotten oracle,
CHAPTER TWO The figures,
CHAPTER THREE Casting the chart,
CHAPTER FOUR Reading the chart,
PART II: EARTH MAGIC,
CHAPTER FIVE Geomancy and magic,
CHAPTER SIX Consecrating instruments,
CHAPTER SEVEN Meditation and scrying,
CHAPTER EIGHT Sigils and talismans,
APPENDIX A medieval handbook of geomancy,
BIBLIOGRAPHY,
INDEX,
BLANK CHARTS,


CHAPTER 1

The forgotten oracle


Geomancy is a traditional Western way of divination based on intuitive contact with the subtle energies of the Earth. Nowadays, it's probably the least well-known of the major methods of divination belonging to the Western world's magical traditions; it's no misstatement, in fact, to call it the forgotten oracle of the West.

Even using the word "geomancy" in modern times risks a good deal of confusion. This term, which is derived from the Greek words ge, "earth," and manteia, "prophecy" or "divination," has come to be used in recent years for a flurry of different and mostly unrelated topics — from feng shui and related systems of spatial design, through ancient traditions of omen interpretation and prophetic lore based on earthquakes and other geological events, to speculations involving ley lines, megaliths, and hidden patterns embedded in the landscape. Each of these has something to do with the Earth, and something (although not always much) to do with divination; none of them have anything significant in common with the subject of this book.

From the high Middle Ages until the end of the Renaissance, by contrast, the word geomancy (and its equivalents in other Western languages) meant one thing only: a specific method of divination using a series of sixteen figures formed of points, and the philosophy and practice centered on that method — a philosophy and practice based on a deeply magical understanding of the flow of elemental energies through the living body of the Earth. This same meaning of the word remained standard within the secret or semi-secret magical orders that carried on the traditions of Western occultism during the heyday of scientific rationalism, and it is the meaning that will be used here. This is not to dismiss the other traditions and teachings just mentioned; some of them deserve careful study on their own. The point that needs to be made here is simply that they have nothing to do with the kind of geomancy we will be discussing, and should not be confused with it.


A glimpse of geomancy

So what is geomancy? The best way to learn that is to see the method in action on a first-hand basis. As a first step in that direction, pick up a pen or pencil and a piece of paper. Think about a situation you are facing, one that is likely to have either a favorable or an unfavorable outcome, and then clear your mind and make a line of dots or dashes at random on the paper. Don't count the number of marks while making them. Do the same thing three more times, so that you have four lines of marks on the paper, like the ones below:

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Now count the marks in each line separately. If the first line has an odd number of marks, that equals a single dot • at the top of the geomantic figure you're producing; if an even number, that equals two dots ••.

If the second line has an odd number, put one dot as the next part of the figure, or two dots if the number of marks is even. Count the other two lines in the same way, to produce a figure made of four elements, each one a single or double dot. The result should be one of the figures in Diagram 1-1.

The favorable or unfavorable nature of the figure shows the most likely outcome of the situation. The meanings and symbolic name of the figure you have produced offer keys — some of the many used in more advanced approaches to geomancy — to the context of forces surrounding and shaping the situation and your place in it.

The traditional method of geomantic divination starts with four figures, not one, and then uses those four to generate a series of other figures that contribute to the meaning of the complete geomantic chart. Still, the process as you've just experienced it is geomancy in a concentrated form: using what we usually think of as "chance" to derive one of the geomantic figures, and then using that figure to cast light on a question or a situation.


The eclipse of geomancy

From a historical point of view, it's surprising that the art of geomancy needs even this much introduction. Geomancy was among the most popular of all divinatory methods during the last great magical revival in the Western world, the time of the Renaissance. Henry Cornelius Agrippa and Robert Fludd, two of the most important writers of that revival, both produced significant works on the subject. So did John Heydon, that master plagiarist of the English Renaissance magical scene, whose Theomagia, or the Temple of Wisdome contains a wealth of half-understood geomantic lore rarely touched since his time. These and other Renaissance texts drew on an entire literature of medieval European and Arabic works on geomancy, in which the basic techniques of geomantic divination had been expanded and applied in a vast range of ways.

Astrology was always the most important of medieval and Renaissance divination methods, because of its more extensive vocabulary of symbols and its deep connections to the way the entire universe was understood before the scientific revolution. Still, geomancy also had a significant role as a system of divination and a tool for thought. It made use of a great many astrological elements for its own purposes, and it may have been more commonly used as a means of ordinary divination.

The reason for this last point is not hard to find. In the days before computers, at least, the compilation of a horoscope required a substantial amount of paperwork and a solid grasp of mathematics, but a geomantic chart could (and can) be produced by anyone willing to learn a fairly simple process. This same simplicity makes geomancy perhaps the best introduction to traditional Western divination for the modern student.

Unfortunately, these advantages have been all but lost in the few modern presentations of the art. Unlike the medieval and Renaissance methods, the forms of geomancy practiced these days are rigid, limited, and difficult to use effectively. The blame for this, surprisingly, must be laid at the door of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, the most important of the source groups behind the modern magical revival.

Founded in 1888, the Golden Dawn sought to collect the fragmentary legacy of Western magical practice into a single coherent system, and succeeded at this Herculean task as well as anyone ever has. In the process, the Golden Dawn's founders came across the half-forgotten art of geomancy and gave it a significant place in their Order's curriculum of esoteric studies. The Order's founders were better magicians and ritualists than diviners, though; furthermore, they were borrowers and synthesizers for the most part, rather than creative thinkers, and their treatment of geomancy betrays their limited approach to the subject.

The entire Golden Dawn "knowledge lecture" on geomancy was...

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9781567183122: Earth Divination Earth Magic: A Practical Guide to Geomancy: A Beginner's Guide to Geomancy

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ISBN 10:  1567183123 ISBN 13:  9781567183122
Verlag: Llewellyn Publications,U.S., 1999
Softcover