![]() ![]() Even though we may not want to admit it, traces still adhere to beliefs we think have superseded it. Magic is connected to a wisdom, handed down through countless generations. In this book Idries Shah takes us back to the magical practices of the Jews, Sufis champion the right to know, and magic, shrouded as it has been in ignorance and secrecy, is one of the things about which we know little. However its essence remains elusive, hidden behind obsessions, superstitions, and the beliefs of cults. ![]() Sufis champion the right to know, and magic, shrouded as it has been in ignorance and secrecy, is one of the things about which we know little. This new release is sure to attract the attention of a new generation of interested readers.more Only an author of Shah's experience, dedication, and knowledge of human nature could assemble such an array of arcane information into a dazzling picture of human beliefs and practices. "Oriental Magic" includes a myriad of illustrations, including unique photos of places and people associated with the mysterious world of magic. Revealed is an astonishing similarity in magical beliefs, practices and terminology of places as diverse as China, the Near East, Scandinavia and Africa. The author includes personal accounts of "training" under a Ju-Ju witch doctor, a demonstration of Hindu levitation, and translations of secret alchemical and magical formulae. The "Singing Sands" of Egypt, the invisible rulership of Sufism, subcutaneous electricity, and the prehistoric sources of Babylonian occult practices are just a few of the intriguing subjects described. Its publication was the culmination of five years of research into rare artifacts, obscure manuscripts and travels into remote areas where strange magical practices endure. Does there lie in mankind's remote past a single origin for the beliefs and practices of magic found in nearly every culture in the world? Behind the distortions and grotesqueries of magical practices, could there be clues to processes worthy of our objective consideration?įirst published nearly forty years ago, "Oriental Magic" is still the definitive work on the subject Does there lie in mankind's remote past a single origin for the beliefs and practices of magic found in nearly every culture in the world? Behind the distortions and grotesqueries of magical practices, could there be clues to processes worthy of our objective consideration?įirst published nearly forty years ago, "Oriental Magic" is still the definitive work on the subject. ![]()
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