Magic and Age of Reason October 31, 2009
Posted by egabriel in History of Magic.Tags: spirits, science, superstition, renaissance, magic, sorcery, witchcraft, occult, baroque, occultism
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Magic and study of occult arts successfully survived Renaissance and entered the Baroque era. And even more. the study of the occult arts remained intellectually respectable well into the seventeenth century. It only gradually divides into the modern categories of natural science versus occultism or superstition. My web analytics research shows, that brilliant Age of Reason was on the rise in the seventeenth century , while belief in witchcraft and sorcery, and consequently the irrational surge of Early Modern witch trials, receded. This process only completed at the end of the Baroque period, somewhere around 1730s.
Contemporary scientists still met resistance, though. Christian Thomasius encountered fierce opposition as he argued in his 1701 dissertation that it was meaningless to make dealing with the devil a criminal offense, since it was impossible to really commit the crime in the first place. In Britain, the Witchcraft Act of 1735 established that people could not be punished for consorting with spirits, while would-be magicians pretending to be able to invoke spirits could still be fined as con artists.
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