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Tag: propaganda

A 17th-Century Conspiracy Tale: Johann Cambilhon and the “Magick” College

Posted on November 17, 2020November 18, 2020 by TheCustodian

“If they find any to be timorous and fearful, they admit not such a man to the secrets of magick…But such as appear to be of bold and undaunted spirits, they take especial notice of them, and reserve them for serious employments.” -from the English translation of Johann Cambilhon’s De studiis Jesuitarum abstrusioribus (1608) Sometime…

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William Prynne and the Long Acre Conspiracy

Posted on October 13, 2020October 13, 2020 by TheCustodian

“I do not profess myself to be any great Statesman, or exactly to know what ever is secretly transacted among us: But this I can say…I have for many years last past been as curious an observer of all the great transactions of Affairs in Church or State, and of the instruments and means by…

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From Spirit to Social Bot: The Familiar Shapes Documentary

Posted on March 2, 2018October 8, 2020 by TheCustodian

“They can assume all manner of shapes at their pleasure, appear in what likeness they will themselves…they are most swift in motion, can pass many miles in an instant…”  -from The Anatomy of Melancholy by Robert Burton (1621) Almost four hundred years ago, a young Oxford graduate named Joseph Glanvill published The Vanity of Dogmatizing, a…

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Political Magic in England

Posted on December 24, 2017October 8, 2020 by TheCustodian

“To reveal and discover conspiracies, and to govern the greater things of life; as to blast or succeed the enterprises of princes and people; to tell and foretell the success of such and such undertakings; and even to influence the undertakers…” -from A Compleat System of Magick: or, The History of the Black Art by Daniel Defoe…

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Sorcery, Trade Secrets, and Enterpise: the Case of William Wheeler

Posted on November 13, 2017October 8, 2020 by TheCustodian

“They hang people for poisoning your body, but no law can touch them when they inject poison in your mind.” -from Witchcraft: its Power in the World Today by William Seabrook (1941). Sorcery, it’s been argued, is both a composite art and an acquired taste. In all ages, the prototypical sorcerer or witch has been…

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