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Hi Angela,

 

As you know, I am deeply involved in these issues.

 

However, I have questions about Kripal’s statement. 

First I wonder how anyone can distinguish a ‘shallow subjectivism that
yields little more than private experience’ from an ‘interpersonal communion
with the object of their study’.

Second, he refers to the ‘genuinely mystical’. Who is to judge whether
someone’s mystical experience is genuine or false?

 

It seems to me that he is introducing an elitist, hierarchical, value system
in which some people’s inner experience is more valid than others.

 

I just don’t know how anyone can judge such things. Any ideas?

 

All the best,

 

Nick

 

From: Society for The Academic Study of Magic
[mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Angela Voss
Sent: 16 September 2011 13:33
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: [ACADEMIC-STUDY-MAGIC] Rv: [ACADEMIC-STUDY-MAGIC] Academic
Writing 2

 

Dear Ana

 

I understand exactly what you are saying. Peter Kingsley is an old friend of
mine, and he represents that rare breed, the gnostic scholar.  I would like
to share with this list a paragraph in Jeffrey Kripal's book 'Roads of
Excess, Palaces of Wisdom', where he outlines the kind of perspective I
think you are talking about.  It is certainly the perspective I try to
cultivate. In the metaphor established so thoroughly by Iain McGilchrist, it
'has a foot in both brain hemispheres' and is therefore unitive, holistic
and transformative:

 

“[These] scholars ... possess unusual powers of imagination, receptivity,
discipline, and experience that allow them to enter religious worlds in a
different way. For these scholars, academic method and personal experience
cannot be so easily separated. “Objectivity” is transcended not in a shallow
subjectivism that yields little more than private experience (however
profound and personally meaningful), but in an interpersonal communion with
the object of their study that produces, among other things, powerful
insights into the nature of religion that stand the test of time and
withstand the criticisms and researches of the larger academic community.
There is something genuinely mystical about the work of such scholars, for
their interpretations and writings issue from a peculiar kind of
“hermeneutical union”. They do not so much process religious data as unite
with sacred realities, whether in the imagination, the hidden depths of the
soul, or the very fabric of the psychophysical selves. Here in such moments,
the hermeneutical understandings and insights of such scholars clearly
transgress the boundaries of academic study or speculation. In their
subjective poles, these understandings become personally transformative; in
their objecti ve poles, they produce genuine insights into the nature of the
phenomena under study. These are types of understanding that are at once
passionate and critical, personal and objective, religious and academic.
Such forms of knowledge are not simply academic, although they are that as
well, and rigorously so. But they are also transformative, and sometimes
sotierological. In a word, the knowledge of such a historian of religions
approaches a kind of gnosis.”

 

bw

Angela

 

Dr Angela Voss

10 Arnold Road

Chartham

Canterbury CT4 7QL

 

07787 434958

01227 732457

www.cosmology-divination.com <http://www.cosmology-divination.com/> 

www.phoenixrising.org.gr <http://www.phoenixrising.org.gr/> 

 

  _____  

From: Society for The Academic Study of Magic
[[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Odrade Atreed
[[log in to unmask]]
Sent: Friday, September 16, 2011 12:59 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: [ACADEMIC-STUDY-MAGIC] Rv: [ACADEMIC-STUDY-MAGIC] Academic Writing
2

Dear caroline and kaostar,

 

I am sorry, but I disagree. Perhaps the problem is not that pagans do not
understand the way of academic research. Perhaps is the way back.

 

I will try to explain my position. 

 

First of all, you talk about the success of Da Vinci Code and Holy Grail´s
novels. I don´t think it is relevant here. Every writer knows, as Sol Stein
has explained really well, that to attract the mass attention you have to 

write something which is different from reality, more desirable or terrible,
but something which the reader want to be into. You create fantasy, because
reality is more plain, but from a "realistical point of view". 

 

Now, about why pagans prefer Whitmore to Hutton. I cannot explain this
particular point, because I am not pagan but I think my case is not very
different from pagans, so I will explain myself to ilustrate the point. I am
philosopher, five years degree and two years master and doing a thesis about
pragmatism. But, primary, I am a magician and astrologer, with ten years
practice on my back. And I prefer Reality from Peter Kignsley, an unofficial
vision of Parmenides to the official philosophical theories about
Parmenides. And, I have to say in my own discredit that I haven´t confirmed
the afirmations of Kingsley, although I subscribe his vision. I suspect if I
were a Pagan I would prefer Whitmore to Hutton.

 

So, what is happening to a pragmatic philosopher educated in the Academic
Language to prefer a not academic text to an academic one?

 

Well, is part of the training we receive. There are different resources to
understand the world. One of them is reason, other is the written texts.
These are very well used by academics and I wouldn´t deny it.

 

But, as a magician, I have been trained to use imagination to achieve vision
and to follow intuition to get knowledge. Most of the time this is nonsense,
specially at the beginning of the training. You have a lot of visions which
express what you want to get, or the self illusions about yourself. As time
pass you are more prepared to appart those things and try to get the
knowledge that trascends what you, as an individual person, are or need.
Those visions give knowledge, and a kind of knowledge it is impossible to
deny. You don´t get to this point because you are a believer, but because
you have checked it in ways which are very difficult and extensive to
explain now. At certain point you are sure of the epistemological value of
this bit of knowledge. I suspect the deep roots of Witchcraft  in the past
of humanity is part of this revelation, so if there is no written proofs of
this, then Witches will wait until it appeares. If an academic study reveals
this, then they will be very proud of academic research. 

 

What is the problem with my assumption, that If academic world does not
understand what kind of knowledge I am talking about, then you, as academic,
will think I am talking about religion and faith. So, in my opinion, if you
get to this conclussion, you are misunderstanding me. 

 

I wait this will be clear. Thank you for helping me to clarify my possition.

 

Ana B. González.

 

 

 

 

De: "[log in to unmask]" <[log in to unmask]>
Para: [log in to unmask]
Enviado: viernes 16 de septiembre de 2011 12:40
Asunto: Re: [ACADEMIC-STUDY-MAGIC] Academic Writing 2

Thanks Caroline. Maybe that is something constructive the list members could
do from this? Devise a one or two page document under creative commons to
clarify how we do research and what makes it academic. Then post it
everywhere. Send it to pagan magazines blog it etc and do what we can to
make it go viral. 

Dave E 

Sent using BlackBerry® from Orange

From: Caroline Tully <[log in to unmask]> 

Sender: Society for The Academic Study of Magic
<[log in to unmask]> 

Date: Fri, 16 Sep 2011 20:19:33 +1000

To: <[log in to unmask]>

ReplyTo: Society for The Academic Study of Magic
<[log in to unmask]> 

Subject: [ACADEMIC-STUDY-MAGIC] Academic Writing 2

 

But then again.. I am not saying that non-academics can’t possibly do
research or write good books.... No. I guess my interest is in what_passes_
for history, or archaeology, amidst the general public and how they often do
not have the knowledge to know how to question such material, or even that
they should.

 

~Caroline.