Magus, Anthony Grafton
Magus, Anthony Grafton
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Magus
The Art of Magic from Faustus to Agrippa

Author: Anthony Grafton

Narrator: Nick Pearse

Unabridged: 8 hr 55 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 04/02/2024


Synopsis

In literary legend, Faustus is the quintessential occult personality of early modern Europe. The historical Faustus, however, was something quite different: a magus—a learned magician fully embedded in the scholarly currents and public life of the Renaissance. And he was hardly the only one. Anthony Grafton argues that the magus in sixteenth-century Europe was a distinctive intellectual type, both different from and indebted to medieval counterparts as well as contemporaries like the engineer, the artist, the Christian humanist, and the religious reformer. Alongside these better-known figures, the magus had a transformative impact on his social world.

Magus details the arts and experiences of several learned magicians. Grafton explores their methods, the knowledge they produced, the services they provided, and the overlapping political and social milieus to which they aspired—often, the circles of kings and princes. During the late fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries, these erudite men anchored debates about licit and illicit magic, the divine and the diabolical, and the nature of "good" and "bad" magicians. Over time, they turned magic into a complex art, which drew on contemporary engineering as well as classical astrology, probed the limits of what was acceptable in a changing society, and promised new ways to explore the self and exploit the cosmos.

About Anthony Grafton

Anthony Grafton is the author of The Footnote, Defenders of the Text, Forgers and Critics, and Inky Fingers, among other books. The Henry Putnam University Professor of History and the Humanities at Princeton University, he writes regularly for the New York Review of Books.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Adam

Interesting. Didn't realize so much was known about the real Faustus, will have to look more into him at some point. Bit of a problem with the book is that it's so diffuse, I felt it sort of went off the rails a bit when it got into engineering. The author does connect it back to the art of magic bu......more

Goodreads review by Janalyn

This is a very interesting book about magic and it’s almost legitimate beginning and how it was viewed in the renaissance. And those who were popular defenders and skeptics of the practice. I found this book very interesting as I do most things written about medieval times and was so surprised as to......more

An interesting attempt to orient the learned magician as a kind of counter-cultural renaissance man, which I think is the correct instinct. However, it reads a little like several small biographies of just a few characters in particular, like Ficino, Pico, Trithemius, and Agrippa, rather than the st......more

Goodreads review by Rauko

Perhaps I'm incapable of reading non-history. This is merely a string of frayed philosophical threads that never made it to our modern world, often torn up by various factions of the church. Prevailing doctrine is exhausting to read as it is. Failed theories and faux wisdom are a downright waste of......more