Get Adobe Flash player


The Egyptian Hermes: A Historical Approach to the Late Pagan Mind

Rating: (out of 1 reviews)

List Price: CDN$ 32.25

Price: CDN$ 25.95

[wprebay kw=”pagans+mind” num=”0″ ebcat=”all”] [wprebay kw=”pagans+mind” num=”1″ ebcat=”all”]

Find More Pagans Mind Products

One Response to The Egyptian Hermes: A Historical Approach to the Late Pagan Mind

  • Christopher I. Lehrich says:

    Review by Christopher I. Lehrich for The Egyptian Hermes: A Historical Approach to the Late Pagan Mind
    Rating:
    Fowden, as a writer, is admittedly no model of lucidity; at the same time, he is writing for academics, and is thus able to compress a huge amount into a small space. If you are not used to academic prose, you will find this book very difficult; it would also help if you know a certain amount about the reception of the Hermetica in 19th and 20th century historiography, and perhaps a bit about the late Classical era.At the same time, this book has been reprinted for a reason: it’s the single most important historical argument about the Hermetica. For a long time, the Hermetica were understood to be purely Greek, essentially Hellenic misappropriations of pseudo-Egyptian ideas, recast in Neoplatonic style. What Fowden does is to show that these texts do have an important base within the dying Egyptian traditions of their day.For non-specialists, this may seem like small potatoes. But it changes everything. If you have read Frances Yates, for example, she argued that these texts were grotesquely misread by Ficino and the Renaissance tradition, on three counts: (1) they thought the texts were really, really ancient, more or less contemporary with Moses; (2) they thought the texts were Egyptian, not Greek; and (3) they thought the texts were really about magic (and not philosophy). Now there’s no question that the Hermetica are from 1st-2d century Alexandria, but they are _not_ simply Greek; they are, in a sense, Egyptian formulations that draw on the then-influential Greek modes of philosophical thought. Furthermore, it means that the texts we usually think of as the Hermetic Corpus can and should be correlated with the PGM (the Greek Magical Papyri and their Demotic associates), changing the whole character of the texts by giving them a wildly different literary and ritual context. In other words, the Renaissance got the dating wrong, but in many respects got the rest more or less right; as a result, Fowden’s book not only changes the way we read the Hermetica in their Alexandrian context, but also how we make sense of the Renaissance magical revival (Ficino, Pico, Agrippa, Bruno, etc.).If, having read this review, you think, “Who cares?” then this book is certainly not for you. If you think, “Wow! That’s fascinating,” then this is essential. I have seen the odd quibble with small points in Fowden’s arguments, but I have not seen any serious attack on the main thrust of the book. Considering when it was first written, that’s extraordinary.But you do need to be comfortable with academic prose.

Search Thorn & Oak


• Have your Advertisment   Featured here

Contact us now <<click here>> have your advertisment featured on our site.

• Welcome to Thorn & Oak
• Join the Mailing List

Keep up to date with the latest changes on this site join our mailing list sign up below.



FREE TAROT READINGS
Lotus Tarot card readings can show you a fresh perspective on your life.
Lotus Tarot
December 2024
S M T W T F S
« Feb    
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293031  
Powered by WebRing.