
The History of Magic
From Alchemy to Witchcraft, from the Ice Age to the Present
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Narrated by:
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Clarke Peters
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By:
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Chris Gosden
About this listen
Brought to you by Penguin.
Three great strands of practice and belief run through human history - science, religion and magic. Over the last few centuries, magic - the idea that we have a connection with the universe and that the universe responds to us - has developed a bad reputation. But it is still with us, as it has been for millennia, as Professor Chris Gosden shows in this extraordinarily bold and unprecedented history.
As Gosden argues, magic preceded religion and science, and it has been with us from the curses and charms of ancient Greek, Roman and Jewish magic, to the shamanistic traditions of Eurasia, indigenous America and Africa, the alchemy of the Renaissance, colonial dismissals of magic as backward, and quantum physics today, where magic and science converge. Today 75 percent of the adult population of the Western world hold some belief in magic, whether we believe that the mind of a patient influences recovery, or find it hard to stab a photo of a loved one.
Drawing on his decades of research around the world, with incredible breadth and authority and stunning detail - from the first known horoscope to the power of tattoos - Gosden reveals magic's positive qualities and how we might use it to rethink our relationship with the world. This timely history of human thought across thousands of years rightly shows the role that magic has played in shaping civilisation.
©2020 Chris Gosden (P)2020 Penguin AudioVery informative
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Good food for thought
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According to the author the death of magic started with the Greek philosophers who changed popular opinion from myth to logic. Over the course of the next 2000 years, we hear that although religion and science have replaced people's belief in the power of magic, some elements have remained, most prominently through astrology and superstitions that have deep roots in history. There is undoubtedly a fine distinction between magic and the miracles that form our religious beliefs. The author is a bit sniffy about the existence of ley lines and new age culture and considers that every generation "gets the Stonehenge it deserves" as magic is invented and reinvented.
Whilst much of this book is dry and academic, in the final chapters, which, in my view are the most interesting for a casual reader, we hear how magical traditions have adapted and survived on different continents and how the practices of placebo medication, Feng shui and I Ching are, ultimately rooted in magic.
It's a kind of magic
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Reading the physical book while listening to the audiobook simultaneously simply to get through this quicker. It is highlighting many errors. A number of times the text has not been followed word for word. The worst examples so far, are on page 63 where the paperback says 'intimate relationship' while the audiobook recording says 'inanimate relationship', while on page 66 the book text says 'contaminants in flour', while the audio says 'contaminants in yeast'.
Reference to figures that are numerous in the text of the book but are not referred to in the audio recording. If there isn't a supporting pdf for the numerous figures in this book, it really needs one as these are a very useful compliment to the text which the author no doubt felt necessary to include for good reason.
Overall, I'm glad I have the paperback to fall back on, and I think it would be worth revisiting the audio in order to address the issues with it in its current form.
Narration is errornous and needs a revisit.
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It's like looking at a Picasso and listing where the paints came from.
I'm listening at 1.5 speed and I can't wait for it to end.
A 'history of magic' which is devoid of any magic
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Really let down by the narrator
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This is pretty grim, overall.
Interesting content, awful narration
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