Exposé - Divination
Exposé - Divination
Sargent
Numbers 22:7, And the elders of Moab and the elders of Midian departed with the
rewards of divination in their hand; and they came unto Balaam, and spake unto
him the words of Balak.
This subject is quite dark and needs to be studied with care and much humility. I
pray the reader will become a blood pleader and live for the Lord Jesus Christ; the
alternative is not to be underestimated. The subject in this study is divination and
will be covering many forms of divination that the Christian may be unaware that
he is practicing. Also at the end is an extensive Divination Glossary Appendix.
Divination in the verse above looks like there was something in their hand;
however this is a form of phraseology to say they had a divination motive in their
heart in agreement together to do someone evil and in this case the children of
Israel. Here you need to pray: I mean real-time: before you read this PRAY!
Notice the phrase ...the rewards of divination in their hand and the
comparative passage: 2 Peter 2:12-16, But these, as natural brute beasts, made
to be taken and destroyed, speak evil of the things that they understand not; and
shall utterly perish in their own corruption; And shall receive the reward of
unrighteousness, as they that count it pleasure to riot in the day time. Spots they
are and blemishes, sporting themselves with their own deceivings while they feast
with you; Having eyes full of adultery, and that cannot cease from sin; beguiling
unstable souls: an heart they have exercised with covetous practices; cursed
children: Which have forsaken the right way, and are gone astray, following the
way of Balaam the son of Bosor, who loved the wages of unrighteousness; But
was rebuked for his iniquity: the dumb ass speaking with man's voice forbad the
madness of the prophet.
This explains what divination is: Unrighteousness. The Bibles says: 1 John 5:17a,
All unrighteousness is sin... And so we are warned not to go along with people
like Balaam; however many in the local churches are doing just that: Revelation
2:14, But I have a few things against thee, because thou hast there them that hold
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the doctrine of Balaam, who taught Balac to cast a stumblingblock before the
children of Israel, to eat things sacrificed unto idols, and to commit fornication.
This is against one of the seven local churches in Revelation during the
Tribulation. But remember this is the left over local churches from the church age
that ended up in Apostasy.
Many Christians are involved in different forms of divination these days. Many are
superstitious about things and because of their lack of Bible reading, studying and
memorizing they lack the needed equipment to fight a good fight of faith. Many do
not even know that they are in a spiritual war and those that do have a modern
Bible version that is like going into battle with a butter-knife.
The modern Bibles are part of the divination involved in textual criticism and
thinking and exalting the original manuscripts to a level of importance and
ignoring what God gave you in the King James Bible. This divination is subtle,
hidden and usually misunderstood.
A very strong law was given to Israel in Deuteronomy 18:9-14, When thou art
come into the land which the LORD thy God giveth thee, thou shalt not learn to do
after the abominations of those nations. There shall not be found among you any
one that maketh his son or his daughter to pass through the fire, or that useth
divination, or an observer of times, or an enchanter, or a witch, Or a charmer,
or a consulter with familiar spirits, or a wizard, or a necromancer. For all that
do these things are an abomination unto the LORD: and because of these
abominations the LORD thy God doth drive them out from before thee. Thou
shalt be perfect with the LORD thy God. For these nations, which thou shalt
possess, hearkened unto observers of times, and unto diviners: but as for thee,
the LORD thy God hath not suffered thee so to do. So if a person that uses
these things of divination and claims to be a Christian can he or she be trusted?
How do we tell when these things are right in front of us? Will it be obvious, or
could it be such a lie that it can deceive us into trusting in them?
First the divination itself cannot be trusted even if the prognosis of that divination
or the diviner is true and actually helps people. The end NEVER justifies the
means. This is the modern lie that has been pushed upon us all to think that
because the end came out right, that the means to it must also be right. This is a lie.
Israel got caught up in this in spite of the warning from the Lord. 2 Kings 17:16-
17, And they left all the commandments of the LORD their God, and made them
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molten images, even two calves, and made a grove, and worshipped all the host
of heaven, and served Baal. And they caused their sons and their daughters to
pass through the fire, and used divination and enchantments, and sold
themselves to do evil in the sight of the LORD, to provoke him to anger.
What we see here is that there are ear marks of divination; things that seem to go
along with divination.
1. Molten Images
2. Worshipping the Sun, Moon Stars and Planets
3. Causing your children to pass through the fire
4. Serving Baal (Satan indirectly)
5. Using Divination
6. Using Enchantments
7. Selling Yourself to do Evil
This is the splitting of the nation of Israel and it was because of these things that
God drave the ten tribes out and carried them away to Assyria leaving Judah,
Benjamin and part of the tribe of Levi in the land.
Later Judah fell away also and were taken to Babylon. But before this they were
warned and yet there were diviners that were false prophets that said to them that
they will not go to Babylon when Jeremiah told them that they were going.
Jeremiah 14:14, Then the LORD said unto me, The prophets prophesy lies in
my name: I sent them not, neither have I commanded them, neither spake unto
them: they prophesy unto you a false vision and divination, and a thing of
nought, and the deceit of their heart. With Jeremiah 27:9, Therefore hearken
not ye to your prophets, nor to your diviners, nor to your dreamers, nor to your
enchanters, nor to your sorcerers, which speak unto you, saying, Ye shall not
serve the king of Babylon: yet they did serve the king of Babylon. And with
Jeremiah 29:8, For thus saith the LORD of hosts, the God of Israel; Let not your
prophets and your diviners, that be in the midst of you, deceive you, neither
hearken to your dreams which ye cause to be dreamed.
You cannot trust in dreams, you are supposed to trust in the Lord by trusting in His
words. If you do not have Gods words, you have to trust in something else: that is
a precursor to modern the divination. It is a matter of what you are TRUSTING in.
That is what IDOLS do, they are for people to trust in and rely on for life. There is
a fine line between Divine and Divination. There is a fine line between an IMAGE
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of an idol, and the IMAGE of God: The Lord Jesus Christ. But an IDOL IMAGE is
NOT the same in any way as the Lord Jesus Christ. The fine line is that IMAGE;
and eventually there will be an IMAGE of a beast during the tribulation. There will
be a whole lot more divination during that time than now as life degenerates with
each generation.
Ezekiel had the same issues as Jeremiah with divination in the land of the people if
Israel. Ezekiel 13:6-9, They have seen vanity and lying divination, saying, The
LORD saith: and the LORD hath not sent them: and they have made others to hope
that they would confirm the word. Have ye not seen a vain vision, and have ye not
spoken a lying divination, whereas ye say, The LORD saith it; albeit I have not
spoken? Therefore thus saith the Lord GOD; Because ye have spoken vanity, and
seen lies, therefore, behold, I am against you, saith the Lord GOD. And mine
hand shall be upon the prophets that see vanity, and that divine lies: they shall not
be in the assembly of my people, neither shall they be written in the writing of
the house of Israel, neither shall they enter into the land of Israel; and ye shall
know that I am the Lord GOD.
The Lord is against these false prophets because of their lying divination and
telling the people that these things the Lord had said when he didnt.
When Judah fell to Babylon; God gave them over to a nation that used divinations
and even in the invasion of the king of Babylon when they were coming into
Jerusalem the king of Babylon used divination and consulted with images as he
gazed into the liver; so there was some sort of pagan sacrifice either of animal or
human to look into the liver and see an image and divine from that to over through
Jerusalem.
Ezekiel 21:21-27, For the king of Babylon stood at the parting of the way, at the
head of the two ways, to use divination: he made his arrows bright, he consulted
with images, he looked in the liver. At his right hand was the divination for
Jerusalem, to appoint captains, to open the mouth in the slaughter, to lift up
the voice with shouting, to appoint battering rams against the gates, to cast a
mount, and to build a fort. And it shall be unto them as a false divination in their
sight, to them that have sworn oaths: but he will call to remembrance the
iniquity, that they may be taken. Therefore thus saith the Lord GOD; Because ye
have made your iniquity to be remembered, in that your transgressions are
discovered, so that in all your doings your sins do appear; because, I say, that ye
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are come to remembrance, ye shall be taken with the hand. And thou, profane
wicked prince of Israel, whose day is come, when iniquity shall have an end,
Thus saith the Lord GOD; Remove the diadem, and take off the crown: this shall
not be the same: exalt him that is low, and abase him that is high. I will overturn,
overturn, overturn, it: and it shall be no more, until he come whose right it is;
and I will give it him.
Divination is also in the New Testament and they are three in the book of Acts
which are in a progression as the book of Acts is a progression and transitional
book so are these three transitional in nature.
1. Simon the Sorcerer who gets saved during the transition but the baggage of
sorcery and being paid for the power he had led to Peters pronouncement:
Acts 8:9-24, But there was a certain man, called Simon, which beforetime
in the same city used sorcery, and bewitched the people of Samaria, giving
out that himself was some great one: To whom they all gave heed, from the
least to the greatest, saying, This man is the great power of God. And to him
they had regard, because that of long time he had bewitched them with
sorceries. But when they believed Philip preaching the things concerning
the kingdom of God, and the name of Jesus Christ, they were baptized, both
men and women. Then Simon himself believed also: and when he was
baptized, he continued with Philip, and wondered, beholding the miracles
and signs which were done. Now when the apostles which were at Jerusalem
heard that Samaria had received the word of God, they sent unto them Peter
and John: Who, when they were come down, prayed for them, that they
might receive the Holy Ghost: (For as yet he was fallen upon none of them:
only they were baptized in the name of the Lord Jesus.) Then laid they their
hands on them, and they received the Holy Ghost. And when Simon saw
that through laying on of the apostles' hands the Holy Ghost was given,
he offered them money, Saying, Give me also this power, that on
whomsoever I lay hands, he may receive the Holy Ghost. But Peter said unto
him, Thy money perish with thee, because thou hast thought that the gift
of God may be purchased with money. Thou hast neither part nor lot in
this matter: for thy heart is not right in the sight of God. Repent therefore
of this thy wickedness, and pray God, if perhaps the thought of thine heart
may be forgiven thee. For I perceive that thou art in the gall of bitterness,
and in the bond of iniquity. Then answered Simon, and said, Pray ye to the
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Lord for me, that none of these things which ye have spoken come upon
me.
2. Elymas the Sorcerer (Barjesus) Did not get saved and was rebuked by Paul
also being in the transitional time and this one withstood against Paul :
Acts 13:6-12, And when they had gone through the isle unto Paphos, they
found a certain sorcerer, a false prophet, a Jew, whose name was Barjesus:
Which was with the deputy of the country, Sergius Paulus, a prudent man;
who called for Barnabas and Saul, and desired to hear the word of God. But
Elymas the sorcerer (for so is his name by interpretation) withstood them,
seeking to turn away the deputy from the faith. Then Saul, (who also is
called Paul,) filled with the Holy Ghost, set his eyes on him, And said, O
full of all subtilty and all mischief, thou child of the devil, thou enemy of
all righteousness, wilt thou not cease to pervert the right ways of the
Lord? And now, behold, the hand of the Lord is upon thee, and thou
shalt be blind, not seeing the sun for a season. And immediately there fell
on him a mist and a darkness; and he went about seeking some to lead him
by the hand. Then the deputy, when he saw what was done, believed, being
astonished at the doctrine of the Lord.
3. The Damsel of Divination also did not get saved and this is near to the end
of the transition from the Jewish ways to Christianity. She was a grief to
Paul and was actually helped by Paul when he cast out the unclean spirit
from her. There is no record that she got saved:
Acts 16:16-18, And it came to pass, as we went to prayer, a certain damsel
possessed with a spirit of divination met us, which brought her masters
much gain by soothsaying: The same followed Paul and us, and cried,
saying, These men are the servants of the most high God, which shew unto
us the way of salvation. And this did she many days. But Paul, being
grieved, turned and said to the spirit, I command thee in the name of Jesus
Christ to come out of her. And he came out the same hour.
Sin leaves the sinner worse than when it found him and divination leaves the sinner
with extreme baggage even if they do get saved. These things come with a price.
Sometimes it is not a price people are willing to pay.
Paul warns us: Galatians 1:6-9, I marvel that ye are so soon removed from him
that called you into the grace of Christ unto another gospel: Which is not
another; but there be some that trouble you, and would pervert the gospel of
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Christ. But though we, or an angel from heaven, preach any other gospel unto
you than that which we have preached unto you, let him be accursed. As we
said before, so say I now again, If any man preach any other gospel unto you
than that ye have received, let him be accursed. With 2 Corinthians 11:3-4, But
I fear, lest by any means, as the serpent beguiled Eve through his subtilty, so
your minds should be corrupted from the simplicity that is in Christ. For if he that
cometh preacheth another Jesus, whom we have not preached, or if ye receive
another spirit, which ye have not received, or another gospel, which ye have not
accepted, ye might well bear with him.
Then tells you who this is: 2 Corinthians 11:13-15, For such are false apostles,
deceitful workers, transforming themselves into the apostles of Christ. And no
marvel; for Satan himself is transformed into an angel of light. Therefore it is
no great thing if his ministers also be transformed as the ministers of
righteousness; whose end shall be according to their works.
This would mean that there is another Jesus and another spirit and another gospel
and they are perpetrated by false apostles, deceitful workers, transforming
themselves into the apostles of Christ. So anyone that says that they are an apostle
of Christ is a LIAR and involved in divination; and is the ministers of Satan.
The trouble is Satan hates the Bible because the Bible says in Romans 10:17, So
then faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by the word of God. So it is in
Satans best interest to pervert the word of God or corrupt it in time. This was
happening when Paul was writing 2 Corinthians 2:17, For we are not as many,
which corrupt the word of God: but as of sincerity, but as of God, in the sight of
God speak we in Christ. And Paul was well aware of this fact even so there were
more doing it then than there were that were keeping it. Degeneration of time has
only made this worse and now we have over 300 English Bibles all against the
King James Bible since 1881 all geared in opposition to the King James Bible.
Did God say what is in the King James Bible or all the modern versions? They
cant all be true, they are vastly different. The King James Bible has proven itself
over 400 years. Not even the originals lasted that long. No manuscripts lasted that
long being USED during that time as the final authority. No other translation has
lasted that long and has been in the forefront like the King James Bible which
means it takes the lead in Time, Usage and Absolute Truth. Everything else is a
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perversion and corruption of the truth. God wrote only ONE absolute truth. Today
it is found in the King James Bible: the Bible of the end times.
These fakers that think to restore Gods words that God lost are trying to set
themselves up as the final authority in your life to take away the fact that YOU
have in your lap in a King James Bible Gods express inspired words that you can
read, know and believe without the approval of any supreme magisterium or
university or anyone else for that matter. We need to hear Paul: 2 Corinthians 4:2-
4, But have renounced the hidden things of dishonesty, not walking in craftiness,
nor handling the word of God deceitfully; but by manifestation of the truth
commending ourselves to every man's conscience in the sight of God. But if our
gospel be hid, it is hid to them that are lost: In whom the god of this world hath
blinded the minds of them which believe not, lest the light of the glorious gospel of
Christ, who is the image of God, should shine unto them.
The very divination that got Israel in trouble was just that: perverting the words of
God: Jeremiah 23:36, And the burden of the LORD shall ye mention no more: for
every man's word shall be his burden; for ye have perverted the words of the
living God, of the LORD of hosts our God. And now; the churches have done
the same thing; but much worse.
Now that the words of God are perverted, let into the churches every foul spirit of
divination that creeps and crawls and flies into the music and ritualistic pagan
voodoo of the modern Christian local church. It is sickening to see and hear the
extreme degradation and putrifying blather spewing forth from most local churches
today. Gone are the days of good wholesome worship services aside from a few
local churches that still cling to the truth.
Perhaps you are a part of this new age churcheanity and christiology that has
permeated the churches with rock and roll music and false doctrines and
modernism so much so that even their Bibles reek of the modernism. Perhaps you
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find this disgusting also and want out. You can escape, but it will come with a
price.
Dear Lord God Almighty, I admit I am a sinner before you and deserve to go to
hell for my sins; but Oh Lord God I dont want to go there; please have mercy on
my wretched soul and save me from hell fire. I now receive the Lord Jesus Christ
as my personal Saviour and trust in Him alone as my payment for my sins against
you. I will confess the Lord Jesus Christ openly as I have done now in my heart.
Thank you, Lord God for saving my soul from hell fire and damnation; in Jesus
Name, Amen.
Dont let this alone; deal with it today the cost of not doing anything or delaying a
decision could be the difference between heaven and hell.
A note before you go any further: The following appendix is compiled from
various sources that are from the horses mouth so to speak and so with this in
mind please be aware that it is not for the faint of heart, or week minded; and
especially not for those that do not seek the truth. The statements below may not be
true to the teachings listed as the sources for the most part cannot be checked. It is
my intention to show that there are some practices in this list that may have crossed
your path unwittingly, unknowingly and perhaps naively. So to be forewarned is to
be forearmed. Before you read further; pray and put on the whole armour of God
and get washed in the blood thoroughly; pleading the Blood throughout the reading
as this is not childs play; this is warfare and knowing the enemy. These are the
wiles of the devil: Ephesians 6:11, Put on the whole armour of God, that ye may
be able to stand against the wiles of the devil.
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Divination Glossary
This glossary is not a complete list but a thorough enough list to help the reader to
understand what we are up against. The powers of darkness want your children and
they will stop at nothing to deceive them and steal them from you if you let them.
To be forewarned is to be forearmed as good solders of the Lord Jesus Christ.
ABACOMANCY: Divination via the observation of patterns of dust. Also used are
the ashes of the recently deceased. See also Ceneromancy, Spodomancy, and
Tephromancy.
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include: Austromancy (wind); Ceraunoscopy (thunder & lightning); Chaomancy
(aerial visions); Meteormancy (meteors, especially shooting stars). It is also known
as Nephelomancy.
Borrowed into Middle English from Old French *aeromancie, aeromaunce, (in
modern French (Cotgrave) aromanty), from Late Latin aeromantia, from Late
Greek aeromanteia, from the Greek aero-, combining form of aer air. After the
Middle English period is has generally been modified according to New Latin
aeromantia and French aeromancie. Classical Greek did not have the word, or at
least it has not survived extant, but they did have aeroskopia divination by
observing the heavens. Variant Forms Middle English: aermacye, aeromance,
aeromancye, aeromauncie, aerymancie. Early Modern English: aeromancie,
romancy, aromancy, aeromanty, eromancy, heromanty. New Latin: aeromantia,
aromantia. The forms with represent a now obsolete typographical convention
which proscribed a pronunciation based on the Greek root, in which the first two
letters formed separate syllables, that is, ay-eromancy. By some lexicographers it
was applied stringently to all words beginning aero-, but for the most part it was
applied rather haphazardly. A look at the entries in OED for words beginning aero-
is a good example of this haphazardness. Presumably some lexicographers and
authors thought that the pronunciation was apparent enough (or "should" be
apparent) without typographical assistance. The modern pronunciation (as air-
omancy) presumably arose from a lack of knowledge of the Greek language, and
also under the influence of the word air. The existence of the form eromancy dates
the pronunciation back to the 17th century.
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Anemoscopy means divination by means of the study of wind. This type of
divination involves the observation of wind direction and strength, including the
shape of dust clouds lifted by it.A different method is posing a question and then
tossing a handful of dirt, sand or light seeds into the air; the answer comes in the
form of the small dust cloud made by the flying particles. Another process uses a
pendulum, allowed to move only by the wind, positioned over a circle graph or a
set of letters, glyphs or runes. Yet another technique consists of listening to the
sound of the wind and interpreting its message. Many people hear 'whispers in the
wind' as the movement of sound carries voices that we sometimes can here. Many
indigenous people practiced wind scrying as a means of talking to their gods and
receiving messages. They believed in wind spirits. Ancient Greeks practiced wind
scrying in the sacred grove of Dodona, which was dedicated to their main god
Zeus. Psellus referred to this technique writing "there is a mode of predicting by
means of the air and the leaves of the trees. The method involved the hanging of
striking wands from branches of sacred oak trees in a way that they struck
resounding brass basins when the wind blew. Interpretations were made of these
sounds and that of the wind. On a windy day, if one stood still, they could hear
tones or perhaps 'whispers in the wind' of the trees as the moving air carries sound
vibration. Native Americans, to this very day, use wind scrying to communicate
with spirits.
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Murray did not feel that Urquhart's erroneous form was worth awarding it
headword status. Probably since it never occurs in any dictionaries nor anywhere
outside of Urquhart.
Lewis Spence, a learned and widely read, but not very careful scholar, wrote in
1920 that the word referred to a type of divination by cakes with messages inside,
similar to our modern Chinese restaurant fortune cookies. This has led to many
sources stating that fortune cookies are a modern-day survival of ancient
aleuromancy. However I think this meaning is, in the end, a spurious one.
Although commonly believed to be of Chinese origin and of some distant date,
fortune cookies are a 20th century invention. The first recorded use of the term
(Chinese) fortune cookies is in 1962, and they were originally a gimmick of North
American Chinese restaurants. Notwithstanding Spence, there is no history of them
in China as such. The notion that people really take to heart the droll messages
available in these cookies, or that the reading of them constitutes a 'method' of
divination, is highly unlikely. The assertion that the use of fortune cookies is a
modern-day survival is a fine example of a widely held notion that is as prevalent
as it is wrong. In much of the literature of folk-lore, superstition, witch-craft, the
occult, etc., there is made a habit of finding some analogous practice from ancient
times and thence stating that the modern-day practice is a survival. The term
survival implies a continuation of the practice throughout the intervening years,
presumedly unrecorded and underground. It is as though the idea that the two
similar practices may have had separate geneses, one ancient, the other modern, is
out of the question, though this is often more likely to be the case. In this instance
the proposition that the ancient Greek aleuromancy continued beyond the end of
the Grecian period, was somehow transported to China, then lost to the Chinese,
except to those who emmigrated to North America and took up the restaurant
trade, is ludicrous. Similarly impossible is the alternate proposition that the whole
of humanity, (or at least the Greeks as well as the Chinese) in ancient times
practised some common form of aleuromancy, of which the making of fortune
cookies is the only vestige remaining. This practice of guilelessly identifying
supposed survivals is quite old. That it is still common is no wonder since many
influential books and authors have indulged in it quite freely. It can be seen
throughout Brand's Popular Antiquities, a hugely popular book that went in to
numerous editions, and it occurs in much of the literature on witchcraft due to the
theories and works of Margaret Murray. Sir James Fraser's all-important Golden
Bough constantly cites connections between ancient beliefs and more recent
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practices, but, at least in the examples I am familiar with, is cautious in doing so
and always cites numerous instances to back up his assertions. Other examples of
this "survival" notion in this document are to be seen at: alomancy, ceromancy,
chartomancy, ovomancy and xylomancy.
ALOMANCY: Divination via the interpretation of table salt. This is the believed
origin of misfortune or superstition including the one about people saying that
misfortune is about to fall on the household when the salt cellar is overturned, and
the one about throwing a pinch of salt over someone's shoulder for good luck. Also
known as Halomancy. A variant of the word halomancy - divination by salt -
which arises from an erroneous reading of the ancient Greek root. In Greek there is
no letter aitch (h) as such, instead aspiration was represented by the opening
apsotrophe symbol (`) placed above the next letter. Someone unaware of this
would read the Greek `als as simply als rather than the correct English rendering
hals. To one ignorant of modern typography of the Greek language the arcane
system of diacritics marking aspiration, lack of aspiration and stress, are confusing
and probably regarded, if anything, as obfuscating. I assume that one of the early
users of this term, or even the coiner of this word, made the mistake of
disregarding the aspiration, and hence concocted the form alomancy. No other
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word using this Greek root has a variant form without the h. The word itself,
appears to be only recorded only in dictionaries and books on the occult. The OED
records it as a variant of halomancy, but when that word is consulted only one
citation appears, Websters (1864), where the form is indeed alomancy. Since it is
not labelled rare-0 then one must assume that the OED had citations of the h form,
though ones later than 1864. OED misses the fact that in 1852 the h form appears
in Roget's Thesaurus, even though this source is cited in other OED -mancy
entries. What is remarkable is the fact that, in a time of prescriptive dictionaries,
the lexicogrpahers of the day did not mark the form alomancy as incorrect or
erroneous. Presumably Roget and Webster had original sources for the word, or
perhaps they both had the same source and Roget etymologically normalised the
form. As yet I have not been able to discover a 19th century (or earlier) primary
source.
ALPHITOMANCY: Divination via the use of special cakes that are digestible by
persons with a clear conscience but are unpleasant to others. It is a practice to
assist identifying guilty parties by feeding an individual or group a loaf of barley.
The innocent would feel no ill effect, but the guilty parties would experience
indigestion. Alphitomancy was often used to identify criminals or adulterers. Also
known as Cursed Bread.
Derived from the French alphitomantie, from the New Latin alphitomantia. Clius
Calcagninus, Compendium amatori magi (ed. Froben Bale, 1544)
"Alphitomantia, quam ceu digito Theocritus signavit in Pharmaceutria." A
derivative from the ancient Greek alphitomantis a diviner who used barley meal,
from Gk alphiton (usually only in the plural form alphita) barley meal, flour made
from barley; also, pearl-barley. See etymology at aleuromancy.
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ANTHROPOMANCY, ANTINOPOMANCY: Divination via the interpretation of
the entrails of a human sacrifice. This practice is outlawed and unethical obviously
Herodotus wrote that Menelaus practiced it when detained in Egypt because of
contrary winds. Because of his barbarous curiosity he sacrificed two country
children in order to discover his destiny. Also known as Splanchomancy. Derived
from New Latin anthropomantia, from ancient Greek anthropos human being; cf. F
anthropomancie. Early) anthropomancia, anthropomancie, (erroneous)
antinopomancy.
Evidently Brand did not understand that there was a typographical error in Gaule
and separately notes the word anthropomancie as "not in the above ample list".
Hone faithfully reproduced this in his famous Year Book, and the error was not
rectified until Mackay's Extraordinary Popular Delusions. The Gibson's, who
almost certainly did not get their evidence from an original copy of Gaule,
continue the error to the point of defining it separately.
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had spun a thick web during the night the omen was good, but if they had remained
idle the omen was bad. Also, it may be noted that the minute red spiders which are
commonly called money spiders are meant to foretell of some financial gain in the
near future.
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ARIOLATIOMANCY: Divining via the interpretation of altars.
According to the OED this is "contracted for arithmomancy, but earlier". However
this earlier form is most probably directly from the New Latin, itself a blend of
arithmetica and -mantia. Notice that the form also occurs both Spanish aritmancia,
and Portuguese arithmancia. This pattern of formation (i.e. without the normal
connective -o- before -mancy) is followed by the two other words referring to
divination by number, namely, logarithmancy and mathemancy. The variant form
arithomancy is a later formation (1983) with the connective -o- added in to
conform the usual pattern of other -mancys. Arithmomantia, Arithmomanty.
Entering into English later than arithmancy it is derived from New Latin
arithmomantia, from the ancient Greek arithmos a number. Often said to be a more
"correct" form of arithmancy since is includes more letters of the Greek base word.
The Chaldeans divided their alphabet into three sections of seven letters and linked
these to the seven planets. The Greeks would analyze the names of opponents and
predict the outcome of a contest.
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ARITHMOSOPHY: Divination by Bertiauxs method of converting words to
numbers. A form of Arithmancy and Numerology.
From New Latin astragalomantia, (in French astragalomantie), from anceint Greek
astragalos one of the vertebrae, or (usually in the plural astragaloi) a type of dice,
made from knuckle-bones of sheep. Greek had the term astragalomantis a diviner
using astragaloi. The only variant form to come to light is astragyromancy (first
recorded 1931) which is either due to a typographical error, or a blending of
astragalomancy and gyromancy (possibly because the dice are spun?).
Among Indo-European peoples, astrology has been dated to the third millennium
BCE, with roots in calendrical systems used to predict seasonal shifts and to
interpret celestial cycles as signs of divine communications. Through most of its
history, astrology was considered a scholarly tradition. It was accepted in political
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and academic contexts, and was connected with other studies, such as astronomy,
alchemy, meteorology, and medicine. At the end of the 17th century, new scientific
concepts in astronomy (such as heliocentrism) called astrology into question, and
subsequent controlled studies failed to confirm its predictive value. Astrology thus
lost its academic and theoretical standing.
Along with tarot divination, astrology is one of the core studies of Western
esotericism, and as such has influenced systems of magical belief not only among
Western esotericists and Hermeticists, but also belief systems such as Wicca that
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have borrowed from or been influenced by the Western esoteric tradition. Tanya
Luhrmann has said that "all magicians know something about astrology," and
refers to a table of correspondences in Starhawk's The Spiral Dance, organized by
planet, as an example of the astrological lore studied by magicians.
Hindu astrology originated with western astrology. In the earliest Indian astronomy
texts, the year was believed to be 360 days long, similar to that of Babylonian
astrology, but the rest of the early astrological system bears little resemblance.
Later, the Indian techniques were augmented with some of the Babylonian
techniques.
Sri Lankan astrology is largely based on Hindu astrology with some modifications
to bring it in line with Buddhist teachings. Tibetan astrology also shares many of
these components but has also been strongly influenced by Chinese culture and
acknowledges a circle of animal signs similar to that of the Chinese zodiac.
Chinese astrology has a close relation with Chinese philosophy (theory of the three
harmonies: heaven, earth and man) and uses concepts such as yin and yang, the
Five phases, the 10 Celestial stems, the 12 Earthly Branches, and shichen a form of
timekeeping used for religious purposes). The early use of Chinese astrology was
mainly confined to political astrology, the observation of unusual phenomena,
identification of portents and the selection of auspicious days for events and
decisions.
The Korean zodiac is identical to the Chinese one. The Vietnamese zodiac is
almost identical to Chinese zodiac except that the second animal is the Water
Buffalo instead of the Ox, and the fourth animal is the Cat instead of the Rabbit.
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The Japanese zodiac includes the Wild Boar instead of the Pig. The Thai zodiac
includes a Naga in place of the Dragon and begins, not at Chinese New Year, but
at either on the first day of fifth month in Thai lunar calendar, or during the
Songkran festival (now celebrated every 1315 April), depending on the purpose
of the use.
History of Astrology: Astrology, in its broadest sense, is the search for meaning in
the sky. It has therefore been argued that astrology began as a study as soon as
human beings made conscious attempts to measure, record, and predict seasonal
changes by reference to astronomical cycles. Early evidence of such practices
appears as markings on bones and cave walls, which show that lunar cycles were
being noted as early as 25,000 years ago; the first step towards recording the
Moons influence upon tides and rivers, and towards organizing a communal
calendar. Agricultural needs were also met by increasing knowledge of
constellations, whose appearances change with the seasons, allowing the rising of
particular star-groups to herald annual floods or seasonal activities.
There is scattered evidence to suggest that the oldest known astrological references
are copies of texts made during this period. Two, from the Venus tablet of
Ammisaduqa (compiled in Babylon around 1700 BCE) are reported to have been
made during the reign of king Sargon of Akkad (2334-2279 BCE).
The system of Chinese astrology was elaborated during the Zhou dynasty
(1046256 BC) and flourished during the Han Dynasty (2nd century BC to 2nd
century AD), during which all the familiar elements of traditional Chinese culture -
the Yin-Yang philosophy, theory of the 5 elements, Heaven and Earth, Confucian
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morality - were brought together to formalise the philosophical principles of
Chinese medicine and divination, astrology and alchemy.
Astrology saw a popular revival from the nineteenth century as part of a general
revival of spiritualism and later New Age philosophy, and through the influence of
mass media such as newspaper horoscopes and astrology software.
Early in the twentieth century psychologist Carl Jung developed some concepts
concerning astrology, which led to the development of psychological astrology.
Core Beliefs: The core beliefs of astrology were prevalent in parts of the ancient
world and are epitomized in the Hermetic maxim, "as above, so below". Tycho
Brahe used a similar phrase to summarize his studies in astrology: suspiciendo
despicio, "by looking up I see downward".
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Although the principle that events in the heavens are mirrored by those on Earth
was once generally held in most traditions of astrology around the world, in the
West there has historically been a debate among astrologers over the nature of the
mechanism behind astrology.
Although the connection between celestial mechanics and terrestrial dynamics was
explored first by Isaac Newton with his development of a universal theory of
gravitation, claims that the gravitational effects of the celestial bodies are what
accounts for astrological generalizations are not substantiated by scientific
research.
Most astrological traditions are based on the relative positions and movements of
various real or construed celestial bodies and on the construction of implied or
calculated celestial patterns as seen at the time and place of the event being
studied. These are chiefly the astrological planets, the stars, the lunar nodes, Arabic
parts and hypothetical planets.
The frame of reference for such apparent positions is defined by the tropical or
sidereal zodiac of twelve signs on one hand, and by the local horizon (ascendant-
descendant axis) and midheaven-imum coeli axis on the other. This latter (local)
frame is typically further divided into the twelve astrological houses. Furthermore,
the astrological aspects are used to determine the geometric/angular relationship(s)
between the various celestial bodies and angles in the horoscope.
In Vedic astrology, the focus is on planetary periods to infer the trend, while
transits are used to time significant events. Most Western astrologers no longer try
to forecast actual events, but focus instead on general trends and developments. By
comparison, Vedic astrologers predict both trends and events. Skeptics respond
that this practice of western astrologers allows them to avoid making verifiable
predictions, and gives them the ability to attach significance to arbitrary and
unrelated events, in a way that suits their purpose.
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In the past, astrologers often relied on close observation of celestial objects and the
charting of their movements. Modern astrologers use data provided by astronomers
which are transformed to a set of astrological tables called ephemerides, showing
the changing zodiacal positions of the heavenly bodies through time.
Cultural Influence: In the West there have been occasional reports of political
leaders consulting astrologers. Louis de Wohl worked as an astrologer for the
British intelligence agency MI5, after it was claimed that Hitler used astrology to
time his actions. The War Office was "interested to know what Hitler's own
astrologers would be telling him from week to week". In fact de Wohl's predictions
were so inaccurate that he was soon labelled a "complete charlatan" and it was later
shown that Hitler considered astrology to be "complete nonsense". After John
Hinckley's attempted assassination of U.S. President Ronald Reagan, first lady
Nancy Reagan commissioned astrologer Joan Quigley to act as the secret White
House astrologer. However, Quigley's role ended in 1988 when it became public
through the memoirs of former chief of staff, Donald Regan.
In Japan, a strong belief in astrology has led to dramatic changes in the fertility rate
and the number of abortions in the years of "Fire Horse". Women born in these
years are called hinoeuma, and believed to be unmarriageable and to bring bad
luck to their father or husband. In 1966, the number of babies born in Japan
dropped by over 25% as parents tried to avoid the stigma of having a daughter born
in the hinoeuma year.
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have faith in astrology have been characterized as doing so "in spite of the fact that
there is no verified scientific basis for their beliefs, and indeed that there is strong
evidence to the contrary." Astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson commented on
astrological belief, noting that "part of knowing how to think is knowing how the
laws of nature shape the world around us. Without that knowledge, without that
capacity to think, you can easily become a victim of people who seek to take
advantage of you".
The former astrologer, and scientist, Geoffrey Deans and psychologist Ivan Kelly
conducted a large scale scientific test, involving more than one hundred cognitive,
behavioral, physical and other variables, but found no support for astrology.
Furthermore, a meta-analysis was conducted pooling 40 studies consisting of 700
astrologers and over 1000 birth charts. Ten of the tests, which had a total of 300
participants, involved subjects picking the correct chart interpretation out of a
number of others which were not the astrologically correct chart interpretation
(usually 3 to 5 others). When the date and other obvious clues were removed no
significant results were found to suggest there was any preferred chart.
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capitalist society. Adorno concluded that astrology was a large-scale manifestation
of systematic irrationalism, where individuals were subtly being led to believe that
the author of the column was addressing them directly through the use of flattery
and vague generalizations.
Astrology and Astronomy: Astrology and astronomy were archaically one and the
same discipline (Latin: astrologia), and were only gradually recognized as separate
in Western 17th century philosophy (the "Age of Reason").
Since the 18th century they have come to be regarded as completely separate
disciplines. Astronomy, the study of objects and phenomena originating beyond
the Earth's atmosphere, is a science and is a widely-studied academic discipline.
Astrology, which uses the apparent positions of celestial objects as the basis for
psychology, prediction of future events, and other esoteric knowledge, is not a
science and is typically defined as a form of divination.
In pre-modern times, most cultures have not made a clear distinction between the
two disciplines, putting them both together as one.
In ancient Babylonia, famed for its astrology, there were not separate roles for the
astronomer as predictor of celestial phenomena, and the astrologer as their
interpreter; both functions were performed by the same person. This overlap does
not mean that astrology and astronomy were always regarded as one and the same.
In the Hellenistic world, the Greek words 'astrologia' and 'astronomia' were often
used interchangeably, but they were conceptually not the same. Plato taught about
'astronomia' and stipulated that planetar phenomena should be described by a
geometrical model. The first solution was proposed by Eudoxus. Aristotle favored
a physical approach and adopted the word 'astrologia'. Eccentrics and epicycles
came to be thought of as useful fictions. For a more general public, the
distinguishing principle was not evident and either word was acceptable. For the
Babylonian horoscopic practice, the words specifically used were 'apotelesma' and
'katarche'. but otherwise it was subsumed under the aristotelian term 'astrologia'.
A more definitive split between astrology and astronomy in the West took place
gradually in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, when astrology was
increasingly thought of as an occult science or superstition by the intellectual elite.
Because of their lengthy shared history, it sometimes happens that the two are
confused with one another even today. Many contemporary astrologers, however,
do not claim that astrology is a science, but think of it as a form of divination like
the I-Ching, an art, or a part of a spiritual belief structure (influenced by trends
such as Neoplatonism, Neopaganism, Theosophy, and Hinduism).
Astrologers practice their discipline geocentrically and they consider the universe
to be harmonious, changeless and static, while astronomers have employed the
scientific method to infer that the universe is without a center and is dynamic,
expanding outward.
Astrologers believe that the position of the stars and planets determine an
individual's personality and future. Astronomers study the actual stars and planets,
but have found no evidence supporting astrological theories. Psychologists study
personality, and while there are many theories of personality, no mainstream
theories in that field are based on astrology.
Both astrologers and astronomers see Earth as being an integral part of the
universe, that Earth and the universe are interconnected as one cosmos (not as
being separate and distinct from each other). However, astrologers philosophically
and mystically portray the cosmos as having a supernatural, metaphysical and
divine essence that actively influences world events and the personal lives of
people. Astronomers, as members of the scientific community, cannot use in their
scientific articles explanations that are not derived from empirically reproducible
conditions, irrespective of their personal convictions. Scientific discourses must
provide explanations based on known measurable laws of nature, according to
which Earth is just as integral a part of the universe as are celestial objects.
Astrology and astronomy were indistinguishable for a very long time - the funding
from astrology supported some astronomical research, which was in turn used to
make more accurate ephemerides for use in astrology. In Medieval Europe the
word Astronomia was often used to encompass both disciplines as this included the
study of astronomy and astrology jointly and without a real distinction; this was
one of the original Seven Liberal Arts. Kings and other rulers generally employed
court astrologers to aid them in the decision making in their kingdoms, thereby
funding astronomical research. University medical students were taught astrology
as it was generally used in medical practice.
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Astronomy and astrology diverged over the course of the 17th through 19th
centuries. Copernicus didn't practice astrology (nor empirical astronomy; his work
was theoretical), but the most important astronomers before Isaac Newton were
astrologers by profession - Tycho Brahe, Johannes Kepler, and Galileo Galilei.
Newton most likely rejected astrology, however (as did his contemporary
Christiaan Huygens), and interest in astrology declined after his era, helped by the
increasing popularity of a Cartesian, "mechanistic" cosmology in the
Enlightenment.
Also relevant here was the development of better timekeeping instruments, initially
for aid in navigation; improved timekeeping made it possible to make more exact
astrological predictions-predictions which could be tested, and which consistently
proved to be false. By the end of the 18th century, astronomy was one of the major
sciences of the Enlightenment model, using the recently codified scientific method,
and was altogether distinct from astrology.
Cognitive Bias: It has also been suggested that much of the continued faith in
astrology could be psychologically explained as a matter of cognitive bias. In 1949
Bertram Forer conducted a personality test on students. While seemingly giving
the students individualized results, he instead gave each student exactly the same
sheet that discussed their personality. The personality descriptions were taken from
a book on Astrology. When the students were asked to comment on the accuracy of
the test with a rating more than 40% gave it the top mark of 5 out of 5, and the
average rating was 4.The results of this study have been replicated in numerous
other studies.Thus, study of this Barnum/Forer effect has been mostly focused on
the level of acceptance of fake horoscopes and fake astrological personality
profiles. Recipients of these personality assessments consistently fail to distinguish
common and uncommon personality descriptors.
Lack of Consistency: Testing the validity of astrology can be hard because there is
no consensus amongst astrologers as to what astrology is or what it can predict.
Most professional astrologers are paid to predict the future or describe a person's
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personality and life, but most horoscopes only make vague untestable statements
that can almost apply to any individual. Astrologers avoid making verifiable
predictions and instead rely on making vague statements which allows them to try
to avoid falsification.
Lack of Mechanism: Astrology has been criticized for failing to provide a physical
mechanism that links the movements of celestial bodies to their purported effects
on human behavior. In a lecture in 2001, Stephen Hawking stated "The reason
most scientists don't believe in astrology is because it is not consistent with our
theories that have been tested by experiment."
Astronomer Carl Sagan declined to sign the statement. Sagan said he took this
stance not because he thought astrology had any validity, but because he thought
that the tone of the statement was authoritarian, and that dismissing astrology
because there was no mechanism (while "certainly a relevant point") was not in
itself convincing. In a letter published in a follow-up edition of The Humanist,
Sagan confirmed that he would have been willing to sign such a statement had it
described and refuted the principal tenets of astrological belief. This, he argued,
would have been more persuasive and would have produced less controversy.
Many astrologers claim that astrology is scientific. Some of these astrologers have
proposed conventional causal agents such as electromagnetism and gravity.
Scientists dismiss these mechanisms as implausible since, for example, the
magnetic field, when measured from earth, of a large but distant planet such as
Jupiter is far smaller than that produced by ordinary household appliances.
Other astrologers prefer not to attempt to explain astrology, and instead give it
supernatural explanations such as divination. Carl Jung sought to invoke
synchronicity to explain results on astrology from a single study he conducted,
where no statistically significant results were observed. Synchronicity itself is
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considered to be neither testable nor falsifiable. The study was subsequently
heavily criticized for its non-random sample and its use of statistics and also its
lack of consistency with astrology.
The word astromancy enters 17th century English from the medieval Latin
astromantia, which comes from the Greek (Siculus Diodorus) astromanteia,
derived from astron a star. In earilest example of its use in English it occurs in the
New Latin form astromantia. Another, more recent, form is the rare astronomancy,
which shows influence from the word astronomy. The term essentially died out
after the 17th century. However, it reappears in the 19th century in a few sources.
It occurs in Mackay where it is used as a substitute for Gaule's etymologically
obscure roadomancy. Its appearance in Sir Richard Burton's translation of the
Arabian Nights' Entertainments is not surprising as the use of archaic terms in this
translation is a stylistic feature (for a further apposite example see egromancy). It
is also to be met with in James Murray's definition of the term astrology in the
OED. The assertion in Gaynor and Gibson that the term astromancy refers to an
ancient form of astrology, and not the modern day practice is based on conjecture
rather thanevidence. Certainly there were many astrological methods and practices
that are now abandoned or lost, but it is clear from the 17th century citations that
the term astromancy is basically equivalent to the modern astrology.
AUGURY: is the general term for the art of divination and is chiefly applied to
interpretations of signs and omens. Often used synonymously with divination to
mean the interpretation of signs and omens. More accurately, it is divination based
on the appearance or behavior of animals. Includes:
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of this term the practice is ridiculed. This is common to many other terms ending
in -mancy.
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who followed Cotgrave's spelling. Badly formed: ax-onomancy (Raffel). New
Latin form: axinomantia.
A relatively modern word, dating only back to the 18th century. From Greek
biblion a book. Definition 1.b. arising from an association with the word Bible.
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Bibliomancy is the practice of seeking spiritual insight by selecting a random
passage from a Holy Book.
Bibliomancy is divination using a book, sometimes a bible is used. The book will
be opened at a random page and while keeping your eyes closed you will point at a
line or passage in the book. Moslems use the Quran for this divination. During the
middle ages Virgil's Aeneid was popular.
Bibliomancy and Stichomancy have been popular methods of divination for at least
3000 years, when the I Ching was first used to divine the future.
Method:
St. Francis of Assisi, to seek divine guidance, is said to have thrice opened to a
random page of the book of Gospels in the church of St. Nicholas. Each time he
opened to a passage in which Christ told His disciples to leave their earthly
belongings and follow Him.
Because book owners frequently have favorite passages that the books open
themselves to, some practitioners use dice or another randomizer to choose the
page to be opened. This practice was formalized by the use of coins or yarrow
stalks in consulting the I Ching. Tarot can also be considered a form of
bibliomancy, with the main difference that the cards (pages) are unbound.
Another variant requires the selection of a random book from a library before
selecting the random passage from that book. This also holds if a book has fallen
down from a shelf on its own.
Chartomancy, from the Latin charta, meaning 'paper', it is the art and practice of
divination by interpreting the writings in literary or musical works, official papers,
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letters, manuscripts, documents, and so forth. Chartomancy it is considered to be a
form of Bibliomancy.
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Derived from New Latin capnomantia, from Gk kapnos smoke; cf. F capnomantie
(Cotgrave), Sp, Pg capnomancia. Capnomancie, Kapnomancy.
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powder to sprinkle in the drink, as well as an arrow to which is tied a white scarf.
He or she then generates himself or herself as a deity and performs the preliminary
ritual for removing obstacles according to the ritual of Tam. Following this,
invocations are made to Dorje Yudronma, one of Tibet's chief protectors, who
holds an arrow with the five colours in her right hand and a white silver mirror in
her left. The diviner then requests the goddess to give a correct answer to the
questions asked. The minor is not read by the diviner but by a virgin boy or girl no
more than 15 years old. The child, who must be clean and well dressed, sits on a
cushion under which has been drawn a swastika, symbol of stability. He or she is
asked to pick up a stone, wrap it in a piece of red cloth and place it under his or her
knee and is made to drink the orange tinted libation. Blessed ears of barley are
placed on the child's head, which is the wrapped with a turban. The diviner cleans
the mirror and lights the butter lamp. The child looks into the mirror and,
depending on the type of divination which has been requested, sees either pictures,
like sequences in a film or letters. Letters require written questions, which have
been given to the diviner. The child describes the visions to the diviner who
interprets and explains them in terms of the questions which have been asked. The
reader of the mirror has no knowledge of the questions asked and the diviner does
not see the mirror; however, they are complementary and mutually dependent for
this type of divination. The child's ability to read the mirror disappears at puberty,
and thus the diviner may use different children at different times.
The early mirrors were made of polished copper, brass, marcasite, tin foil or
mercury behind glass, polished silver and obsidian. All types of mirrors may be
used for scrying and the size is not important.
Because mirrors are linked to the moon mirrors should be backed with silver. Try
and use a round or oval mirror instead of a square mirror.
For the frame try and use a mirror that has a silver frame. Old mirrors also seem to
work better than new mirrors.
Most seers prefer to use a black mirror. Because this is difficult to buy you may
have to make one.
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Just simply take out the glass and paint it black. You may have to give it a few
coats of paint though. When you put it back in the frame make sure the glass part is
to the front.
The use of black mirrors may be traced back over the centuries. Alchemists
Edward Kelley and John Dee used a black mirror of shewstone - a piece of
polished obsidian.
When using the black mirror for scrying you do not want to see your reflection.
The best is to leave the mirror on a table and look at it from an angle.
Look into the depths of the mirror as though you were looking into a bowl of
water. At first it may appear gray than colors will come and go.
With time and practice you will be able to see sacred images like still photographs
or moving film images. Spirits may sometimes look at the scryer, talk to the scryer
or even touch the scryer. The visions may even exist outside the mirror and
surround the scryer on all sides.
Other Methods of Mirror Scrying: Black Obsidian Mirror: This type of Mirror
Scrying involves messages received on a mirror ...
Mirror Scrying: Mirrors that are steamed up can leave messages or impressions
from the other side. Mirrors can serve as 'windows' to other realities. Mirror
images manifests all at once as they come from consciousness.
Mirror Scrying:
1. The diviner goes into the bathroom and shut the door and window so hot air
will be temporarily trapped in the room. Clean the mirror. Allow hot water
to run in the sink or shower until the mirror steams up. Watch for images to
emerge, either immediately or after a few minutes.
a. An entire picture, or part of something can manifest. Observe the
mirror from various angles. You may be surprised at what you see!
Messages and symbols received are subject to personal interpretation.
2. The Diviner stand in a dark room facing a mirror. Place a flashlight under
your face. Do not move. Stare into the mirror and watch your features
change. Some believe you are looking at yourself in a parallel or past life.
a. They also do this with a candle held beneath your face, but not too
close. The candle holder must have a large base to capture the wax
drippings as they fall.
Magic Mirrors in Past History: Magic mirrors were allegedly used in ancient times
to see the future.
In Rome people who read mirrors were called Specularii. Pica della Mirandola had
faith in them providing they were made under a favorable constellation, and that
they should only be consulted when one felt comfortably warm, for the cold harms
the lucidity of their oracle.
The Chinese and the Hindus made their mirrors out of metal - their shapes concave
or convex.
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More recently they have been used to fix the eye of clairvoyants or mediums so as
to put them into a state of hypnosis.
CATTABOMANCY: A term used by Gaule for the ancient Greek divinatory game
of 'kottabos'. The game originated in Sicily, but became popular among young men
in Athens. The "simplest mode was when each threw the wine left in his cup, so as
to strike smartly in a metal basin, at the same time invoking his mistress' name; if
all fell in the basin, and the sound was clear, it was a sign he stood well with her.
..The game soon became more complicated, and was played in various ways."
(Liddle and Scott). See also, chalcomancy. The word was coined by Gaule from
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the Greek kottabos the game of kottabos, also the metal basin used in the game. It
has not been recorded in the OED or any other dictionary, and appears in Gaule
and his copyists. The only modern book on divination to record it is Gibson who
gives a catch-all definition and seems unaware of the ancient Greek game. As far
as I know none of the popular books on divination or the occult mention the Greek
game of kottabos.
CENEROMANCY: A rare term for divination by ashes, the more common term
being tephramancy. The fine distinction drawn between this and tephramancy in
the citation is probably illusory. Derived from cenero-, a rare, early modern
English combining form of Latin cinerem ashes. This word, along with a number
of words listed by Shipley, is not recorded elsewhere. The form of the word is
consistent with 17th century spelling. The OED records cenereous and ceneritious
as "erroneous" forms of cinereous and cineritious. Perhaps Shipley knew of some
source that I have not yet discovered.
1. Cephaleonomancy.
2. Divination by study of the shape of the skull or head, esp. of a donkey or
goat.
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nonsense, one boils something 'in some liquid'. This error has been copied in later
editions of Urquhart, and also found its way into later -mancy lists. This form of
the word literally means 'divination by a head' and would thus apply to any sort of
head divination, whereas 'cephaleonomancy' literally means 'divination be an ass's
head'.
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could certainly not have arisen from a misreading of a handwritten manuscript by
the typesetter nor from a simple typographical mistake. This curious word was
sometimes (faithfully) copied into later editions of Urquhart. Most editions of
Urquhart silently correct the mistake, and later translations of Rabelais follow the
French and give cleromancy - see citations 1951, 1955. However, some alter it to
cheromancy, an equally spurious form. Neither form is recorded in OED, though
this would have made a nice story, and explained the word to some undoubtedly
mystified English readers of Rabelais.
The original passage in Rabelais read: "Par cleromantie, comme l'on trouve la
febve on guasteau la vigile de l'Epiphanie."
The practice referred to is one found various European countries where a nomial
King or Queen is chosen on the night of the Feast of the Epiphany (ie Twelth
Night) by dividing up a cake that has had a bean baked in it. The person to get the
bean is accordingly the King or Queen, and has to shout the rest of the company
for the evening. The fact that this custom relies on a 'random' selection makes it a
form of cleromancy.
Urquhart had made mention of this custom in an earlier work. According to Brand
Popular Antiquities i. 23:
Sir Thomas Urquhart, of Cromarty, in his curious work, entitled The Discovery of
a most exquiste jewel, found in the kennel of Worcester streets, the day after the
fight, 1651, says, p. 237, "Verily, I think they make use of Kings - as the French
on the Epiphany-day use their Roy de la fehve, or King of the Bean; whom after
they have honoured with drinking of his health, and shouting aloud, 'Le Roy boit,
Le Roy boit,' they make pay for all the reckoning; not leaving him sometimes one
peny, rather than exorbitancie of their debosh should not be satisfied to the full."
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Graeca mentions: Sometimes, when the entrails foretold nothing certain by
dissection, the priest made observations from them in a fire: in order hereto he took
the bladder, and binding the neck of it with wool (for which reason Sophocles calls
the bladders mallodetous kysteis), put it into the fire, to observe in what place it
would break, and which way it would dart the urine.
Though this doesn't specifically refer to pigs. This word comes into English
through Thomas Urquhart's translation of Rabelais. In the French text it appears as
choeromantie, and is derived from the Greek choiros a small pig, a pig. The variant
form, namely: choeromancy, choeromancy, and choiromancy, all show editorial
substitution of the normal connective -o-, where Urquhart has -a-.
CIROMANCY:
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CLAIGUSTANT: Divination via taste. The gift ability to sense a being or the
metaphysical by taste.
CLAIRVOYANT: See Ariolater or Oracle. Seeing the future and looking beyond
the present by following the stretch or path of time. This ability allows one to see
that which is beyond the normal range of seeing. With this ability a psychic is able
to see the metaphysical with the "third eye", this is closely related to astral
projection, but of course all gifts are closely related to one and other. Clairvoyance
is the minute aspect of the third eye capabilities. This ability shares like
components with Psychometry in that it can see what is to come.
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CLEDONOMANCY: Divination by chance remarks overheard. Derived from
ancient Greek kledon an omen, a presage contained in a word, sound or chance
utterance. (cledomancy).
CONCHOMANCY: Divination via sea shells. Derived from Latin concha, from
ancient Greek konche muscle, cockle, shell.
Shell Scrying: This is a modern method of scrying and is becoming more popular.
Most people are familiar with the sound of when a shell is placed over the ear.
Shell Scrying is listening to the sounds of the ocean which often reverberate
sounds in the atmosphere and may bring messages. Nautilus - Golden Ratio -
Sacred Geometry.
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Sacred Geometry: Sacred geometry involves sacred universal patterns used in the
design of everything in our reality, most often seen in sacred architecture and
sacred art. The basic belief is that geometry and mathematical ratios, harmonics
and proportion are also found in music, light, and cosmology. This value system is
seen as widespread even in prehistory, a cultural universal of the human condition.
David's work harnesses the power of spiritual symbols and sacred geometry from
around the world to bring those wearing them health, happiness, vitality,
abundance, excitement, and above all - love. David's jewels are meticulously
crafted to work on conscious and subconscious levels to inspire people's lives.
Nature's Design: Many forms observed in nature can be related to geometry (for
sound reasons of resource optimization). For example, the chambered nautilus
grows at a constant rate and so its shell forms a logarithmic spiral to accommodate
that growth without changing shape. Also, honeybees construct hexagonal cells to
hold their honey. These and other correspondences are seen by believers in sacred
geometry to be further proof of the cosmic significance of geometric forms. But
some scientists see such phenomena as the logical outcome of natural principles.
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Golden Ratio, Divine Proportion, Phi, Consciousness.
Galaxies; North polar hexagonal cloud on Saturn; The Great Pyramid Above and
Below; Geometry of the Great Pyramid; The Great Pyramid Geometrically Links
to the Belt of Orion.
Art and Architecture: In ancient civilizations the golden ratio (sacred geometry)
was often employed in the design of art and architecture - from the simple spiral to
more complex designs. Today sacred geometry is still used in the planning and
construction of many structures such as churches, temples, mosques, religious
monuments, altars, tabernacles, sacred spaces and the creation of religious art.
Music: A modern theory states that reality is created by harmonics following the
patterns of sacred geometry.
Researcher explains mystery of golden ratio PhysOrg - December 21, 2009: The
Egyptians supposedly used it to guide the construction the Pyramids. The
architecture of ancient Athens is thought to have been based on it. Fictional
Harvard symbologist Robert Langdon tried to unravel its mysteries in the novel
The Da Vinci Code. "It" is the golden ratio, a geometric proportion that has been
theorized to be the most aesthetically pleasing to the eye and has been the root of
countless mysteries over the centuries. Now, a Duke University engineer has found
it to be a compelling springboard to unify vision, thought and movement under a
single law of nature's design.
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century when all becomes clear and the nature of reality, as based on a sacred
geometric design, is understood. It's really not that complicated.
1. Those arising from different transliterations of the Greek letter kappa (K):
Choschinomancy, Choschinomancie (prob. from misreading Greek kappa
(K) as chi (ch) Coskinomancy, Koskinomancy.
2. Erroneous forms showing elision: Cosinomancy, Coskiomancy (Brand,
OED - see Note), Cosnomancy.
3. Erroneous form showing transposition of letters: Coskniomancy (Athenian
Oracle).
4. Transcription error in typesetting: Coseinomancy.
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Another method, mentioned in Frazer's Golden Bough, comes from Germany,
where on one of the twelve days of Christmas, twelve layers of peel, each
representing one month, were taken off an onion, and a pinch of salt was sprinkled
into each. The next morning the amount of moisture collected in each foretold the
amount of rain expected in the coming year.
To this may be added a gardener's rhyme recorded in 1893: Onion's skin very thin,
Mild winter coming in; Onion's skin thick and tough, Coming winter cold and
rough.
The word first appears in a New Latin form cromnysmantia, and I assume that
Burton is quoting some Latin text which I have not seen. Also, I have not been able
to track down a 1660 edition of The Anatomy of Melancholy in Australia and thus
have to rely on Brand's secondary evidence, which is not altogether reliable (see
Note). Clearly the term is derived from the ancient Greek kromyon or krommyon
an onion. This has not been a productive word element in English, and apart from
the Sydenham Society's Lexicon which records crommyon as an "Old name for an
onion" (citing a 18th century text), I have not found any other examples.
Note that the form cromnio- involves a misspelling retained since the earliest
citation!
CRYSTAL BALL: A crystal sphere used for divination, especially for scrying.
Also called a Showstone.
From ancient Greek krystallos crystal. Cf. French cristallomancie, New Latin
crystallomantia. Chrystallomancy, Cristallomancy, Cristallomantia,
Crystallomancie, Crystalomancy.
DICE DIVINATION: Palden Lhamo dice divination is conducted with three dice
with a number from one to six indicated by dots on each face. Divination
associated with other deities can be conducted with dice marked with letters. The
dice are made of bone, wood or conchshell. Khamtrul Rinpoche described his own
procedure for doing dice divination as follows: For a divination to be successful, it
is essential that the diviner should have a pure motivation and the person who
came for advice believe in the diviner. It is important that they both pray to the
Three Jewels, their root and lineage lamas and their deities, chiefly Palden Lhamo
and other Dharma protectors, for a clear answer. If I didn't hear the request clearly,
I ask again. Then, I visualize myself as my personal deity Dorje Shonu or Vajra
Kilaya and call on Palden Lhamo. Through my long familiarity with her, I can
clearly visualize her before me and I request her to give a perfect answer to the
person who came for advice. Then I throw the dice and according to the numbers
indicated on the dice, I refer to a divination book. There are many such hooks
written by great lamas and they provide all the possible answers, though once you
are familiar with divination techniques reference to texts is no longer necessary".
DIRECT WRITING: The term for a spirit writing without human or mechanical
assistance. Distinct from Autography, Automatic Writing and Psychography which
are done through human beings.
DIVINATION: The art of using magickal tools and symbols to gather information
from the Collective unconscious on the nature of people, places, things, and events
in the past, present and future. Also known as Dukkerin, Dukkering.
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DIVINATION ON A ROSARY: The person doing the divination prays to the deity
he is invoking for the correct answer and recites that deity's mantras. He then holds
up the rosary horizontally in front of him, with the fingers of each hand grasping a
randomly chosen bead, leaving half the beads of fewer between them. Then the
fingers of each hand move towards each other counting three beads at a time. The
outcome of the divination depends on the number of beads left. The procedure is
repeated three times. When only one bead remains, the result is called `falcon'.
When two beads remain, it is called 'raven'. When three beads remain the result is
called 'snow lion'. The outcome on the first attempt indicated the extent of the
deities' support and the quality of the divination in general. A falcon at the first
attempt would indicate support from protectors, luck in a new enterprise, and
success in a lawsuit. A raven on the first try means the protectors are not on your
side. There will be no accomplishment, lawsuit will be unsuccessful and there are
enemies present. Such a divination would caution against starting on any new
enterprise. A snow lion on the first round would indicate support from the deities,
slow but stable accomplishments and weakness on the part of enemies. If the
question concerned successful business, this would be regarded as a neutral result.
At the second attempt, the outcome indicates conditions to take place in one's
immediate environment. The falcon indicates good luck in general, but not much
success for those wishing to have children. The risk of thefts and illnesses in
general would remain small. The raven indicates serious illness, obstacles to health
and a decline in the life force. There will be a tendency for things to get lost or
stolen. However, in the case of an ordained person, these negative aspects would
be reduced. On the third occasion, the number of remaining beads gives clues
about an expected person arriving from elsewhere. This was a very important
aspect of life in Tibet, for people travelled constantly and there was no
communication system. A falcon with regard to an expected visitor indicates
imminent news or arrival. With regard to illness, it would indicate finding the best
way to cure it. A raven represents a bad indication concerning expected travellers.
They are likely to encounter obstacles on the way will not arrive at all or will be
robbed. The sick will not be cured and possessions will be lost or stolen. The snow
lion indicates that travellers will arrive late, but come to no harm. Problems with
health will be few, although there will be difficulties in finding the right treatment.
The best divination would be three consecutive falcons. This would indicate that
travellers will arrive quickly, patients will recover and accomplishments will be
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swift. iv) Bootstrap Divination: This form of divination is popular among nomads.
The flat, one inch thick bootstraps are folded over each other into squares and
suddenly pulled apart. if the bootlace unfolds freely and clearly it indicates positive
signs, while a tangle would be negative.
DIVINING ROD: A forked rod or branched which is used to for dowsing (locating
things underground). Also known as Dowsing Rod or the Devils Fork or the
witches wand.
DOWSING ROD: A forked rod or branched which is used to for dowsing (locating
things underground). Also known as Divining Rod above.
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based on the etymological conjecture: - from driry, a 16th & 17th century form of
dreary, representing Old English dreorig, a derivative of dreor gore, falling blood!
This etymology involves a number of problems: the word driry never had the
meaning "(pertaining to) dripping blood"; the Old English word dreor did not
continue into the Middle English period, let alone modern English; a hybrid
compound of an obsolete native English word with a Greek ending is unlikely
(though see spealomancy); and generally -mancy compounds take a noun as their
first element, not an adjective. If this is wrong, then I am unable to suggest any
other etymon, as driri- corresponds to no Greek or Latin word recorded in the
major dictionaries of those languages. That it may represent a word of some other
language is highly unlikely.
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ELEAOMANCY: Accord to Wedeck: divination "by observation of liquid
surfaces". A rare word, the more common term being lecanomancy. It is
presumably derived from the Greek elaion) olive-oil, though the usual, "regular",
combining forms from this Greek root are elaio-, elo- and eleo-. Often oil was
dropped into water when used for divining, and a mixture of water and oil (called
in ancient Greek chytla) for rubbing into the skin after bathing, was possibly used
in divination.
I would tend to agree that it is probably an error, and there are basically three
reasons for this:
1. Most similar compounds have an ancient Greek noun as their first element,
not an adjective;
2. The earliest form includes the r - see Smedley, and,
3. The word occurs in French as eaccute; noptromancie.
Recorded firstly in Smedley, from whence it made its way into 19th century
dictionaries. The (most probably erroneous) variant form enoptomancy found
favour early on, but no longer appears in dictionaries. Webster's 2nd edition
records it, but it has been dropped by the 3rd edition. From French
eaccute;noptromancie, from Greek enoptron a mirror.
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ENTOMANCY, ENTOMOMANCY: Divination interpreting the appearance and
behavior of insects. A form of augury. To this may be referred the various omens
of popular folklore, such as crickets bringing good luck, and ladybirds indicating
visitors.
Also, here we may note the old superstition of the death-watch. Recorded since at
least the 17th century, this was a clicking or ticking noise like that of a watch,
which was believed to portend the death of someone in the house within the next
twelve hours. It was for many years unknown exactly what it was that produced the
noise, however, it was eventually discovered to be a certain beetle that made the
sound, apparently its mating call, by striking its head against a hard surface. The
ancient Greeks had numerous beliefs about portentous insects. Ants were meant to
have presaged the death of Cimon, and, also, the great wealth of Midas was
foretold by ants coming to him as a boy while asleep and dropping grains of wheat
into his mouth.
EROMANCY: a "bad form of aeromancy", and gives the first two citations as
here. Etymologically I guess this is correct, however it does represent the
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pronunciation better. The latter two citations are even worse forms since they don't
even fit their definitions well. What is being described is rather a specific form of
hydromancy known as lecanomancy.
FENG SHUI: (Chinese, feng shui: "wind and water"): The ancient Chinese practice
of studying and following the natural currents of the Earth to ensure the proper
alignment with them so that Qi is not disrupted. Feng Shui is used to determine the
suitability and layout of homes, businesses, burial grounds and temples.
Not in OED or other dictionaries. Derived from Latin folio, ablative of folium a
leaf.
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GASTROMANCY: is an ancient form of ventriloquism whereby the voice is
lowered to a sepulchral tone and prophetic utterances are delivered in a trance
state. Divination by interpreting the sounds or signs on the belly. Gastromancy is
most frequently reported as a voice emanating from the belly and it has been
dismissed by most occult investigators as a form of ventriloquism and trickery. An
ancient description of another gastromancy technique described placing a child in
front of a glass filled with water and illuminating the glass. Divination was done by
interpreting the images in the glass.
From New Latin gastromantia (Agrippa), French gastromancie, from the ancient
Greek gastro-, combining form of gaster the belly, also the wide part of a bottle.
Cf. the ancient Greek gastromanteuomai to divine by the belly. New Latin:
gastromantia. Rare: (unexplained) gastronomancy
GEOMANCY: is the study of figures on the ground and the influence of the
Earth's "currents". Divination by interpreting the Element of Earth. Forms include
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scattering and throwing dirt, gravel or sand, interpreting lines or figures traced in
earth, and observation of earth formations. Ley line interpretation and Feng Shui
are forms of Geomancy.
1. Divination where people walk on a circle of letters until dizzy, the letters
they stumble on being significant. Hence identical in form, but with a
different agent, to alectryomancy.
2. Divination by whirling a nicked coin on a circle of letters.
Probably from Middle French gyromancie, from New Latin gyromantia, from
Medieval Latin *gyromantia, from the ancient Greek gyros a ring, a circle, a spiral.
In New Latin - Clius Calcagninus, Compendium amatori magi (ed. Froben
Bale, 1544) "Gyromantia, quotiens ex circulis in lvam dextramve declinantibus
futura conjiciunt." Gyromancye, Giromancy, Giromantie.
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Golden Bough (x. 244) we find that in the Isle of Man on Halloween the housewife
fills a thimble full of salt for each member of the family and each guest; the
contents of the thimblefuls are emptied out in as many neat piles on a plate, and
left there over night. Next morning the piles are examined, and if any of them has
fallen down, he or she whom it represents will die within the year.
This, of course, is in the days when salt did not come with an anti-caking agent
added. Also, this word could refer to the unlucky omen designated by the spilling
of salt. This, nowadays, is expiated by throwing a little of the spilt salt over the
shoulder. This superstition dates back to Roman times. Also in the erroneous form
Alomancy. Clearly a modern word, as the first element is the New Latin combining
form halo-. This is normally used to form scientific words to do with either "salt"
or "the sea", and in chemistry signifies the presence of "halogen". It is not to be
found in any word before the early 19th century (the earliest being halogen and
haloid dating from the 1840s). The New Latin halo- comes from the ancient Greek
combining form of hals salt. The word also appears in French as halomancie.
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very important occasions. Some lamas are able to make predictions using no overt
means of divination, but through direct inspiration from the deity. Though the
result is the same, they would not usually claim to be performing divination.
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taking note of their neighing, stamping, etc., even their sweating. Derived from
New Latin hippomantia, from Greek hippos a horse. A form of augury.
HOROSCOPE: An astrological chart for a specific person or group that charts and
correlates the signs of the zodiac as they are crossed by the sun, moon and planets
and the position of planets in the twelve astrological houses.
What exactly Shipley means I am not sure. The two definitions seem to be
referring to quite different things. Divination by the hyoid bone, or as he calls it,
the tongue bone, could refer to the practice of cephaleonomancy. Divination as the
tongue wags could refer to logomancy or labiomancy. It is obvious that in his
treatment of the -mancy words Shipley is flippant because of the contempt in
which he holds such practices. Thus his definitions are not very reliable. Derived
from the New Latin combining form hyo-, referring to the hyoid bone, a bone
running from the root of the tongue to the larynx, from New Latin hyoides, from
the ancient Greek (osteon hyoeides) the hyoid bone (so named since it is shaped
like the Greek letter upsilon (ugr;)]
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HYPNOMANCY: Divination via hypnosis.
The core of the I Ching is a Western Zhou divination text called the Changes of
Zhou ( Zhu y . Various modern scholars suggest dates ranging between the
10th and 4th centuries BC for the assembly of the text in approximately its current
form. Based on a comparison of the language of the Zhou yi with dated bronze
inscriptions, Edward Shaughnessy dated its compilation in its current form to the
early decades of the reign of King Xuan of Zhou, in the last quarter of the 9th
century BC. A copy of the text in the Shanghai Museum corpus of bamboo and
wooden slips (recovered in 1994) shows that the Zhou yi was used throughout all
levels of Chinese society in its current form by 300 BC, but still contained small
variations as late as the Warring States period. It is possible that other divination
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systems existed at this time; the Rites of Zhou name two other such systems, the
Lianshan and the Guizang.
ICONOMANCY: Divination via icons or images. (The use of Idols). From ancient
Greek eikon likeness, image.
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know, no ancient Greek *knissomanteia, *knissomantis, etc. This word has been
copied by later amateur lexicographers into their popular-consumption books. It is
not recorded by the OED, or any other Standard English dictionaries.
LABIOMANCY: A rare word for the art of lip-reading. Seemingly invented for the
nonce by Plot in 1686. The only real evidence I have for this word comes fom the
great OED. Not actually a method of divination. Here the terminus -mancy is being
used in its looser sense of denoting the discovery of unknown things without resort
to occult powers. Derived from labio-, combining form of Latin labium lip.
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means the eldest son will die, the middle of the flame turning red and smoke
coming from the wick indicates loss of property and the lamp going out without
apparent reason means death. Spilling of the melted butter stands for the length of
an undertaking.
LESSER ARCANA: The 56 suit cards in a Tarot deck that assist in fleshing out the
situations indicated by the Trump Cards (Major Arcana), or indicate smaller
occurrences in our lives. Also known as the Minor Arcana
LETNOMANCY: A spurious word, punning on 'let no man see'. n.d. W.H. Cremer
(ed.) The Magician's Own Handbook ii. 186: On either side of your little stage
whereon you exercise your art the decorations may comprise a shield, ornamented
in mock heraldry with the jugglers' insignia - cups, wand, sword, cards,
hieroglyphical signs, c., and a comic placard, founded on the following assertions:
- "By Desire, there will appear Signor Puscellino, native of Whangfobia, Doctor of
Pyrotechny, A.Z.X. and R.S.V.P., Professor of Chiromancy and Letnomancy,
known as Light-fingered Hieronimus, who has passed all degrees in every
Academy of Europe, Asia, Africa, America, and the Isle of Man, for alegbra,
mineralogy, topography, middleography, hydrodynamics, and
lowdrodynamicalogismatics, as well as the occult, mystic, and transcendental
sciences, such as cabalistics, busology, astrology, superstitions, animal magnetism,
alchemy, and divination." From New Latin libanomantia (Agrippa), French
libanomantie, from the ancient Greek libanomantis a diviner by incense, from
libanos frankincense. The variant form livanomancy appears only in Gaule. This is
presumably a typographical error.
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LUNOMANCY: Divination by interpreting moonlight on a person's face dusted
with silver. A form of Selenomancy.
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Astrologicall-Diviner Posed, and Puzzled. It can be neatly glossed as magical
astrology. The point Gaule is making with this word is that the concept of
astrology as practised in his day involved a belief in magic. This word, though
magestically constructed, and powerfully scathing, unfortunately did not find
favour, and apart from being recorded by a number of major lexicographers of late
19th and early 20th centuries, has quite disappeared. It did however find slightly
greater acceptance than its nearby companion magomancy. The word is concocted
from the Latin magus magic, added to astromancy.
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MECONOMANCY: Divination via behavior of a person during sleep. A word
occurring in Shipley with two definitions: a divination by drug induced sleep and
the divination by poppies. Derived from the ancient Greek mekon a poppy.
MICROMANCY: Divination via the studying of the smallest object within a set
area. Derived from the ancient Greek mikros small.
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from Cotgrave. Normally Blount modified the ending. I assume in this case it is a
mere oversight.
MYOMANCY: is the study of the prophetic meaning of behavior of rats and mice.
Divination by interpreting the appearance and behavior of mice. A form of
Augury. Derived from the ancient Greek myo-, combining form of mys mouse.
1. Divination through raising the spirits the dead. Also called necyomancy.
2. Black magic; sorcery, witchcraft; magic in general, conjuration.
An adoption of a more etymologically correct form, from Latin (and also New
Latin) necromantia, from the ancient Greek nekromanteia, from nekros dead.
Replacing the Middle English form nigromancie.16th Century: nicromancy,
nycromancie, nycromancy. 17th Century: necromancie, necromanty, nycromansy.
18th Century: necromancie, necromantie. See also egromancy, igramancie, and
especially nigromancy.
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NECRO-PURO-GEO-HYDRO-CHEIRO-COSCINO-MANCY: A nonce-word
meaning, literally, divination utilizing the raising of the dead, fire, earth, water,
hands, and sieves. A blend of necromancy, pyromancy, geomancy, hydromancy,
cheiromancy and coscinomancy. Note that puro- = pyro-.
NECTROMANTIA:
NOTARIKON: A form of gematria in which the first and last letters of a word or
phrase are put together to create a new word, or to turn a word into a phrase.
Gematria is a system of discovering truths and hidden meanings behind words,
using numerical values for letters of the alphabet. Each letter corresponds to a
number. The numerical values of words are totaled and interpreted in terms of
other words with the same numerical value. Gematria dates back to the 8th century
B.C. Babylon, and has been used by most mystics since that time including the
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Magi, Gnostics, and Quabbalists. Temurah is a form of gematria that creates
anagrams through systematic letter substitutions. See also: Numerology.
OINOMANCY: Divination by wine, esp. when poured our in libations. From the
ancient Greek oinos wine. Recorded only since the 17th century. One could
however mistakenly believe that the word dates back to the 15th century if one
happened to look up the headword -mancy in the OED. Here the illustrative
citation for the Middle English period contains an error. The word ornomancie
(See ornomancy) is substituted by oinomancie! nomancy, oenomancy. New
Latin: oenomantia
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OLOLYGOMANCY: Divination by barking dogs. From the ancient Greek
ololygon the croak of a male frog.
OMEN: A sign, preferably found in nature, that foretells either good or bad events.
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ONYCHOMANCY: is the study of fingernails. Divination by interpreting the
fingernails. The original form was to study the reflection of the sun in the nails of a
young boy. See Onychomancy. Divination by observing the fingernails, oiled, and
interpreting images seen reflected in the sunlight. From the ancient Greek onychos
a fingernail. Onuchomancy, Onychomantia, Onycomancy. Erroneous Forms:
Onchyomancy (Mackay), Oncyomantia (Brand).See also: Onimancy, Onymancy
and Onyomancy. onycomancy, onychomancy, onymancy, onyomancy From New
Latin onimantia, unexplained shortening of *onychomantia. Pictorius Vigillanus:
Onimantici enim fuligine et oleo pollicis unguem vel manus volam, seu palmam in
puero tenello, tacito susurramine verborum accedente illinunt, ut hinc spectra
videant, aut imagines pro sua re convenientes, quas puer denuo prodat.
1. Divination of the future sex of a child by incubating a hen's egg between the
mother-to-be's breasts and noting the sex of the chick.
2. Divination by dropping egg-whites into water.
Commonly in the New Latin form oomantia. Cf. ooscopy. From New Latin
oomantia, fro the ancient Greek oon an egg. Greek did have the word Ooskopia.
ORACLE: The Modern Oracle respects the traditional enigmatical prophetic verses
alongside the more coherent prophetic verses as well. Enigmatical verses for
instance needed to be translated for seekers of prophecy for the Oracle of Delphi.
Oracles that divine information coherently have no need for interpreters for they
are coherent enough during the divining to interpret their own findings. Many see
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Oracles to souly have the ability of precognition, but this is only the mainstream
version of divining. Oracles at Delphi were chosen based on their potentials to
interact with the gods in an entranced state. At Delphi, Oracles would directly
inhale ethylene gases and sway in a euphoric trance to enhance intuition. She
would continue by answering question in an ecstatic and wild manner in a
complete incoherency. They were not necessarily precognitive or clairvoyant
before they became oracles, but had the potential to be communicated through.
Other Oracles are born with the ability to prophesize and have an unbreakable
heritage. These Oracles are raised from early childhood by their spirit guides due
to their extensive abilities such as Precognition (future sight), Postcognition (past
sight), Clairvoyance (to see the unseen), Clairsentience (to sense the insensible),
Clairaudience (to hear the inaudible) and Psipathy (based on still images and
detailed emotions). It is their past, their present and future life. At any time they
can choose to wander from their growth, their path, but these abilities can be to
overwhelming to live a normal life for the gifts can outgrow the Oracle.
Oracles never receive all the information asked, rather all the information
necessary. They divine what is needed to be known at the time, not necessarily
what actually is the truth. Oracles are raised in a community of people and have set
belief systems that are ever growing. Oracles offer their prophecies to their
community and never ask for anything in return. Oracles, such as the one at
Delphi, are allowed to accept donations. The calling and faith of an Oracle is
precious to them and their laws are never undermined without consequence. An
Oracle does not know all such as in myth, they only learn from what they ask and
they only answer in detail if the question was in detail as well. (Vagueness results
in vagueness). Basically, they only know what they need to now. For questions of
great standing value one "must" choose their question wisely and the format in
which it is given. The modern Oracle is an individual who speaks to divine beings
such as archangels or gods, but rarely the dead. The Oracle bases their reception of
information in the "heavens" not in the "underworld". The modern Oracle is an
individual of heritage, a strong belief structure, a community, of charity and of
many gifts. Too many individuals believe Oracles to be fictitious and their
prophecies if correct are merely seen as an auspicious coincidence. Those who lack
in intuitive awareness tend to be a constituent of this belief. Whether or not an
oracle is believed by anyone external to their community is irrelevant. It is
supremely their only need to be accepted unconditionally by their community. The
Oracle in history has been a right-hand to many kings and queens. They are of
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great importance to political, financial and generalized community matters. Thus is
the same today in the modern world. Many communities all over the world
including the USA and Britain have Oracles either as royal advisors equal to that
of Shamans. They are also help highly as leaders of smaller communities. In these
communities they better their peoples futures by foretelling the major movements
in their system. They are still seen as priest and priestesses and aide consistently in
the ever advancing belief system for the area. Oracles also involve themselves in
the societies moral or laws of the community. The Oracle adjoins their localized
accepted belief system and formulates just laws accordingly. Since the diviner
preforms his or her services without a salary the community takes care of him or
her and supplies the oracle with everything she or her requires to continue
preforming this great service. Keep in mind a diviner in a community setting is not
of control and seizure rather of innovation, growth and revision.
Oracles are not only utilized to look into the future, but to also be utilized in
protection and healing. Protection is done spiritually and the healing is both
mental, by entering the deep recesses of the mind through their guides aide, and of
a physical nature. However, their primary function is to protect those of their
community unconditionally. The term Oracle in Tibet is used to describe the spirit
who enters the "medium" rather than the medium. The Oracle in this case would be
a medium between the physical and metaphysical spirit world. In Tibets case they
are known as Kutens or "the physical bases". Also in Tibet there was once thought
to be thousands of Oracles, but today only a few remain, including those consulted
by the Tibetan government. A person who speaks directly to a Deity to divine or
prophesize. Also known as Prophet, Theomancer. See Also: Ariolater, Aruspex,
Clairvoyant, Diviner, Haruspex, Seer, and Soothsayer. More Information on this
site about Oracles
ORNITHOMANCY: Divinations via a birds flight and cries. From medieval Latin
or New Latin ornithomantia, from the ancient Greek ornithomanteia divination by
birds (but, also, = crithomanteia ?), from ornithos genitive of ornis bird.
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ORNOMANCY: A early spelling, dating back to the Middle English period, of
ornithomancy. This curious form seems to be a shortened version of ornithomancy,
but yet is found centuries earlier. It has no parallel in other medieval languages,
medieval Latin had ornithomantia, regularly adopted from the ancient Greek
ornithomanteia. A similar "earlier" shortening can be seen in arithmancy.
c1500 (?a1475) John Lydgate Assembly of the Gods ll. 862--70: These folowyd
Konnyng & the dyr with hym came, With many oo moo offryng her seruyce To
Vertew at hat nede; but natwithstandyng than Some he refusyd and seyde in
nowyse They shuld with hym go, and, as I coude auyse, These were her names:
fyrst, Nygromansy, Geomansy, Magyk, and Glotony,
OUIJA, OUIJA BOARD: (French, oui: "yes"; German, ja: "yes"): A divination
tool with the alphabet and numbers laid out on a board. Also called a Spirit Board.
Produced to look like a childs game: this is a yes-yes board. It is designed to
deceive as is all forms of divination.
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PALMISTRY / CHIROMANCY: Palmomancy: is the broad field of divination and
interpretation of the lines and structure of the hand. The study of the hand, and the
lines of the palm to assess character and foretell the future. See Cheiromancy.
PEGOMANCY: concerns itself with spring water and bubbling fountains and the
omens contained therein. Divination by interpreting sacred pools, springs, wells or
fountains. A form of Hydromancy and often used in conjunction with scrying.
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PHYLLORHODOMANCY: is a means of divination whereby one slaps a rose
petal against the hand and judges the favorability of the omen by the loudness of
the sound. Divination by interpreting rose petals. The original form involved
slapping a rose petal against the palm of the hand and interpreting the sound made.
divination of luck in love by clapping rose petals against the palm and noting the
loudness of the sound made. [Gk (phyllon) leaf + `poov (rhodon) rose].
POSTCOGNITION: This ability can help one to see what has happened in the
past, or to see people who have passed on. Some postcognates can see ghosts
wandering the earth in search for retribution or the chance to cross over and be at
peace. Some also see spirits, ghosts that have passed on and want recognition, or
are just wandering about with a loved one they watch over. Some postcognates can
see Demonics and Angelic's as well, though the base of their gift lies with the
dead.
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piromancie, piromancye, piromaunce, pyromancye, pyromanty, perimancie,
perimansie, permansie, pernirancy. Surviving into Early modE - piromancy,
pyromancie. NL pyromantia. Observing the flames of ritual fire offerings is also a
form of divination. First, one invokes the fire god and then observes the flame. A
bright, golden, orange colour, a smokeless and soundless quality, the flame burning
strongly and turning to the right, or burning upward in a single point, the fire
lasting long and giving off a pleasant smell are general positive signs, and indicate
that whatever questions one had in mind will be answered in a positive way. When
the colour of the flame is Snow white and the fire burns very gently, it mean that
one has been cleansed of imprints left by unwholesome actions. The flame turning
yellow means that one will become powerful and wealthy. Its turning bright red
signifies success in any undertaking and its becoming a clear, smokeless blue
colour symbolizes sound health and that one will develop one's lineage. Signs of
illness and other misfortune are indicated by the fire blazing fiercely and the flame
turning dark smoky, the colour of human flesh, green, that of vegetable oil, dull,
pale, having two or three points and a foul smell. When performing a fierce fire
offering ritual, though, the above signs are considered to be positive. Signs that are
considered to be negative in the case of either peaceful or wrathful rituals are
sparks and smoke afflicting the performer of the ritual. Dark flames moving in all
directions and blazing in an unsteady way indicate the termination of one's lineage.
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RHABDOMANCY, RABDOMANCY: is divination using a stick or wand. These
methods were forerunners of the divining rod. the interpretation of the position of
rods, arrows, or staffs for the purpose of divination. Divination using a stick, wand
or divining rod. Rhabdomancy is often used in dowsing.
1. (1646) (generally) divination by means of any rod, wand, staff, stick, arrow,
etc. (specifically) Used to describe various methods of divination as by a.
using sticks to draw lots,
a. setting staffs on end and watching them fall,
b. divination by arrows (with wooden shafts) - see belomancy.
2. Used in reference to two instances occurring the Bible - Hosea 4:12 and
Ezekial 21:21. It is not certain what practises these verses are actually
referring to, but it is generally considered to be a divinatory practice.
Numbers 17 (almond rod) has also been ascribed to rhabdomancy. None of
these practises seem to be found in Ancient Greece. Liddle & Scott are
"dubious" about the word's existence in Classical Greek, though, naturally,
the word is well attested in Patristic Greek. II. (1649) the use of a divining-
rod (the virgula divina, or baculus divinatorius), a Y-shaped branch of a tree,
in discovering ores, springs of water, etc; also known as dowsing, water
witching, and, rarely, Bletonism. Often the branch was taken from a hazel
tree, a tree which has long had mystic significance - the rods of Moses and
Aaron were of hazel, and Apollo gave Mercury a hazel rod. However, any
other sort of appropriately shaped branch could be used, and in modern
times two separate pieces of wire are often substituted. The method basically
involved holding the divining-rod before oneself and wandering over the
land, when above the thing sought for the rod moves involuntarily in some
manner. This was in extensive use from the 16th century onwards in
Germany for discovering ores. Sebastian Mnster's Cosmographia
universalis 1544, and Georg Agricola's De Re metallica 1546, provide early
evidence of this art. It's use for discovery of subterranean water, hidden
treasure, thieves, etc. does not seem to be recorded before the seventeenth
century. In modern occultism rhabdomancy is explained as a form of
radiesthesia.
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a book to a random page to answer a question. The variant of using any book is
called bibliomancy or stichomancy and using books by Virgil and Homer is called
stoichemancy. [F rhapsodomancie, NL rhapsodomantia, from Gk `pywoc
(rhapsodos) reciter of epic poems].
SCAPULIMANCY: Divination via the shoulder blade which has been charred or
cracked from a fire. It is said that divining from shoulder blades was first done by
brown bears who, after killing weasels and mice took out the shoulder blades and
examined the lines on them to know whether they were being pursued by hunters.
This was observed by hunters, who noticed that the bears sometimes ate the body
of their prey and sometimes abandoned it uneaten with only the shoulder blade
extracted. Gradually, this form of divination came into use among hunters
themselves, as well as among robbers and thieves. It was also very popular among
village people. The bone used in the divination must be the right shoulder blade of
a slaughtered sheep, as opposed to an animal which has died from disease or been
lulled by wild animals. To begin with, the shoulder blade must be cleaned of meat
and washed in clean water. The diviner than fumigates it with juniper and holds it
up with his or her right band to be reflected in a mirror. Next, he recited 'Ye
dharma' three to seven times and invokes the deities requesting them to give a clear
answer. The shoulder blade is then burned in a smokeless fire, Out of the sight of
strangers. During the burning, if the shoulder blade makes a rattling sound it means
evil spirits are haunting the house. Accompanying clucking sounds would indicate
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that they are causing harm and discord in the family. The spine of the shoulder
blade falling away very quickly would mean that the above troubles could be
dispelled with a appropriate rituals. The shoulder blade is divided into different
areas which enable the diviner to make quite detailed predictions. These are: one's
protector's, Naga's enemy's and kindred's areas. Between the protector's and the
kindred's areas are five sections known as the king's, the lord's, the minister's, one's
own and the servant's areas. These should be separated by a distance of one finger's
breadth. Bubbles in one's own area are a good sign, although if they recede the
implications are negative. A crack in the lower part of one's own area indicates
weakness in that year, and in the middle part, misfortune and regret. however, a
rack on the back signifies invincibility in he face of enemies and evil spirits. A
rack in the shoulder blade socket indicate loss of property, though its fullness
indicates impending wealth. The shoulder remaining white is a positive sign of
imminent action, while its turning to an ash colour is negative and indicates high
winds that year. Black stands for heavy sin and yellow for a warm year. The
shoulder blade's cracking in many lines indicates a loss of path or an unsuccessful
future. Generally speaking white cracks are good indications, black ones are bad
and slightly dark ones are of middling negativity. White cracks in one's protector's
area indicate that the protector is helping you and black ones show the necessity of
performing purifying rituals, lamp offerings, incense burning rituals, hoisting
prayer flags and chanting prayers of confession. If the Nags's area or the cracks on
it become black one must perform a Naga cake offering beside springs and lakes.
A crack appearing in the upper part of one's enemy's area means that he will
become powerful and if it is black, it is a bad sign and one must recite sutras and
the ritual of the white Umbrella (gDugs dkar), which has the power to clear
obstacles. If the kindred area is black one must perform ransom life rituals (Tse
sgrub). The division between the king's area and the servant's area are examined in
the same way. The shoulder blade's cracking in vertical lines denotes illness and in
horizontal lines, that one will be a victim of theft and robbery or that it will take a
long time to achieve a goal or accomplish a task.
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SCARPOMANCY: Divination by old shoes. [It scarpa shoe].
SHAMAN: A medicine man, priest or healer that reaches past the boundris of
herbs into the psychological levels. The can seek out new knowledge to help aid
and he can accompany the spirits of the dead on their journey to the afterlife.
SIDEROMANCY: is the burning of straws with a hot iron, the resulting figures
having divinatory properties. Divination interpreting straw placed on a hot iron
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surface. A form of pyromancy (divination interpreting fire). [Gk inpoc (sideros)
iron].
SOLMANCY: Divination via the interpretation of the patterns formed by the rays
of the sun.
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SPHEROMANCY: Divination via a crystal sphere. See Crystallomancy. [from
sphero- combining form of Gk ip (sphaira) ball].
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oixiov (stoicheion) element)] Variant Forms: (erroneous) Stitchomancy,
Stoicheomancy, Stoicheiomancy, Stoichomancy.
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Minor Arcana or Suit cards that assist in fleshing out the situations indicated by the
Trump Cards, or indicate smaller occurrences. The Minor Arcana are also known
as the Lesser Arcana.
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THUMOMANCY: divination by one's own soul. [Gk ?v?o??v?ic (thumomantis)
prophesying from one's own soul (without special inspiration), endowed with a
spirit of prophesy (the opposite of ??o??v?ic (theomantis)), from ?v?oc (thumos)
the soul]
TOPOMANCY: Divination via the shape of an area of land. [Gk ?o?oc (topos)
place].
URINOMANCY: A rare term for the more common Uromancy. The 1979 citation
is clearly referring to a 17th century text, however, the title was most likely
originally in Latin, as was probably the whole book. It apparently was not one of
Fludd's own texts. From urino- combining form of Latin urina urine.
Yet, uromancy was much more than merely diagnosing disease. Brian says (page
1): The vulgar sort are so strongly prepossest (by reason of their ignorance) the
Physicians can discern (by the Urine) the Disease, the conception, the sex, the
parties age, with many other such absurdities, that I fear it will be an hard matter to
dispossesse them of that opinion.
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Brain as quotes (page A2) a Latin proverb "often heard..spoken from the mouth of
many a well-read and experienced man in Physicke, that (Urina est meretrix, vel
mendax) the Vrine is an Harlot, or a Lyer..." The practice was also previously
known as uroscopy, and, according to Bailey, as late as 1755, was "commonly
called the casting of Waters". Rarely, termed urinomancy. From New Latin
oromantia, uromantia, from uro- combining form representing Greek ouron urine.
Here -mancy refers to 'divination' in its weaker sense of 'sucessful conjecturing'
rather than 'magical/supernatural prediction or insight'.Early modern English:
oromancie, vromancie. Latinate forms: uromantica, uromantia. Modern:
(influenced by the i in "urine") urimancy.
XYLOMANCY: is divination from pieces of wood, either from their shape when
collected or their appearance while burning. Originally this word was used to refer
to two oft quoted verses in the Bible; namely Ezekiel 21:21 and Hosea 4:12. These
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two verses are not very specific in themselves about the method of divination used.
However it is generally believed to be a similar practice to that described at
belomancy. In this sense it is virtually synonymous with rhabdomancy. The word
is from New Latin xylomantia, derived from the ancient Greek xylon wood.
Here ends the list of divination; quite a romantic notion of pseudo-science anti-
Christ and otherwise superstitious paganism bent on perverting the truth and bring
in more nave people into their folds. From this expose I would hope to enlighten
you to what your children may be practicing or experimenting with. There things
have hidden traps made by devils lying in wait to keep people from the truth of the
Gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ and also to keep them enslaved in darkness and
push them to an early death and then in hell as the devils trophies. Plead the Blood!
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