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#esoteric manuscript
disease · 5 months
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Divina proportione | 1509
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uncleardyn · 23 days
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man i love that character. you know, the deeply paranoid author who made a pact with a dark entity that ultimately ended with him stranded in another dimension separated from his loved ones for years at a time? takes place in the pacific northwest? has twin imagery associated with him and a reoccurring specific piece of symbology related to the unfortunate situation they're in? doesn't ever explain the reasoning behind his actions and instead just kinda goes "bro trust me"? yeah he also wears an outer layer of clothing with elbow pads on it, that one.
#my art#stanford pines#gravity falls#alan wake#remedyverse#i am. normal about the crossovers i make up.#what do you mean the esoteric weird horror game about stories and the disney cartoon about family dont have a shared audience. sounds fake.#anyways the comic on the right is in honor of a joke i had to scrap in my fic wip due to a perspective switch.#rip that joke i thought you were pretty funny. i like the idea of alan critiquing his own manuscript pages upon the events happening.#oh i should probably do a warning since theres that crunchy image of the aw2 alan death screen huh. uh#blood#aw2 alan death screen my beloved. literally made me go ''oh god'' out loud in shock and horror when i first saw it#anyways did you know theres an au to this objectively already an au crossover. i call it ''bill cipher gets sent to the shadow realm''#bill doesn't show up a lot in this au he gets one scene where he taunts ford abt alan being a danger#with the implication that the dark place/presence genuinely freaks him out. but in this self indulgence of a self indulgence#alan essentially manages to trick bill into swapping places with him and bill ends up trapped in the writers room/the dark place.#lmao get yötön yö'd idiot. YOU are aleksi kesä now.#also i like the idea of zane and bill meeting as well as door and bill meeting. i think they might scare bill a little bit.#just like how zane scares me <3 what a cool character what the fuck is his deal#also you may be wondering why alans in his aw2 look and not aw or awan look despite the fact that lines up closer#to when gravity falls happens-ish. well the answer to that is 1: the crossover uses a lot of the elements from aw2#and 2: i like alans long hair and suit and beard. i like the pathetic sopping look when his hair is in his face
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zephyrbug · 9 days
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When is somebody gonna match my FREAK⁉️🤨
(chatting about the voynich manuscript together please please please please please PLEASE)
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thesorceresstemple · 4 months
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illustratus · 2 years
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matthiascastle · 9 months
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Ars Notoria: The Notory Art of Solomon: A Medieval Treatise on Angelic Magic & the Art of Memory (Inner Traditions, 2023).
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shredsandpatches · 4 months
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PAUL OSKAR KRISTELLER I WOULD LIKE A WORD WITH YOU
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blueheartbooks · 10 months
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Alchemical Marvels: Navigating the Secrets of Collectanea Chemica
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Arthur Edward Waite's "Collectanea Chemica" is a captivating exploration into the enigmatic realms of alchemy and hermetic medicine, transcending time to unveil the mystical allure of ancient wisdom. With its rich tapestry of select treatises, this book beckons readers on a mesmerizing journey through the esoteric corridors of the alchemical tradition.
Waite, a distinguished scholar and esotericist, curates a collection that serves as a portal to the profound insights of alchemists and hermetic practitioners. The book’s pages are imbued with the mystique of the past, offering glimpses into the spiritual and transformative pursuits that have echoed through the ages.
The treatises within "Collectanea Chemica" serve as illuminated manuscripts of alchemical philosophy, each unfolding a unique facet of the practitioner's quest for enlightenment. From the Magnum Opus to the pursuit of the Philosopher's Stone, Waite guides readers through the labyrinthine corridors of alchemical thought, where base metals transform into gold, and the elixir of life beckons with promises of immortality.
Waite’s meticulous annotations and commentary provide a guiding light, illuminating the complex symbolism and allegorical language employed by alchemists. His insightful notes bridge the temporal gap, making the esoteric knowledge accessible to modern seekers of wisdom.
The title itself, "Collectanea Chemica," resonates like an incantation, conjuring the very essence of ancient laboratories and the alchemist's pursuit of the arcane. It beckons readers to delve into the alchemical opus, enticing them with promises of arcane knowledge and the potential for profound transformation.
In essence, "Collectanea Chemica" is not merely a book but a transcendental guide—an alchemical roadmap inviting intrepid minds to decipher the secrets of hermetic wisdom. Arthur Edward Waite, with his scholarly finesse, ensures that the alchemical fire within these pages continues to burn, casting its luminous glow on those who dare to embark on this intellectual and spiritual odyssey.
Arthur Edward Waite's "Collectanea Chemica" is available in Amazon in paperback 11.99$ and hardcover 18.99$ editions.
Number of pages: 138
Language: English
Rating: 9/10                                           
Link of the book!
Review By: King's Cat
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youjustwaitsunshine · 11 months
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next week we're gonna make parchment and gold beater's skin, very excited
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blueheartbookclub · 10 months
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Alchemical Marvels: Navigating the Secrets of Collectanea Chemica
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Arthur Edward Waite's "Collectanea Chemica" is a captivating exploration into the enigmatic realms of alchemy and hermetic medicine, transcending time to unveil the mystical allure of ancient wisdom. With its rich tapestry of select treatises, this book beckons readers on a mesmerizing journey through the esoteric corridors of the alchemical tradition.
Waite, a distinguished scholar and esotericist, curates a collection that serves as a portal to the profound insights of alchemists and hermetic practitioners. The book’s pages are imbued with the mystique of the past, offering glimpses into the spiritual and transformative pursuits that have echoed through the ages.
The treatises within "Collectanea Chemica" serve as illuminated manuscripts of alchemical philosophy, each unfolding a unique facet of the practitioner's quest for enlightenment. From the Magnum Opus to the pursuit of the Philosopher's Stone, Waite guides readers through the labyrinthine corridors of alchemical thought, where base metals transform into gold, and the elixir of life beckons with promises of immortality.
Waite’s meticulous annotations and commentary provide a guiding light, illuminating the complex symbolism and allegorical language employed by alchemists. His insightful notes bridge the temporal gap, making the esoteric knowledge accessible to modern seekers of wisdom.
The title itself, "Collectanea Chemica," resonates like an incantation, conjuring the very essence of ancient laboratories and the alchemist's pursuit of the arcane. It beckons readers to delve into the alchemical opus, enticing them with promises of arcane knowledge and the potential for profound transformation.
In essence, "Collectanea Chemica" is not merely a book but a transcendental guide—an alchemical roadmap inviting intrepid minds to decipher the secrets of hermetic wisdom. Arthur Edward Waite, with his scholarly finesse, ensures that the alchemical fire within these pages continues to burn, casting its luminous glow on those who dare to embark on this intellectual and spiritual odyssey.
Arthur Edward Waite's "Collectanea Chemica" is available in Amazon in paperback 11.99$ and hardcover 18.99$ editions.
Number of pages: 138
Language: English
Rating: 9/10                                           
Link of the book!
Review By: King's Cat
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brother-hermes · 1 year
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“The appreciation of objects and subjects is the same for an enlightened as for an unenlightened person. The former has one greatness: he remains in the subjective mood, not lost in things.”
-Shakti speaking to Devi in a 4,000 year old Sanskrit manuscript from Lake Shamangoo.
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1iam · 1 day
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dougielombax · 3 months
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Not now.
He’s trying to write down something so vague, undefinable and esoteric which scholars will be interpreting for generations and centuries to come and which people will kill each other over.
Oh.
I think he’s got it.
Let’s have a look.
Thanks.
*reads over manuscript*
What do you mean God said “I don’t fucking know!”! How?! Why?! Explain! What did God mean by this? How do you know that?
What’s so funny?
And now he’s running away with the manuscript while laughing like a maniac.
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talonabraxas · 2 months
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“If the existence of hidden knowledge is admitted, it is admitted as belonging to certain people, but to people we do not know, to an inner circle of humanity.
According to this idea, humanity is regarded as two concentric circles. All humanity which we know and to which we belong form the outer circle. All the history of humanity that we know is the history of the outer circle. But within this circle is another, of which men of the outer circle know nothing, and the existence of which they only sometimes dimly suspect—although the life of the outer circle in its most important manifestation, and particularly in its evolution, is actually guided by the inner circle. The inner or the esoteric circle forms, as it were, a life within life, a mystery, a secret in the life of humanity.
The outer or exoteric humanity to which we belong is like the leaves on a tree that change every year. In spite of this they consider themselves the centre of life, not understanding that the tree has a trunk and roots, and that besides leaves, it bears flowers and fruit. The esoteric circle is, as it were, humanity within humanity ... the immortal soul of humanity.” --Ouspensky
Art: Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil. Geheime Figuren der Rosenkreuzer, manuscript, 1943, based on Valentin Weigel’s Studium universale of 1698
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illustratus · 2 years
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A red-faced sun rises above a city; stunted trees stand in the foreground; representing either the culmination of the alchemical Great Work or the star of hope that inspires the alchemist through his tribulation; from Salomon Trismosin's 'Splendor solis'.
Salomon Trismosin was a legendary Renaissance alchemist, claimed possessor of the philosopher's stone and teacher of Paracelsus. He is best known as the author of the alchemical works Splendor Solis and Aureum Vellus.
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by Matti Friedman
The little book may have been kept by a Jewish family in Bamiyan, the curator suggested, with different people adding new texts as the years passed. The hands of at least five scribes are evident in the pages. They were influenced by ideas and writing coming from both major Jewish centers of the time—Babylon, which is modern-day Iraq, and the Land of Israel, where Jewish sovereignty had been lost seven centuries before and whose people were now under Islamic rule.
The previously unknown poem shows the influence of a familiar biblical text, the erotic Song of Songs, according to Professor Shulamit Elizur of the Hebrew University, the member of the research team in charge of the poem’s analysis.  But it also shows the impact of an esoteric Jewish book that wasn’t part of the Bible, known as the Apocalypse of Zerubbabel. This book is thought to have originated in the early 600s, when a brutal war between Byzantium and the Sasanian empire of Persia generated desperate messianic hopes among many Jews. Whoever wrote the poem in the Afghan prayer book had clearly read the Apocalypse, Elizur said—giving us a glimpse of a Jewish spiritual world both familiar and foreign to the coreligionists of the Bamiyan Jews in our own times, 1,300 years later. The previously unknown poem shows the influence of a familiar biblical text, the erotic Song of Songs, according to Professor Shulamit Elizur of the Hebrew University. (Museum of the Bible)
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Chapters of the book’s journey from Afghanistan to Washington are unclear—some because they’re simply unknown even to the experts, and others because that’s the way the people in the murky manuscript market often prefer it.  
When the book was discovered by the Hazara militiaman, according to Hepler, the tribesmen didn’t know exactly what it was but understood it was Jewish and assumed it was sacred. The local leader had it wrapped in cloth and preserved in a special box. At one point in the late 1990s, it seems to have been offered unsuccessfully for sale in Dallas, Texas, though it’s unclear if the book itself actually left Afghanistan at the time. 
After the al-Qaeda attacks of 9/11 triggered the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan, the book disappeared for about a decade. In 2012 it resurfaced in London, where it was photographed by the collector and dealer Lenny Wolfe. 
Any story about Afghan manuscripts ends up leading to Wolfe, an Israeli born in Glasgow, Scotland. I went to see him at his office in Jerusalem, an Ottoman-era basement where the tables and couches are cluttered with ancient Greek flasks and Hebrew coins minted in the Jewish revolt against Rome in the 130s CE. It was Wolfe who helped facilitate the sale of the larger Afghan collection to Israel’s National Library. “The Afghan documents are fascinating,” he told me, “because they give us a window into Jewish life on the very edge of the Jewish world, on the border with China.” 
When Wolfe encountered the little prayer book, he told me it had already been on the London market for several years without finding a buyer. In 2012, the year he photographed the book, he said it was offered to him at a price of $120,000 by two sellers, one Arab and the other Persian. But the Israeli institution he hoped would buy the book turned it down, he told me, so the sale never happened. Not long afterwards, according to his account, he heard that buyers representing the Green family had paid $2.5 million. When I asked what explained the difference in price, he answered, “greed,” and wouldn’t say more. (Hepler of the Museum of the Bible wouldn’t divulge the purchase price or the estimated value of the manuscript, but said Wolfe’s figure was “wrong.”)
The collection amassed by the Green family eventually became the Museum of the Bible, which opened in Washington in 2017. The museum has been sensitive to criticism related to the provenance of its artifacts since a scandal erupted involving thousands of antiquities that turned out to have been looted or improperly acquired in Iraq and elsewhere in the Middle East. The museum’s founder, Steve Green, has said he first began collecting as an enthusiast, not an expert, and was taken in by some of the dubious characters who populate the antiquities market. “I trusted the wrong people to guide me, and unwittingly dealt with unscrupulous dealers in those early years,” he said after a federal investigation. In March 2020 the museum agreed to repatriate 11,000 artifacts to Iraq and Egypt. 
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