Edward P. Butler
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Slava!: Slavic Paganism and Dual-Faith Folk Ways:
"For those practicing any type of Slavic polytheism, this book is indispensable. I was fortunate enough to receive a copy of the manuscript from the author and I think it is one of the most important books on polytheism to come out in our communities "
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"How I love PAM. Her beautiful writing and gorgeous stories have sustained me since I was a young woman.
I'd read this one before but couldn't remember it, which is surprising since she's one of my favorite authors. But I remember why now. It's a stran" Read more of this review » |
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Kaye's review
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Becoming Gold: Zosimos of Panopolis and the Alchemical Arts in Roman Egypt:
"This was a very readable, very fascinating book, and relatively OK to jump into and out of while juggling a million and a half things during a busy time at work. It starts out by explaining that our understanding of alchemy as a lead-into-gold obsess"
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“The passions of the Gods are thus in themselves actions: the wrath of Apollo is the pestilence that begins the Iliad, the seeing of mortal suffering by Hera is the action she inspires.”
― Essays on Hellenic Theology
― Essays on Hellenic Theology
“In this regard, a Stoic pun on the name of Hekate may be instructive: ‘Hekate’ is so called dia to hekastou pronoeisthai, “on account of foreknowledge of each [hekastos].”[39]”
― Essays on Hellenic Theology
― Essays on Hellenic Theology
“The activities of the Chaldean Hekate can be understood as an intensive meditation upon and elaboration of Hekate’s actions in the Homeric Hymn to Demeter, which fall into three stages: 1. (HHD 22-5): Hekate, described as “Perses’ daughter still innocent of heart [atala phroneousa],” hears Persephone’s cries “from her cave [ex antrou],” as does Helios. Here, Hekate is quiescent, but responds to the “voice” of the soul descending to embodiment, to which compare the “lifegiving whir” or “hum” (rhoizêma) with which Damascius associates Hekate (In Parm. III 42.18). 2. (51-61): On the tenth day [dekatê] of her search, Demeter meets Hekate “with a light in her hand [selas en cheiressin echousa]” and tells her what she heard. Demeter runs with her “with burning torches in her hands” to Helios, who saw the events. The numbers ten and four (the ten being the expansion of four, 1+2+3+4) are spoken of as “key-bearers”, kleidouchoi in the pseudo-Iamblichean Theology of Arithmetic (28.13, 81.14 de Falco), this being an epithet of Hekate’s as well. The text refers first to Hekate’s single light at first, but then to Demeter’s twin torches, as they run back to Helios to retrieve the vision. Thus, at the furthest limits of the centrifugal motion, the centripetal motion of “virtue” (keys) comes into play. 3. (438-440): Hekate, described as at 25 as “of the glossy veil [liparokrêdemnos]”, embraces Persephone on her return, and “the mistress [anassa]” becomes Persephone’s attendant and servant [propolos kai opaôn]. At the beginning and the end of the sequence, Hekate is veiled, as when the world is rendered flat or “membrane-like [humenôdês]” (frag. 68). In embracing Persephone on her return, that is, the soul upon its liberation from self-imposed bondage, Hekate is acknowledged as Mistress, and assumes a role of guide and helper to the soul in its future transformations (“ascents” and “descents”).”
― Essays on Hellenic Theology
― Essays on Hellenic Theology
“We both had a tender regard for this god. Min had not only helped us learn something material; more importantly, his presence had helped Tiberius. Working in disguise at the lettuce booth, though ludicrous, had taken his mind off his troubles after the lightning strike. Min had restored my man to me.”
― Pandora's Boy
― Pandora's Boy
“As well as her benevolence toward the nation as a whole, a busy task, Salus also guards every individual. I was going to need her myself today.”
― Pandora's Boy
― Pandora's Boy
“In the ideal impossibility that paradoxically represents its greatest perfection, the world would at once become the sensible image (εἰκών) of the gods and an object of worship (ἄγαλμα) offered to the memory of their immortality. The world, in the universality of its totality, would have been mimetically produced as a votive object, an object henceforth destined to offering, gift, and sacrifice. This is what we will call the tomb of the artisan god.”
― The Tomb of the Artisan God: On Plato's Timaeus
― The Tomb of the Artisan God: On Plato's Timaeus
“According to the Phaedo, to philosophize is to learn to die. It is thus to learn to return to the world this ideality that the demiurge will never be able to definitively inscribe within its sensible body.”
― The Tomb of the Artisan God: On Plato's Timaeus
― The Tomb of the Artisan God: On Plato's Timaeus
“As to the age of Hesiod and Homer, I have conducted very careful researches into this matter, but I do not like to write on the subject, as I know the quarrelsome nature of those especially who constitute the modern school of epic criticism.”
― Complete Works
― Complete Works
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