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  • Published: 4 January 2024
  • ISBN: 9781802064377
  • Imprint: Penguin eBooks
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 304
Categories:

The Magus




A revelatory new account of the magus - the learned magician - and his place in the intellectual, social and cultural world of Renaissance Europe

At the heart of the extraordinary ferment of the High Renaissance stood a distinctive, strange and beguiling figure: the magus. An unstable mix of scientist, bibliophile, engineer, fabulist and fraud, the magus ushered in modern physics and chemistry while also working on everything from secret codes to siege engines to magic tricks.

Anthony Grafton's wonderfully original book discusses the careers of men who somehow managed to be both figures of startling genius and - by some measures - credulous or worse. The historical Faust, Marsilio Ficino, Pico della Mirandola, Johannes Trithemius and Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa are all fascinating characters, closely linked to monarchs, artists and soldiers and sitting at the heart of any definition of why the Renaissance was a time of such restless innovation. The study of the stars, architecture, warfare, even medicine: all of these and more were revolutionized in some way by the experiments and tricks of these extraordinary individuals.

No book does a better job of allowing us to understand the ways that magic, religion and science were once so intertwined and often so hard to tell apart.

  • Published: 4 January 2024
  • ISBN: 9781802064377
  • Imprint: Penguin eBooks
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 304
Categories:

About the author

John Fowles

John Fowles was born in 1926. He won international recognition with The Collector, his first published title, in 1963. He was immediately acclaimed as an outstandingly innovative writer of exceptional imaginative power, and this reputation was confirmed with the appearance of his subsequent works: The Aristos, The Magus, The French Lieutenant's Woman, The Ebony Tower, Daniel Martin, Mantissa, and A Maggot. John Fowles died in Lyme Regis in 2005. Two volumes of his Journals have recently been published; the first in 2003, the second in 2006.

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Praise for The Magus

‘A serious yet accessible account of learned magic’

Dennis Duncan, Guardian

‘A solidly argued look at an intellectual movement that is too often sensationalised’

Suzi Feay, Spectator

‘Grafton is a learned cultural historian who for decades has studied how people came to understand themselves through gathered knowledge in what we might call the first information age in Europe – the period between the mid-15th and mid-17th centuries … In a sense this is a book about the beginning of science … enlightening … one comes away … strangely grateful that when it comes to the human passion for discovery, there is nothing new under the sun’

Erica Wagner, Sunday Times

‘Magus: The Art of Magic from Faustus to Agrippa sheds light on the golden age of occult writing’

Christopher Howse, Sunday Telegraph

‘The magi were tricksters and con artists, unemployed students or priests, members of monastic orders, artists and occultists who shared the belief that knowledge could transform the world. They were the crucible in which science was formed … Magus is a brilliantly vivid exercise in intellectual history, as told through the biographies of the early modern magi, which will stir the thoughts of everyone who reads it … The implication of Grafton’s mind-changing book is that our age of science may be one of the most extreme periods of magical thinking in history’

John Gray, New Statesman