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I ask this because I've heard that not everyone does. Also, what resources would you recommend? Personally, I have a book on making Chinese talismans.
Hot take: I think magic as a concept primarily belongs to western esotericism. Indigenous cultures and Eastern cultures have techniques, rituals, and practices that are nearly identical to western magic but I think culturally would not be understood in the same way that we, as westerners, think of magic. I think magic itself comes mostly from Egyptian (as a force) and Mesopotamian (as compelling spirits) roots and without the developments of the west's institutions to kind of drive it into the concept we have of it today these techniques and practices would be considered mysticism, folk religion, or just plain superstition. Thats not to say the practices arent magical. Just that I dont think they have the same connotations that magic does. Communing with and compelling spirits, alternative healing, visualization/visionary experiences/astral practices, deity assumption, plant medicine, energetic bodies, mantras/vocalizations... these can all be viewed as normal mystical, religious, or shamanic/animistic practices in other cultures.I ask this because I've heard that not everyone does. Also, what resources would you recommend? Personally, I have a book on making Chinese talismans.
Magick is a western term. Same with occult. Eastern spiritual systems dont correlate with those terms, but as a westerner, you could think of them as that. I just feel like relating them to magick, or occult, devalues the power of the practices. They arent meant to be thought of or associated with ideas like “having powers” or things like that.I ask this because I've heard that not everyone does. Also, what resources would you recommend? Personally, I have a book on making Chinese talismans.
Eastern magick most certainly exists.I ask this because I've heard that not everyone does. Also, what resources would you recommend? Personally, I have a book on making Chinese talismans.
Fu talismans = sorcery = "magick"
Siddhis in Hindu and Buddhist/Vajrayana tantra are numerous as well. I would say the Eastern traditions, in particular, are more magic-saturated for the most part. That's just my opinion, though.
I would argue that east Asian magic also puts the power out of the hands of the practitioner, but instead of just so called religious figures it is in the hands of the spirit world and largely ghosts and spirits of ancestors. This is shaped by the familial Confucian influence in Japan Korea and China. However in Buddhist magic like Bonpo or Buddhist influence you get petitions and magic towards deities as well, like bodhisattva Guanyin for fertility or protection. This is the same as Western magic and someone petitioning Mary for exampleI agree with this in a sense, that
Talismans = sorcery = directed use of intention and will = magic
Eastern traditions simply give more agency to individuals to wield their intention. Western traditions largely demand everyone send their intention via religious figures (never we mind that Christianity is technically an Eastern religion, geographically speaking, and would we call Jesus an egregore? Some would.) So it does come down to what we actually define as "magic" in an objective sense + cultural trappings.