Enochian Magic in Theory
W**E
A great study into the theory of Dee's Enochian system
A great study into the theory of Dee's Enochian system. Everything is covered here, from the Calls to the Great Table. Fr. Yechidah provides a balanced viewpoint that is well informed and useful to both the novice and adept.Would have been 5* if the errors in the small biography of John Dee had been corrected. The work though is far from a biography -- there are many of those available for Dee. Yechidah here provides an excellent resource for those working with the Enochian system.
T**C
recommended! The author has clearly done an awful lot ...
Really interesting and informative book, recommended! The author has clearly done an awful lot of research and is clearly deeply interested in the topic. I think you are in good hands here :D
R**T
Five Stars
Probably the best book on enochian magick out there.
M**L
Well worth buying
I first became interested in Enochian in the 1990s and was among a group which was not particularly impressed with the GD's approach to it. That is not to say we didn't try it. There were some glorious moments pathworking into the Enochian Aethyrs and some outright unpleasant ones. On the plus there was a moment where an angel predicted the Bosnian War which was something none of us knew anything about. On the negative side there were post ritual fainting and nose bleeds. There was a rough edge to it which we could not place. We decided that it might have had something to do with the way GD enochian was wired and so went back to John Dee's Diaries. (Of course not being members of the Golden Dawn, none of us realised that it might have been above our grade). We started experimenting with using the same sorts of equipment, the seal, the table, and a crystal, which was used by John Dee and the rough edge started to vanish.Then we discovered that the Golden Dawn system was based on a document called Sloane 307 which was written in the 17th century and was based on a reading of True and Faithful Relation, by Casubon. Casubon provided an edited version of Dee's Diaries and so some of the important stuff was missing.Dean's book fills in the gaps that have been left by the Golden Dawn and Sloane 307 by bringing together a lot of the research which has been carried out over the last 20 years on Dee's magic system. In this book is all you need to do to go from A, to B, to C. Some of this material is elsewhere, but not of it is in one place. Dean brings the material to hand and explains it very clearly.When there is some dispute about what Dee, or his Angels were banging on about, Dean provides both sides of the argument and gives his opinion. The opinion is valid and is based on his actual practices.What I like about this book is that rather than going into what is called a Dee versus Golden Dawn Enochian split, Dean comes up waving the flag for the GD more than he snipes at it. It is logical that the Golden Dawn did not get everything wrong and some of the developments, actually take Enochian in places where Dee could not go. However, where the Golden Dawn went a little off, Dean is the first to point it out.There are a couple of books out there which do similar things, however there is a feeling of completeness about Enochian Magic in Theory. You could give it to a Golden Dawn Student and they would be able to go off and do something with it.Dean's theme is an interesting concept for those who believe that Enochian needs to be entirely like Dee did it. Dean believes that the Enochian Magic system was not designed for Dee at all. The logic of the argument is sensible. Dee was lazy. He was asked to make material and didn't, given deadlines which he failed to meet, and seemed to be unable to deal with information which was outside his belief structure. Yet surprisingly the Angels continued to work with him and hand over a complete system.After the separation between Kelly and Dee, the material was taught to Dee's inner circle but not expanded further. In other words it was waiting for the likes of the writer of Sloane 307 and the Golden Dawn to come along. So when you see Golden Dawn Enochian it is a matter of merging it with Dee not rejecting it out of hand.I am interested in seeing Dean's Enochian Magic in Practice, which is coming out next year. The voice behind this book is knowledgeable and it provides you with the information you need to know rather than getting side tracked. I am looking forward to seeing how he sees Enochian working in a practical way.However I really recommend anyone who is interested in Enochian should buy this book.
A**R
Essential reading for any aspiring student of Enochian
At the outset, I have to state that I came "cold" to the practice of Enochian, so my review will be of a less detailed nature than Amazon reviews of many magickal texts, but that in itself is not necessarily a bad thing.I have been a practitioner of what is often (derogatorily) called "low magick", that is, creative visualization, chakra meditation, siddhi meditations and other new age populist spiritual methods - all of which I have to say I have had excellent results with.But at some point, in my own experience at least, Enochian calls you.In a nutshell, Enochian magick is the "AA Route Planner" of other spiritual dimensions, worlds and peoples - it gives direction, structure and form to the non-physical that even the mainstream religions despite their dominance, miserably fail on.I read Dean's book before any other on the topic. It is, essentially, the backstory - or prequel! - to the actual practice of the Enochian system. Dean holds us by the hand as he guides us through the meeting of John Dee and Edward Kelley, who received the system from an Angelic Hierarchy over a five year period in the 16th century, and puts a structure on the information they received as to the dimensions that lie above us here on Earth, and who lives there. Dean limits this particular tome to the delivery of the information - I understand that a second volume, Enochian Magick in Practice, is to follow.After Enochian Magic in Theory, I went to an earlier tome, Enochian Vision Magick by Lon Milo DuQuette. Written in a familiar, folksy tone, Lon puts the material to work and applies a humorous tone to his writing style, but his information on the background, and the detail of what the Enochian system is comprised of, is patchy. As a result, I found myself consistently referring back to Dean.The only criticism I would have of Dean's text is that an epilogue or summary, outlining what is to come, would have been helpful, but this is a minor gripe.Enochian Magic in Theory is less a book, and more an immersion in the creative stream that Dee and Kelley found themselves in. One is not just a student of the text, but given an understanding of how the system unfolded. It is, in essence, an essential part of the magickal practice itself.
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