The Brill
Dictionary
of Religion
Edited by Kocku von Stuckrad .
Revised edition ofMetzler Lexikon Religion
edited by Christoph Auffarth, Jutta Bernard
and Hubert Mohr
Translated from the German by Robert R. Barr
Volume III
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Original German language edition: Metzler Lexikon Religion, vol. 1-4. Stuttgart,
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Vol. 1 published 1999 as: Metzler Lexikon Religion. Gegenwart- Alltag- Medien.
Band 1: Abendmahl -Guru. Herausgegeben von Christoph Auffarth, Jutta Bernard,
Hubert Mohr, unter Mitarbeit von Agnes Imhof und Silvia Kurre. Stuttgart · Weimar,
vii
xi
1999. ISBN 3-476-01551-3.
Vol. 2 published 1999 as: Metzler Lexikon Religion. Gegenwart ·- Alltag ·- Medien.
Band 2: Haar- Osho-Bewegung. Herausgegeben von Christoph Auffarth, Jutta Bernard,
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1999· ISBN 3-476-01552-1.
Vol. 3 published 2000 as: Metzler Lexikon Religion. Gegenwart- All tag- Medien.
Band 3: Paganismus -Zombie. Herausgegeben von Christoph Auffarth, Jutta Bernard,
Hubert Mohr, unter Mitarbeit von Agnes Imhof und Silvia Kurre. Stuttgart · Weimar,
2000. ISBN 3·476 .. 01553-X.
Vol. 4 published 2002 as:. Metzler Lexikon Religion. Gegenwart - All tag - Medien.
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1129
1134 •
Macrocosm
The microcosm/macrocosm analogy regards the human being as a 'little
world' and as an image of the 'big world' (the cosmos) that stands in relationship with it or is influenced by it (thus, by way of example, that certain
constellations of stars determine human destiny;--+ Astrology). Various religions, and Weltanschauung traditions, host a conception of these chains of
laws: by way of example, in -> Buddhism and -+ Lamaism they are present
in the correspondences of the cosmos or stars and the energy channels in
the human body; they also prevail in ritual practice (Tantrism, Yoga), and in
the Tibetan --+ Mandala. In the alchemical symbol of the egg God's creation
is rehearsed 'in little: 1be purpose of microcosm and macrocosm analogies
is to evoke the aspect of totality (holism), a concept found today in alternative medicine (body/soul/mind), as well as in esoteric concepts.
-+
Astrology, Esotericism, Meaning/Signification
futta Bernard
Magic
Origins of the Term
'Magic'
Attempts at Definition
and Their Critique
The term "magic" has served to indicate, in the history of Western culture,
a variety of ideas and of practices, often related to religion and/or science.
Consequently, the term has been historically defined and understood in
many different ways, according to the context in which it has been used.
The ancient Greek term mageia, which is at the origin of all modern words
related to 'magic; had a Persian origin, and served to indicate, since its
adoption by Greek culture, religious activities considered to be exotic, unsanctioned, or forbidden. The term kept these mostly negative connotations
in Roman culture, where it was translated as magia. Especially during the
late Hellenistic period, however, more positive connotations of magic began
to manifest themselves, as appears in contemporary documents such as Apuleius's (c. 125-170 CE) Apologia and the so-called "Greek Magical Papyri:'
In this context magic was used not so much to describe the practices or the
beliefs of others, as had been mostly the case so far, but positively claimed
and self-assumed by the authors. The rise of Christianity, however, would
add new weight and contents to the negative connotations of magic, which
would remain dominant in Western culture until very recent times. The
subsequent conflict between negative and positive views of magic remains
one of the most significant, and for a long time underestimated, aspects of
Western culture.
Since the second half of the nineteenth century, scholars working in the
social sciences (anthropology, sociology, psychology) and in the study of
religion have repeatedly tried to define the term as a more or less universal
category of human thought and/or behavior, in contrast with (and often in
opposition to) other broad categories such as --> 'religion' and-+ 'science:
In so doing they have often translated into scholarly discourse some of the
old polemical dichotomies that have marked the history of this notion in the
West. Tl
criticize,
der the i
of magi'
compr01
would b,
has not
revitalizi
it has sh
ences, to
recent S\
not inch
ject of ar
understa
concepts
new fielc
fered, an
that had
magic sti
Given th
during tl
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restricts i
tions oft
sociologi
thevario1
been con
The most
alist scho
(1854--1 s
evolution
Their the
presence
than soci
Tylor, oft
unlike Fr
sharp dis
several oJ
ForTylor
exclusive
for the ot
of accide
reality. It
understo
of'primi1
play a sig
of his "m
magical"
rational,
the religi
Magic • 1135
tg as a 'little
mds in relathat certain
. Various re:se chains of
rare present
channels in
'oga), and in
)d's creation
m analogies
vin alterna-
"tta Bernard
セイョ@
culture,
'or science.
erstood in
been used.
lern words
セG@ since its
セクッエゥ」L@
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iuring the
tgic began
:has Apull Papyri."
ces or the
y claimed
er, would
:ic, which
mes. The
:remains
.spects of
1g in the
study of
miversal
often in
'science:
1e of the
min the
West. These abstract, universal definitions of magic have been increasingly
criticized after the Second World War, and especially since the 1970s, under the impact of postmodern and postcolonial theories. Scholarly notions
of magic have been seen as ethnocentric and inherently biased, thereby
compromising an objective understanding of the phenomena to which they
would be applied. As a consequence, if magic as a strict theoretical problem
has not disappeared altogether, as is shown by several recent attempts at
revitalizing its use as a valid scholarly category, it seems nevertheless that
it has shifted, from the center of methodological debate in the social sciences, to its margins. For instance, it is perhaps significant to note that in a
recent survey of the most important terms in religious studies, magic was
not included at all. 1 At the same time, however, magic has become the object of an increasingly large number of detailed historical analyses, aimed at
understanding the evolution of its concept (or, rather, the constellation of
concepts associated to it) in Western history. The recent development of a
new field specifically devoted to the study of Western-> esotericism has offered, among others, a convenient frame for the historical study of a subject
that had been neglected, from that perspective, for too long. For this reason,
magic still shows signs of great vitality as an object of scholarly study.
Given the great complexity and breadth of the scholarly debate on magic
during the last 130 years, and of the number of theories and definitions
which have been proposed during this span of time, the following summary
restricts itself to the main figures and stages of this debate. Several classifications of theories of magic have been proposed: evolutionist, intellectualist,
sociological, emotionalist, functionalist, depending on the aspects on which
the various definitions of magic have focused or the ways in which they have
been constructed.
A Cornucopia of
Classifications
The most important authors belonging to what has been called the intellectualist school are the British Edward B. Tylor (1832-1917) and James G. Frazer
(1854-1941). These two authors were also particularly influenced by the
evolutionist theories of their times (-+ Evolutionism; Theory of Evolution).
Their theories have been defined as intellectualist because, in their view, the
presence of magic could be explained in terms of processes of thought, rather
than social behavior, mostly related to a primitive stage of human evolution.
Tylor, often considered as the founder of modern anthropology, did not,
unlike Frazer, elaborate a full-fledged theory of magic, nor did he trace a
sharp distinction between religion and magic, but he dealt with the subject in
several of his works, mainly in his highly influential Primitive Culture (1871).
For Tylor magic is the result of a wrong association of ideas, typical (but not
exclusive) of the 'primitive man: The primitive man mistakes the subjective
for the objective plan, and thinks that objects associated in his mind because
of accidental similarity or analogy should also be connected in objective
reality. It is mostly on the basis of these illusory connections, sometimes
understood as impersonal principles or forces, that magic works in the view
of'primitive man: 1he belief in spiritual beings, on the other hand, does not
play a significant role in Tylor's definition of magic, and is rather at the basis
of his "minimum definition of religion" (-+ Animism). Tylor contrasts the
magical way of thinking of the primitive man especially with the supposedly
rational, scientific one of the modern man, and only to a lesser extent with
the religious one. In the economy ofTylor's ideas, therefore, the distinction
Edward B. Tylor
1136 •
between magic and science was much sharper than the one between magic
and religion.
fames G. Frazer
Sociological
Interpretations
Frazer systematically presents his ideas on magic beginning with the second
edition of his classic The Golden Bough (1900). According to him, magic is
clearly and neatly distinguished both from science and religion, and they
form together a sort of triad. The distinction is not only intellectual, but also
in terms of evolution. Frazer posits that magic, religion, and science belong
to three successive stages of human evolution, which go from the most
primitive to the present, modern and enlightened stage. Frazer's distinction
between the three modes ofthought is obviously inspired by Tylor. Magic
is based on wrong associations of ideas, religion on the belief in spiritual
entities, and science, having emancipated from both, represents a finally
valid, objective view of reality. But Frazer introduces an interesting nuance
in giving also a positive connotation to magic. The latter is in fact closer to
science than _religion (although it represents a more primitive stage on the
evolutionary scale) because it recognizes the presence of natural, immutable
laws governing the universe, however mistakenly primitive man understands them. Religion, on the other hand, renounces the idea of universal
natural laws because it prefers to believe in the intervention of gods or other
spiritual entities, whose range of action would not be limited by any natural
regularity. It is interesting to notice, in this respect, that religion is supposed
to deal with those entities with an attitude of veneration or submission.
However, magic and religion can find themselves mixed sometimes, when
the belief in spiritual beings is not accompanied by this attitude of veneration, but rather by one of coercion. In the latter case these beings are treated
like inanimate agents. In this manner Frazer, who was following here the
ideas ofW Robertson Smith (1846-1894), was clearly giving a scholarly coat
to a distinction (veneration vs. coercion), which had been used polemically
in traditional theological discourses on magic, and which would remain
highly influential in subsequent scholarly discourses on magic. Frazer also
elaborated and systematized the explanation of the wrong association of
ideas on which magic was supposed to be based. For him magic can be of
two kinds: 'contagious' (when two objects that have been in physical contact
are imagined to maintain a reciprocal influence even after they are separated), or 'homeopathic' (when the reciprocal influence is a consequence of
the similarity of the two objects).
Some early sociological interpretations of magic can be found already in the
writings of the British historian of Semitic cultures, W. Robertson Smith
(Lectures on the Religion of the Semites, 1889). Robertson Smith's ideas on
magic influenced later, in the early years of the twentieth century, the French
group of scholars gathered around the figure of Emile Durkheim (18581917). Durkheim himself (Les Formes elementaires de Ia vie religieuse, Fr.,
"The Elementary Forms of Religious Life"; 1912), and more systematically
his colleagues Marcel Mauss (1872-1950) and Henri Hubert (1870-1927)
(Esquisse d'une theoriegenerale de la magie, Fr., "A General Theory of Magic";
1904) addressed the problem of magic within the context of their largely
shared ideas on religion and society. Instead of focusing on the mode of
thought of individuals, like the English intellectualists, this group of French
sociologists preferred to emphasize the social conditions in which the phenomenon of magic develops. According to them, religion is the expression
of a socia
Religious
the social
and its air
against, th
anti-socia
and margi
in anygiv1
to one ove
Despite
rather eas·
cent as we
nature. It 1
theories oJ
of them w
interpreta1
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of magic.,
losopher F
Marett's ap
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ofbothma
in a primit
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more comf
relieved by
in a symbo
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tionalist th
Bronislaw
the history
an in dispel
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the object 1
linowski m
is provoke,
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of help. It
of magic t<
Under the
ideologica
Jar history
----------------------------------------------------------ween magic
of a social structure and serves to maintain the cohesion of a community.
Religious rites are, therefore, public and directed at the common wealth of
the social group. Magic, on the other hand, is practiced on a private basis,
and its aims are mostly individualistic. They at best ignore, and at worst go
against, the common interests of the community. Thus, magic represents an
anti-social phenomenon, which can explain why it is frequently forbidden
and marginalized. On the other hand, magic and religion seem to be found
in any given social structure, and no chronological precedence is attributed
to one over the other, as Frazer had believed.
Despite the difference of approach from the intellectualist school, it is
rather easy to see that this sociological interpretation of magic is reminiscent as well of older polemical discourses on magic, mostly of a theological
nature. It could be argued that, with the intellectualist and the sociological
theories of magic the stage was set for all later discussions on the topic. Most
of them will in fact build, often critically, on the ideas of these two different
interpretations of the phenomenon.
1 the
second
m, magic is
n, and they
ual, but also
ence belong
n the most
. distinction
ylor. Magic
in spiritual
.1ts a finally
ting nuance
tct closer to
:tage on the
immutable
nan under)f universal
)ds or other
any natural
is supposed
ubmission.
imes, when
セッヲ@
venera; are treated
1g here the
1olarly coat
Jolemically
11ld remain
Frazer also
ociation of
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f are sepaequence of
セ。、ケ@
in the
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.'s ideas on
the French
im (1858セゥ・オウL@
Fr.,
ematically
)70-1927)
of Magic";
eir largely
セュッ、・@
of
of French
1 the pheセクーイ・ウゥッョ@
Magic • 1137
,.
Not only the French sociological school criticized the intellectualist theories
of magic. Also in England, in the same years, the anthropologist and philosopher R. R. Marett ( 1866-1943) elaborated a different kind of criticism.
Marett's approach has been called emotionalist, because he does not focus on
the association of ideas, but on the human emotions that he sees at the origin
ofboth magic and religion. In his view, and in opposition to Frazer's theories,
in a primitive culture magic and religion do not differentiate themselves, but
rather belong to a continuum. For this reason, he has preferred to use the expression 'magico-religious' in that context. However, he also gives a specific
explanation of magic as distinct from religion, which applies especially to
more wmplex cultures. Magic arises from emotional tensions that cannot be
relieved by operating directly on their source, and must therefore be solved
in a symbolic or ritual way.
R. R. Marett
This explanation was particularly influential and stood at the origin ofJunetionalist theories of magic, as expressed by the Polish-born anthropologist
Bronislaw Malinowski (1884-1942). Malinowski is particular important in
the history of anthropology for having advocated participant observation as
an indispensable tool for studying and understanding other cultures. Unlike
previous anthropologists, who studied 'primitive' cultures on second-hand
reports, Malinowski spent long periods of time with the groups that were
the object of his research, on the Trobriand Islands (Pacific Ocean). ForMalinowski magic offers the means to solve situations of emotional stress, which
is provoked in primitive man by a lack of technology and, consequently, of
control of the natural environment in which he lives and operates. Magic is
different from religion, because, unlike the latter, it is always goal-directed.
It is interesting to note that, in Malinowski's view, magic seems to acquire a
positive function, because it can help both the individual and the community
to overcome difficult situations in which neither science nor religion may be
of help. It is of course tempting to relate this new, relatively positive vision
of magic to the new approach of field-research and participant observation.
Under the impact of a direct contact with the 'primitive' populations, old
ideological assumptions concerning magic, obviously related to the particular history of Western culture, began perhaps to show their limits.
B. Malinowski
1138 •
L. Levy-Bruhl
E. E. Evans-Pritchard
Another author who must be mentioned here, more because of the influence
he has had on later discourses on magic than for his direct treatment of the
subject, is Lucien Levy- Bruhl (1857-1939). Levy-Bruhl did not produce a
definite theory on magic, but he was particularly interested in understanding the functioning of primitive mentality and its difference from modern,
scientific mentality. In his view primitive, or pre-logical, mentality is based
on a particular way of thinking which he calls 'participation: This way of
thinking is not considered as erroneous, childlike, or pathological. It is just
based on different premises, and, being consistent with those premises, cannot even be considered as 'irrational: Participation, unlike scientific thought,
is not based on causality. The mystical mind of the primitive sees a relation
of identity and consubstantiality between persons and objects. The primitive can therefore believe in direct action on reality in a way that would be
incompatible with normal causality.
Several authors, including the English anthropologist E. E. Evans-Pritchard
(1902-1973), criticized Levy-Bruhl for supposing that it is possible to divide
humanity between those who have a pre-logical mentality and those who
have a scientific one. As a consequence, late in his life he modified his theory
and admitted that both mentalities could be found in all cultures, including
the modern Western one. Levy-Bruhl's ideas on pre-logical mentality represented an important step in that they helped emancipate 'primitive' man from
the prejudice of being incapable of sound reasoning. He tried to understand
his way of thinking on its own terms, and not only in relation to modern
Western thinking, and thereby paved the way for later developments in the
same direction, such as C. Levi-Strauss's structuralism.
In his definition of magic, Malinowski had given universal value to his findings in the field, although they had been originally limited to a particular
area of the Pacific(--> South Sea). Other authors engaged in field-research
after him criticized this aspect of his work and followed a different direction.
Such is the case with the aforementioned Edward E. Evans- Pritchard. In his
classic study on an African population, Witchcraft, Oracles, and Magic among
the Azande (1937), Evans-Pritchard defined magic only in the terms of the
culture he had studied, without pretending to make any conclusions on a
supposedly universal nature of magic. In that context, therefore, magic refers
to and translates a set of concepts, which have already their own specificity
in the culture at issue. In so doing Evans-Pritchard broke with a tradition of
universal, abstract definitions of magic, which he knew very well (Theories
of Primitive Religion, 1965). The influence of his ideas will begin to be felt
especially after the Second World War, but since then, social scientists have
found it increasingly difficult to avoid the theoretical and methodological
problems posed by the use of magic as a universal category. It is noteworthy
that three of the most influential anthropologists of the post-war period,
C. Levi-Strauss (b. 1908), Clifford Geertz (b. 1926), and Edmund Leach
(1910-1989), despite their considerable differences on other points, have
either come to the conclusion that magic as a scholarly concept should be
dissolved, or have ignored the issue altogether, no doubt considering it as
irrelevant for the needs of the discipline. On the other hand, recent ambi-·
tious attempts at reviving magic as a universal scholarly category, such as
D. L. O'Keefe's Stolen Lightning (1982), have not been able to create a wide
consensus among scholars.
During
Martino
on then
identity
the prob
views (lY
recurren
has cont
ture. De
ation of
Magic,2
of magic
defining
field of n
meant tc
1
Finally,<
that rese
years. Th
Western
finds the
periods 1
scholarly
lar and t
research.
less intefl
too in th
I.
TAYLOR
Literatur
BELlER,
w
in: Metho•
Graham, ll
Ernesto, M
(English) I
1,2 (1933),
Wouter J.,
Tylorand J
Emergenct
CHESI, Bri!
fremden I
History in
Modernity
Lawrence,
Making M
2004; Suu
York/Lond
Rationalit)
Magic-Rei
Magic • 1139
of the influence
reatment of the
not produce a
in understandfrom modern,
ntality is based
m.' This way of
ogical. It is just
premises, canentific thought,
: sees a relation
cts. The primi' that would be
:vans-Pritchard
ssible to divide
md those who
ified his theory
ures, including
rentality repretive' man from
to understand
on to modern
1pments in the
!ue to his findo a particular
field- research
rent direction.
itchard. In his
1
Magic among
e terms of the
1clusions on a
セN@ magic refers
wn specificity
a tradition of
well (Theories
:gin to be felt
dentists have
セエィッ、ャァゥ」。@
s noteworthy
t-war period,
mund Leach
points, have
:pt should be
sidering it as
recent ambigory, such as
:reate a wide
During the post-war period two authors among others, the Italian E. de
Martino (1908-1965) and the American R. Styers (b. 1958), have focused
on the role that discourses on magic have had for the shaping of the cultural
identity of the West and for the rise of modernity, and have helped to assess
the problem of magic in new, potentially very fruitful ways. In De Martino's
views (Magia e civilta, 1962) Western culture has been characterized by the
recurrence of an anti-magical polemic, which, by a sort of dialectical process,
has contributed creatively in defining the particular features of Western culture. De Martino sees in many of the scholarly theories of magic a continuation of this polemic under a new form. Styers, on the other hand (Making
Magic, 2004), has focused more specifically on the importance of discourses
of magic for the development of modernity. In his view, these discourses, in
defining the illicit in three particular fields (the field of religious piety, the
field of reason, and the field of sexuality), have tried to regulate them in ways
meant to be compatible with the project of modernity.
Magic as Polemical
Discourse
Finally, apart from the social sciences, it is probably in the field of history
that research on magic has shown the greatest vitality in the past twenty
years. This scholarly output, insofar as it focuses on the history of magic in
Western culture, seems to be able to avoid the problems of definition, as it
finds the term magic used in an ernie sense in the literature it studies. Most
periods of -> European history of religion have been the object of recent
scholarly studies focused on magic. The Greco-Roman period in particular and the medieval period have been explored by new groundbreaking
research. The period after the -+ Enlightenment, which has attracted so far
less interest from scholars than other periods, is now beginning to be studied
too in that perspective.
Magic in Historical
Research
1. TAYLOR, Mark C. (ed.), Critical Terms for Religious Studies, Chicago/London 1998.
Literature
BELlER, Wouter W, "Religion and Magic: Durkheim and the Annee sociologique group",
in: Method and Theory in the Study of Religion 7,2 (1995), 163-184; CUNNINGHAM,
Graham, Religion and Magic: Approaches and Theories, New York 1999; DE MARTINO,
Ernesto, Magia e civilta, Milan 1962; EvANS-PRITCHARD, Edward E., "The Intellectualist
(English) Interpretation of Magic;' in: Bulletin of the Faculty of Arts, University of Egypt
1,2 (1933), 283-311; Idem, Theories of Primitive Religion, Oxford 1965; HANEGRAAFF,
Wouter J., "The Emergence of the Academic Science of Magic: The Occult Philosophy in
Tylor and Frazer;' in: MoLENDJIK, Arie L./PELS, Peter (eds.), Religion in the Making: The
Emergence of the Sciences of Religion, Leiden 1998, 253-275; KIPPENBERG, Hans G./LuCHESI, Brigitte (eds.), Magie: Die sozialwissenschaftliche Kontroverse iiber das Verstehen
fremden Denkens, Frankfurt/M. 1978; KrPPENBERG, Hans G., Discovering Religious
History in the Modern Age, Princeton 2001; MEYER, Birgit/PELS, Peter (eds.), Magic and
Modernity: Interfaces of Revelation and Concealment, Stanford 2003; O'KEEFE, Daniel
Lawrence, Stolen Lightning: The Social Theory of Magic, New York 1982; STYERS, Randall,
Making Magic: Religion, Magic, and Science in the Modern World, Oxford/New York
2004; SuLLIVAN, Lawrence E. (ed.), Hidden Truths: Magic, Alchemy, and the Occult, New
York/London 1989; TAMBIAH, Stanley Jeyaraja, Magic, Science, Religion, and the Scope of
Rationality, Cambridge 1990; VERSNEL, HendrikS., "Some Reflections on the Relationship
Magic-Religion;' in: Numen 38,2 (1991), 177-197.
1140 • Mandala
-> Amulet, Electricity, Enlightenment, Esotericism, Evil Eye, Evolutionism, Occultism,
Paganism/Neopaganism, Power, Rationalism/Irrationalism, Religion, Science, Witch!
Persecution of Witches
Marco Pasi
Mandala
1. In its general meaning, a mandala is a circle that divides a sacred place
from the profane sphere. In Tibetan Buddhism(--> Lamaism), the concept
designates a diagram bringing central doctrinal content to graphic expression, and serving as an aid for meditation. Through the aspects of a mandala,
viewers may recall their religious tradition, and have practical meditation
experiences as well.
The basic form of the mandala consists in a concentric arrangement of
circles and squares, together yielding a symmetrical, closed area. It represents a two-dimensional palace installation. There are also three-dim ensional representations. Inside the three outer circles, there is a rectangle,
the 'Celestial Palace.' Its basic outline resembles the shape of the universe
in Tibetan cosmography, and the four palace gates correspond to the four
directions of the heavens. The midpoint is formed by the 'lotus center:
whose analogy is the axis of the world, Mount Meru.
In the center, a ---+ Buddha or bodhisattva is often to be seen, and other
deities can also be represented there. Thus, there are numerous figures
and symbols around the mandala, varying with particular doctrinal systems. There are not only picture-mandalas, but mandalas on the ground as
spatial models made of colorful rice. Besides their ritual function, they are
intended to represent the reciprocal relationship between --> macrocosm
and microcosm.
2. The goal of meditation consists in simultaneously rendering the particular central form of a mandala visible, and experiencing it within oneself.
To this purpose, the person meditating first imagines the form within her
or his body, and then visualizes an external image of it. Finally, he should
recognize that all of the images have sprung from his own mind, and are
ultimately empty.
·
Literature
BRAUEN, Martin, Das Mandala. Der heilige Kreis im trantrischen Buddhism us, Cologne
1992; DAGYAB, Loden S., Tibetan Religious Art, 2 vols., Wiesbaden 1972; Tucci, Giuseppe, The Theory and Practice of the Mandala: With Special Reference to the Modern
Psychology of the Subconscious, London 1969.
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Buddhism, Image!Iconoclasm, Lamaism, Meditation, Tibet
Thomas Schweer