Hermetism

Hermetism refers to a Greco-Egyptian pagan mystical sect, based on the Hermetic Corpus, also known as the Hermetica, a group of 18 tracts composed in Hellenic Alexandria in the first century C.E. To be distinguished from its Renaissance and modern offshots, generally known as Hermeticism. The initiator of these philosophy was attribuated traditionally to Hermes Trismegiste. According to literary scholar Harold Bloom, "The Hermetists were Platonists who had absorbed the allegorical techniques of Alexandrian Jewry, and who developed the Jewish speculation concerning the first Adam, the Anthropos or Primal Man, called the Adam Kadmon in Kabbalah, and 'a mortal god' by the Hermetists...." The Hermetic Corpus became available to the West in 1460, when the documents salvaged from Constantinople surfaced in Florence. Their translation in 1471, by Marsilio Ficino, set off the great explosion of Renaissance Hermeticism as embodied in John Dee, Giordano Bruno, Tommaso Campanella, Johannes Trithemius, Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa, Robert Fludd, and Theophrastus Bombastus von Hohenheim Paracelsus.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
full metal panic!
keio line
administrative divisions in gwangju
keio hachioji station
ratfor
thornton township
chuo line
jython
brady anderson
legendre transformation
chuo main line
list of honorary societies
emergency committee of atomic scientists
tubular bells
uss america (cv 66)
tandy 2000
leys school
fuel pump
lin yang kang
uss bunker hill (cv 17)
uss bunker hill
list of computer term etymologies
nixon's enemies list
royal tern
elegant tern
mikulas dzurinda
3dlabs
forster's tern
adam kadmon
roman usurper
ramon magsaysay
list of roman usurpers
ball state university
chen li an
michael's gate
semisimple
emancipation of the dissonance
1602 in music
1676 in music
red billed gull
gpl linking exception
planning and execution of the september 11, 2001 attacks
bluegrass region
salt pan(geology)