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Is (Islamic) Occult Science Science?

Theology and Science, 2020
More than any other object of historical and anthropological study, Islamicate occult science cuts to the quick of what it means to be modern, to be Western, to be scientific.
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Occult Sciences:

2017
First paragraph: The occult sciences were woven into the fabric of everyday life in nineteenth-century Britain. By no means the exclusive preserve of late Romantic all-male secret societies or, subsequently, of the urban bourgeoisie who formed the core membership of occult organizations such as the Theosophical Society or the Hermetic Order of the ...
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Occult Sciences

2012
This examination of the connection between the belief in miracles and religious practices in ancient times was originally written by French politician and polymath Anne-Joseph-Eusèbe Baconnière de Salverte (1771–1839) and published in 1829. In 1846, it was translated into English by a Scottish physician and writer, Anthony Todd Thomson (1778–1849), and
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Occult arts and sceptical sciences

Physics World, 2019
As Richard Noakes explains in his new book, Physics and Psychics: the Occult and the Sciences in Modern Britain, professional magicians of the Victorian theatre often challenged the claims made by psychics, mediums and spiritualists. You might expect such exposure of fraud to have been welcomed by the scientists of the time, but an interest in ...
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Outline of Occult Science

2011
Austrian philosopher, playwright, and artist Rudolf Steiner (1861–1925) is perhaps best known as an educational philosopher and reformer, the founder of Steiner (or Waldorf) schools located around the world. Steiner was an active member and leader of the German branch of Madame Blavatsky's Theosophical Society before forming his own Anthroposophical ...
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Occult sciences and medicine

2000
In his Muqaddima (Prolegomena) the well-known sage Ibn Khaldūn (d. 808/1406) reported a diversity of opinion among Muslim jurists concerning the grounds for the imposition of the death penalty upon practitioners of magic. The term he employed here is siḥr , an appellation which denotes a very wide range of occult phenomena; it is generally rendered ...
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