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Juan Tamariz-Martel Negrón (born 18 October 1942) is a Spanish magician.. Tamariz is considered to have pionereed close-up card magic.American stage magician Ricky Jay once said he considered him to be a magician people will remember, [1] and he was referred to as "the greatest and most influential card magician alive" by David Blaine. [2]
El Secreto de la Suerte (1928) Logos, Mantran, Magia (1930) Biorritmo (1930) Rosa Esotérica (1930) Die Gnostische Kirche / La Iglesia Gnostica (1931) Plantas Sagradas (1934) Del Incienso a la Osmoterapia (1ed - Biblioteca del espiritu - vol -4 - ed cultura - chile 1936) Arisches Weistum (1935) Akademie für die Rechte der Völker (1939 ...
For them, magia was viewed as an elemental force pervading many natural processes, [86] and thus was fundamentally distinct from the mainstream Christian idea of demonic magic. [125] Their ideas influenced an array of later philosophers and writers, among them Paracelsus , Giordano Bruno , Johannes Reuchlin , and Johannes Trithemius . [ 86 ]
In the same year, Rivero was nominated for the Cordovan of the Year award by the newspaper La Voz del Interior for her literary activity, obtaining recognition as an outstanding Cordovan of the year 2011. In 2016, she was the winner of the Reader's Prize for her book Los colores de la felicidad at the 43rd Buenos Aires International Book Fair.
1972, El mundo secreto de los dientes; 1975, Historia del nombre y de la fundación de México ; 1979, El ombligo como centro erótico; 1981, El ombligo como centro cósmico: Una contribución à la historia de las religiones; 1981, La tríade prenatal: cordón, placenta, amnios. Supervivencia de la magia paleolítica
The Arbatel is noted for being straightforward in its writing, positive in its contents, and unusually honest regarding its origins. While a number of occult works claim to be from earlier periods and other regions than where they were actually published, textual evidence demonstrates that the book must have been written between 1536 and 1583, which encompasses the claimed date of 1575.
Mitos y supersticiones recogidos de la tradición oral chilena (in Spanish). Santiago de Chile: Imprenta Universitaria. pp. 26– 32. Mancilla Pérez, Juan. Magia y brujería en Chiloé. Secretos de Mitología. Medicina Popular. 2006. 74 p. (Spanish) Conte, Jeanne (1999). "Tapestry of Horrors". World & I. Volume 14:192-200-Via MasterFILE Complete
The Greek Magical Papyri (Latin: Papyri Graecae Magicae, abbreviated PGM) is the name given by scholars to a body of papyri from Graeco-Roman Egypt, written mostly in ancient Greek (but also in Old Coptic, Demotic, etc.), which each contain a number of magical spells, formulae, hymns, and rituals.