Satans Invisible World discovered; or, a choice collection of modern relations, proving evidently against the Saducees and Atheists of this present age, that there are Devils, Spirits, Witches, and Apparitions. ... To all which is added that marvellous History of Major Weir, and his Sister; with two relations of Apparitions at Edinburgh


Book Description










Witchcraft in Scotland


Book Description




Satan's Invisible World Discovered


Book Description

Facsimile reprint of a 1685 work by the Scottish Presbyterian professor of philosophy, George Sinclair, which aimed to prove the existence of Satan, witchcraft, and apparitions via a collection of supposedly true stories. The work is sometimes compared to Joseph Glanville's "Saducismus Triumphatus" of 1681.




Empirical Wonder


Book Description

Eighteenth-century England did not only see the rise of the novel, but also the rise of genres of what we now call the fantastic, such as imaginary voyages and apparition narratives. Combining theoretical reflection and cultural analysis, the author of this book investigates the origins, and demonstrates the formal and historical identity of a great variety of texts, which have never been considered as part of the same family. The fantastic, he argues, is an intrinsically modern mode, which uses the devices of realistic representation to describe supernatural phenomena. Its origins can be found in the seventeenth century, when the rise of modern empiricism threatened the ontological and epistemological underpinnings of traditional religious culture. The author shows how a broad range of discursive formations - demonology, providential literature, teratology, and natural philosophy - attempted to reconcile world-views that were felt to be increasingly incompatible, and traces the development of a new kind of fiction that gradually replaced them and took over their work of reconciliation. Coalescing as an autonomous system of genres, free from the restrictions of modern science and at the same time self-consciously aesthetic, the fantastic emerged as an instrument both to affirm and to transcend the empirical vision.




The Scottish Witch-Hunt in Context


Book Description

This book is a collection of essays on Scottish witchcraft and witch-hunting, which covers the whole period of the Scottish witch-hunt, from the mid-16th century to the early 18th. It particularly emphasizes the later stages, since scholars are now as keen to explain why witch-hunting declined as why it occurred. There are studies of particular witchcraft panics, including a reassessment of the role of King James VI. The book thus covers a wide range of topics concerned with Scottish witch-hunting - and also places it in the context of other topics: gender relations, folklore, magic and healing, and moral regulation by church and state.