:''"Seer stone" redirects here. For the usage in Mormonism, see
Seer stone (Latter Day Saints).
Scrying (also called
crystal gazing,
crystal seeing,
seeing, or
peeping) is a
magic practice that involves
seeing things supernaturally in a medium, usually for purposes of
divination or
fortune-telling. The media used are most commonly reflective, translucent, or luminescent substances such as crystals, stones, glass, mirrors, water, fire, or smoke. Scrying has been used in many cultures as a means of divining the past, present, or future. Depending on the culture and practice, the visions that come when one stares into the media are thought to come from
God,
spirits, the
psychic mind, the
devil, or the
subconscious.
Scrying is actively used by many cultures and belief systems and is not limited to one tradition or ideology. However, like other aspects of divination and
parapsychology, it is not supported by mainstream science as a method of predicting the future or otherwise seeing events that are not physically observable.
Media used in scrying
The most common media used for scrying are:
Crystal balls (pictured), crystals, precious stones, polished quartz, beryl, or another transparent mineral body: this method is called crystal gazing ''gastromancy'', ''crystallomancy'' or ''spheromancy''). Crystal balls are also called ''shew stones''. A stone or crystal is also called a ''seerstone'' or ''peepstone''.
Water or another liquid: this method is called hydromancy.
Fire: this method is known as pyromancy.
Air or atmospheric conditions: this method is known as aeromancy.
Earth, soil or dirt: this method is known as geomancy
Mirrors; this method is called catoptromancy, also known as ''captromancy'', ''enoptromancy'', or ''mirror gazing''.
Psychomanteum, a room used for scrying usually using mirrors, water, or crystals.
Specific objects that have been used for scrying include:
a pool of ink in the hand (Egypt)
the liver of an animal (tribes of the North-West Indian frontier)
a hole filled with water (Polynesia)
quartz crystals (the Apaches and the Euahlayi tribe of New South Wales)
a smooth slab of polished black stone (the Huille-che of South America)
water in a vessel (Zulus and Siberians)
a crystal (the Incas)
a mirror (classical Greece and the Middle Ages)
a fingernail
a swordblade
a ring-stone
a glass of sherry
the burning of a poppy flowerbud on hot coals
History
The etymology of the ''-mancy'' words is the Greek ''manteia'', "divination". Scrying comes from the English word ''descry'' meaning "to make out dimly" or "to reveal."
Ancient Europe
Around 2,000 BC,
Greece, as well as "early"
Britain and its subsequent
Celtic population, practised many forms of scrying.The media often used were beryl, crystal, black glass, polished quartz, water, and other transparent or light catching bodies.
Celtic tribes, known to exist in Britain as early as 2,000 B.C., were unified by a priesthood known as
Druids. Druids are one of the earliest known peoples to have used crystals in divination. It is interesting to note that Druid religion had similarities to
megalithic religion of an earlier Britain; thus, it is possible the first use of crystal divination might have come from them.
Pausanias, 2nd century AD Greek traveller, described catoptromancy (mirror gazing) as follows:
:''Before the Temple of
Ceres at
Patras, there was a fountain, separated from the temple by a wall, and there was an oracle, very truthful, not for all events, but for the sick only. The sick person let down a mirror, suspended by a thread till its based touched the surface of the water, having first prayed to the goddess and offered incense. Then looking in the mirror, he saw the presage of death or recovery, according as the face appeared fresh and healthy, or of a ghastly aspect.''
Medieval central Europe
Later, during central Europe's Medieval Period diviners used crystals to "see" into the past, present, or future. Due to its transparent nature, a natural gemstone called Beryllium Aluminum Silicate (
Beryl), was often used in the divination process. Scottish Highlanders termed these objects "stones of power." Though early crystal balls were made from Beryl, they were later replaced by rock crystal, an even more transparent rock.
16th century central Europe
Nostradamus is believed to have employed a small bowl of water as a scrying aid.
Dr
John Dee (1527–1608, dates vary) was a noted British mathematician, astronomer, astrologer, geographer, and consultant to
Queen Elizabeth I. Dee and his assistant
Edward Kelley employed crystal ball. The crystal ball and wax tablets used by Dee and Kelley are on display at the
British Museum in
London.
Religion and mythology
Judaism and Christianity
According to the
Hebrew Bible,
Urim and Thummim (Variously translated from Hebrew as "Revelation and Truth" or "Lights and Perfections".) were used as a divination process. Many scholars believe they were two or twelve crystals used for scrying, but there are also other interpretations. The earliest reference is in Exodus 28:30, when Aaron carried them with him as High Priest.
Deuteronomy 18:10-11 says, ''There shall not be found among you... one who uses divination, one who practices witchcraft, or one who interprets omens or a sorcerer, or one who casts a spell, or a medium, or a spiritist, or one who calls up the dead.'' Christianity is traditionally against all forms of divination, historically condemned by the Catholic church and some specific forms even forbidden under pain of excommunication.
Ancient Persia
The
Shahnameh, a semi-historical epic work written in the late 10th century, gives a description of what was called the
Cup of Jamshid or ''Jaam-e Jam'', used in pre-Islamic Persia, which was used by wizards and practitioners of the esoteric sciences for observing all the seven layers of the universe. The cup also contained an elixir of immortality.
In folklore
Rituals that involve many of the same acts as scrying in
ceremonial magic are also preserved in folklore form. A formerly widespread tradition held that young women, gazing into a mirror in a darkened room (often on
Hallowe'en) could catch a glimpse of their future husband's face in the mirror — or a
skull personifying Death, if their fate was to die before they married.
Another form of the tale, involving the same actions of gazing into a mirror in a darkened room, is used as a
supernatural dare in the tale of "
Bloody Mary". Here, the motive is usually to test the adolescent gazers' mettle against a malevolent
witch or
ghost, in a ritual designed to allow the scryers' easy escape if the visions summoned prove too frightening.
[Bill Ellis, ''Lucifer Ascending: The Occult in Folklore and Popular Cultur''e (University of Kentucky, 2004). ISBN 0-8131-2289-9]
Modern uses
The Dr. John Dee Memorial Theater of the Mind research institute founded by the parapsychologist Raymond Moody utilizes crystallomancy to allow people to experience an altered state of consciousness with the intention of invoking apparitions of the dead.
In the TV series Babylon 5, Telepath Alfred Bester uses a form of scrying in the episode The Corps is Mother, the Corps is Father.
Contemporary mass media, such as films, often depict scrying using a crystal ball, stereotypically used by an old gypsy woman.
In Christopher Paolini's fictional universe of Alagasiea (Eragon) Dragon Riders can use scrying through shiny objects to see things they have seen before
In J. R. R. Tolkien's fictional universe of Middle-earth (such as ''The Lord of the Rings''), the Palantír is a stone that allows seeing any what any other Palantír sees, and the Mirror of Galadriel is used as a type of scrying device used to see visions of the past, present, or future.
In the television show Charmed the main characters use crystals suspended over maps to scry for people. This is different from other forms because it just shows location and not a picture.
Method of scrying
The visions that scryers say they see may come from variations in the medium. If the medium is water (hydromancy), then the visions may come from the color, ebb and flow, or ripples produced by pebbles dropped in a pool. If the medium is a crystal ball, the visions may come from the tiny inclusions, web-like faults, or the cloudy glow within the ball under low light (e.g. candlelight).
One method of scrying using a crystal ball involves a self-induced trance. Initially, the medium serves as a focus for the attention, removing unwanted thoughts from the mind in the same way as a mantra. Once this stage is achieved, the scryer begins a free association with the perceived images suggested. The technique of deliberately looking for and declaring these initial images aloud, however trivial or irrelevant they may seem to the conscious mind, is done with the intent of deepening the trance state, wherein the scryer hears their own disassociated voice affirming what is seen within the concentrated state in a kind of feedback loop. This process culminates in the achievement of a final and desired end stage in which rich visual images and dramatic stories seem to be projected within the medium itself, or directly within the mind's eye of the scryer, like an inner movie. This overall process reputedly allows the scryer to "see" relevant events or images within the chosen medium.
To start practicing scrying, you can try making your own
psychomanteum, a scrying room.
Notes
References and further reading
Psychomanteum
''A Symbolic Representation of the Universe: Derived by Doctor John Dee Through the Scrying of Sir Edward Kelly'' ~Aleister Crowley, Adrian Axwirthy
''Crystal Gazing: Study in the History, Distribution, Theory and Practice of Scrying'' ~Theodore Besterman
''Scrying for Beginners: Tapping into the Supersensory Powers of Your Subconscious'' ~Donald Tyson
''Crystal Gazing: Its History and Practice with a Discussion on the Evidence for Telepathic Scrying'' ~Northcote W. Thomas
Andrew Lang, Crystal visions, savage and civilised , ''The Making of Religion'', Chapter V, Longmans, Green, and C°, London, New York and Bombay, 1900, pp. 83-104.
http://www.themystica.com/mystica/articles/c/captromancy_or_enoptromancy.html
http://www.agnosticwitch.catcara.com/divindex-part1.htm
Armand Delatte, ''La catoptromancie grecque et ses dérivés'' (1932)
Hydromancy
Scrying and Divination Methods
Techniques and methods of Hydromancy
Andrew Lang, Crystal visions, savage and civilised , ''The Making of Religion'', Chapter V, Longmans, Green, and C°, London, New York and Bombay, 1900, pp. 83-104.
http://skepdic.com/scrying.html
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