Scrying also referred to as "seeing" or "peeping," is a practice rooted in divination and fortune-telling. It involves gazing into a medium, hoping to receive significant messages or visions that could offer personal guidance, prophecy, revelation, or inspiration. The practice lacks a definitive distinction from other forms of clairvoyance or divination but generally relies on visions within the chosen medium. Unlike augury, which interprets observable events, or divination, which follows standardized rituals, scrying's impressions arise within the medium itself.
The terminology and methods of scrying are diverse and lack
a standardized structure. Practitioners coin terms such as "crystallomancy," "spheromancy," or "catoptromancy," naming
practices based on the medium or technique employed. These practices have been
reinvented throughout history, spanning cultures and regions. Scrying media
encompass reflective, refractive, or luminescent surfaces like crystals,
mirrors, water, fire, or smoke. Some practitioners even close their eyes,
engaging in "eyelid scrying."
Methods of scrying often induce self-induced trances, using
media like crystal balls or even modern technology like smartphones.
Practitioners enter a focused state that reduces mental clutter, enabling the
emergence of visual images. These initial images, however trivial, are
amplified during the trance. Some scryers claim to hear their voices affirming
what they see, creating a mental feedback loop.
Throughout history, various traditions and cultures have
practiced scrying as a means of revealing the past, present, or future. The
practice involves diverse media, from reflective surfaces to shimmering
mirages, and is often accompanied by rituals inducing altered states of
consciousness. Despite its popularity in occult circles and its portrayal in
media, scrying lacks empirical support and is met with skepticism from the
scientific community.
Definitions and
terminology
There is no definitive distinction between scrying and other
aids to clairvoyance, augury, or divination, but roughly speaking, scrying
depends on impressions of visions in the medium of choice. Ideally in this
respect it differs from augury, which relies on interpretations of objectively
observable objects or events (such as flight of birds); from divination, which
depends on standardized processes or rituals; from oneiromancy, which depends
on the interpretation of dreams; from the physiological effects of psychoactive
drugs; and from clairvoyance, which notionally does not depend on objective
sensory stimuli. Clairvoyance in other words, is regarded as amounting in
essence to extrasensory perception.
Scrying is neither a single, clearly defined, nor formal
discipline and there is no uniformity in the procedures, which repeatedly and
independently have been reinvented or elaborated in many ages and regions.
Furthermore, practitioners and authors coin terminology so arbitrarily, and
often artificially, that no one system of nomenclature can be taken as
authoritative and definitive. Commonly terms in use are Latinizations or Hellenization’s
of descriptions of the media or activities. Examples of names coined for
crystal gazing include 'crystallomancy',
'spheromancy', and 'catoptromancy'.
As an example of the looseness of such terms, catoptromancy should refer more
specifically to scrying by use of mirrors or other reflective objects rather
than by crystal gazing. Other names that have been coined for the use of
various scrying media include anthracomancy for glowing coals, turifumy for
scrying into smoke, and hydromancy for scrying into water. There is no clear
limit to the coining and application of such terms and media.
Scrying has been practiced in many cultures in the belief
that it can reveal the past, present, or future. Some practitioners assert that
visions that come when one stares into the media are from the subconscious or
imagination, while others say that they come from gods, spirits, devils, or the
psychic mind, depending on the culture and practice. There is neither any
systematic body of empirical support for any such views in general however, nor
for their respective rival merits; are individual preferences in such matters
arbitrary.
Media
The media most commonly used in scrying are reflective,
refractive, translucent, or luminescent surfaces or objects such as crystals,
stones, or glass in various shapes such as crystal balls, mirrors, reflective
black surfaces such as obsidian, water surfaces, fire, or smoke, but there is
no special limitation on the preferences or prejudices of the scryer; some may
stare into pitch dark, clear sky, clouds, shadows, or light patterns against
walls, ceilings, or pond beds. Some prefer glowing coals or shimmering mirages.
Some simply close their eyes, notionally staring at the insides of their own
eyelids, and speak of "eyelid
scrying".
Scrying media generally either suggest images directly (such
as figures in fire, fluid eddies or clouds), or else they distort or reflect
the observers' vision confusingly, in the manner to be seen in crystals or
transparent balls. Such fancies have long been satirized by sceptics, for
example in Hamlet III.
Do you see yonder
cloud that's almost in shape of a camel?
By the mass, and 'tis
like a camel, indeed.
Methinks it is like a
weasel.
It is backed like a
weasel.
Or like a whale?
Very like a whale.
Alternatively the medium might reduce visual stimuli to
thresholds below which any clear impressions could interfere with fancied
visions or free association. Examples include darkened reflections of night
sky, or plain shadow or darkness.
Methods
Modern-day scrying
experience
One class of methods of scrying involves a self-induced
trance, with or without the aid of a medium such as a crystal ball or, even via
modern technology such as a smartphone among other things. Some say that the
sensation is drug-like, some that various drugs can potentiate the experience;
others categorically exclude any connection with drug usage, claiming that it
invalidates any images observed.
Many practitioners say that the scrying medium initially
serves to focus attention, removing unwanted thoughts from the mind in much the
same way as repetition of a mantra, concentration on a mandala, inducing the
relaxation response, or possibly by hypnosis. Once this stage is achieved, the
scryer may begin free association with the perceived images. The technique of
deliberately looking for and declaring these initial images aloud, however
trivial or irrelevant they may seem to the conscious mind, attempts to deepen
the trance state. In this state some scryers hear their own disassociated
voices affirming what they see, in a mental feedback loop.
Practitioners apply the process until they achieve a
satisfactory state of perception in which rich visual images and dramatic
stories seem to be projected within the medium itself, or in the mind's eye of
the scryer. They claim that the technique allows them to see relevant events or
images within the chosen medium.
Nostradamus practiced scrying; he would stare into a bowl of
water or a "magic mirror"
to see the future while he was in trance.
Religion and
mythology
Hebrew Bible
Divination is briefly mentioned in chapter 44 of the Book of Genesis. A silver chalice or
cup is deliberately planted in Benjamin's sack when he leaves Egypt, later to
be used as evidence of theft. It is revealed the cup belongs to Joseph, the
vizier of Egypt, whose steward claimed was used for drinking and divination
during the course of his accusation. This is mentioned to reinforce his
disguise as an Egyptian nobleman. Nothing in the book of Genesis indicates that
Joseph actually used the cup for divination.
Ancient Persia
The Shahnameh, a 10th-century epic work narrating historical
and mythological past of Persia, gives a description of what was called the Cup
of Jamshid (Jaam-e Jam), which was used by the ancient (mythological) Persian
kings for observing all of the seven layers of the universe. The cup was said
to contain an elixir of immortality, but without cogent explanation for any
relevance of the elixir to the scrying function.
Latter Day Saint Movement
In the late 1820s, Joseph
Smith founded the Latter Day Saint
movement based in part on what was said to be information obtained
miraculously from the reflections of seer stones. Smith had at least three
separate stones, including his favorite, a brown stone he found during
excavation of a neighbor's well. He initially used these stones in various
treasure-digging quests in the early 1820s, placing the stone inside the crown
of his hat and putting his face in the hat to read what he believed were the
miraculous reflections from the stone. Smith also said that he had access to a
separate set of spectacles composed of seer stones, which he called the Urim and Thummim. He said that, through
these stones, he could translate the golden plates that are the stated source
of the Book of Mormon.
In folklore
Divination rituals such as the one depicted on this early
20th-century Halloween greeting card, where a woman stares into a mirror in a
darkened room to catch a glimpse of the face of her future husband while a
witch lurks in the shadows, may be one origin of the Bloody Mary legend.
Rituals that involve many acts similar to scrying in
ceremonial magic are retained in the form of folklore and superstition. A
formerly widespread tradition held that young women gazing into a mirror in a
darkened room (often on Halloween) 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.
Folklore superstitions such as those just mentioned, are not
to be distinguished clearly from traditional tales, within which the reality of
such media are taken for granted. In the fairytale of Snow White for example, the jealous queen consults a magic mirror,
which she asks "Magic mirror on the
wall / Who is the fairest of them all?", to which the mirror always
replies "You, my queen, are fairest
of all." But when Snow White
reaches the age of seven, she becomes as beautiful as the day, and when the
queen asks her mirror, it responds: "Queen,
you are full fair, 'tis true, but Snow White is fairer than you."
There is no uniformity among believers, in how seriously they prefer to take
such tales and superstitions.
In Western
esotericism
The Hermetic Order of
the Golden Dawn (1888-c.1902 in its original form) taught their own version
of scrying that could be done individually or as a group. It emphasized three
levels:
"Scrying in the
Spirit Vision" with an emphasis on inner seeing by focusing on a
symbol or mirror,
"Traveling in the
Spirit Vision" involves going to the place seen and interacting with
what is found there,
"Rising on the
Planes" focuses on a spiritual process (involving scrying via the Tree
of Life) that has the potential to elevate consciousness to the level of the
Divine.
Scientific reception
Scrying is not supported by science as a method of
predicting the future or obtaining information unavailable to empirical
investigation. Some critics consider it to be a pseudoscience. Skeptics
consider scrying to be the result of delusion or wishful thinking.
Psychologist Leonard
Zusne suggested that scrying images are hallucinations or hypnagogic
experiences.
A 2010 paper in the journal Perception identified one specific method of reliably reproducing a
scrying illusion in a mirror and hypothesized that it "might be caused by low level fluctuations in the stability of
edges, shading and outlines affecting the perceived definition of the face,
which gets over-interpreted as ‘someone else’ by the face recognition
system."
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