#22109 by Craig Maxim
Fri Feb 15, 2008 8:25 am
Fri Feb 15, 2008 8:25 am
Guitaranatomy wrote:
Hey, out of curiosity, what is your take on Nostradamus?
You mean whether he was a true seer or not?
Well, he is certainly undeserving of the degree of fame provided him. An entire culture has developed around his personage, until it is nearly religious in nature.
He himself declared in several correspondences that he was NOT a prophet.
The problem with his "Les Propheties" or The Prophecies, which is the main body of work that admirers use, and which has remained in print almost continually since his death, is that the prophecies, written in the form of quatrains (4 verse poems), are exceedingly vague and contain no dates. This method allows future generations to basically fill in the blanks, and apply the quatrains that seem to fit, to events AFTER they have occured.
Since as early as the 17th century it has been discovered that Nostradamous copied much if not most of his "prophecies" from previous authors and works. Plagaerism was not something considered immoral or even criminal in that time, as it is today. Rather than passing things off as his own prophecies though, he likely saw himself as an editor of previous information, culled from various authors, including the Bible, and worked them all together into a cohesive collection of prophecies and warnings for the future.
I think he was something of an opportunist, looking to make a buck.
He had success in printing an almanac and encouraged by that success, branched out into prophecies and also wrote several medical books, and a book on chemistry of sorts, with recipees for medicines and potions and even cosmetics.
I think he was probably very intelligent, charismatic or at least had a good undersanding of psychology, and probably enjoyed to some degree his fortune and fame, and the acclaim and attention it brought him.
It is through the centuries that he has now become a larger than life figure. I doubt, based on the considerable evidence, that he was a truly gifted psychic or seer. He did dabble in the occult, but most likely, rather than receiving many unique visions of his own, he generally borrowed everyone elses, compiled them, and arranged them into quatrains to avoid the horrors of the Inquisition, which he feared could be his fate if he were not cautious and clever.
Sorry if this is disappointing in any way. I know Irminsul hates it when I take the "magic" out of stuff. Translation: Through research and some basic logic, I tend to demystify certain things, and it makes it more difficult to worship at their altar, once the veil is removed and the truth becomes a little more obvious.
But don't despair. We live in a cosmos vast and mysterious enough to be in awe of it's beauty and complexities for millenia to come, without the need to believe in the "rock spirit" or Mother Mary's visage in a PBJ sandwich.
