Thalassa
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Ok.
Yes, the fear of witchcraft is related to glamour and the evil eye, basically the capacity to charm to change someone to your will and make them do what you want. Witches were feared during the middle ages, reformation, and rennaissance because people were so irrational and primitive passions were so conscious, people were afraid of the witch who would manipulate their wills. Nowadays people think themselves more rational, but the primitive passions are still there, and can be tapped into by someone who excercises fascination and glamour (willingly or not).
View attachment 16484
Black Magic, by William Mortensen
The above image is a typical Mortensen photograph designed to evoke a strong response in onlookers. Could be considered witchcraft in and of itself.![]()
But we're getting sidetracked, since my OP was about how to infleunce and challenge others intellectually, not emotionally. The artist's purpose is to cause reactions, as Marilyn Manson once said. Thats the witch, that tries to affect only the emotional. But I see it as less my own purpose to evoke strong emotions than to cause people to think, and appeal to intellect as opposed to emotion. Where does that leave me? A simple heretic? Where I am going is that maybe witchcraft tries to influence people towards unorthodox (read: not accpeted by society) ends using emotion, passion, fear, and desire where heresy attempts to lead people down the same path through logic and reason. So what is tradionally labelled "heresy" and "witchcraft", their purpose is the same, their means of acheiving that purpose is different.
European tribes, as well as Arabic tribes in the further back Old Testament world, had different religious beliefs than Jews or Christians, then later, Muslims. I doubt many of these people were intentionally trolling the RCC or anyone else, they simply had different spiritual beliefs and rituals, and in the Medieval world especially these cultures lingered strongly even among the churched. In the late 20th century, I grew up with superstition interweaved with Christianity, carried from who knows how far back in European or Native American cultures, beliefs about luck, spirits or "evil." Catholicism always appealed to me because of their Medieval attempt to blend some of those cultural aspects into the church, but of course I know they had strict limits with what they accepted or rejected, and if one took a step too far towards, say,being a Druid, they risked being accused of witchcraft.