Die Prinzipien, die die Zahlen regieren, sollten die Prinzipien alles wahren Existierenden sein; und weil Zahlen die Hauptbestandteile der mathematischen Mengen sind und zur gleichen Zeit viele Analogien zu verschiedenen Realitäten darstellen, wurde abgeleitete, dass die Elemente der Zahlen die Elemente der Realitäten wären. Von Pythagoras selbst wird angenommen, dass die Bewohner Europas ihm die erste Lehre über die Eigenschaften der Zahlen, die Grundsätze der Musik und die Physik verdanken; aber es gibt Hinweise, dass er Zentralasien besucht hatte und dort die mathematischen Ideen, die die Grundlage seiner Lehre bilden, erlangt hatte. Die Denkweisen, die von Pythagoras eingeführt wurden und von seinem Nachfolger Jamblicus und andere weiterverfolgt wurden, wurden später unter den Titeln der „italienischen Schule“ oder der „dorischen Schule“ bekannt.
William Wynn Westcott—who usually published as W. Wynn Westcott or W.W. Westcott and occasionally under the motto Sapere Aude—was a coroner, Theosophist, and Freemason who was a leader in the Societas Rosicruciana in Anglia and went on to co-found the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, later remaining involved with the breakaway group Stella Matutina.
The information was good, but really poorly printed. Difficult to follow at times due to the print. If you can overcome that, then there's lots of info to ponder on.
"…The contents are necessarily of a fragmentary character, and have been collected from an immense number of sources; the original matter has been intentionally reduced to the least possible quantity, so as to obtain space for the inclusion of the utmost amount of ancient, quaint, and occult learning. [….] My great difficulty has been to supply information mystic enough to match the ideal of the work, and yet not so esoteric as to convey truths which Adepts have still concealed.” – William Wynn Westcott, from the 1890 Preface
“I am prepared to find that critics will declare this volume to be an undigested collection of heterogeneous information, still I prefer to leave the data in their present form; for there is a scheme of instruction running through it, which will be recognized by students of certain schools….” – William Wynn Westcott, from the 1902 Preface
[this book contains the prefaces to all 3 printed editions of 1890, 1902, and 1911]
In his own words above, the author of this book (originally published in 1890) basically provides the essential thrust of the criticism I would have made myself, today, over 130 years later.
This book probably contains at least a handful of fascinating tidbits to intrigue any reader, even one with only a casual or no occult background… But that being said, even at only 100 pages, reading this book cover to cover is like reading a religious math textbook [ such a thing probably doesn’t actually exist, but if it did, this might be how it would feel ]. Now granted, as a reader of much Victorian occult literature, I understand that much of the period’s work was attempting a syncretism of ancient material (such as Egyptian myth) with Judaism, Christianity, and the (at the time) very new (to the West) mystic systems of the Far East.
As expected, the author’s ways of referring to these cultures feels dated although never comes across as problematic; plenty of other texts from this period can, occasionally, throw a whammy of a racist curveball at the modern reader (again, published 1890). The author, Westcott, mostly comes across as interested/open-minded of other cultures here. Mostly the noticeable things were in the spelling/ antiquated terminology of things like ‘Hindoo’ and ‘Mahometan’ (which I can only imagine is meant to be ‘Mohammedan’ – we would just say Muslim today). And since this is a print-on-demand book, as is sadly rather common, it is filled with typos - for example, in the chapter on the Number 10, the number '10' is misprinted as the word 'to' probably half the time and this makes it really annoying to read (and you’d think accuracy would especially be important when dealing with anything mathematical, especially when you’ve had 100+ years to proof-read and correct a small book) – but I digress.
If you’re not aware, Dr. William Wynn Westcott was one of the 3 founding members of the (in)famous Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, a ‘secret’ society of magick and mysticism whose influence really can’t be understated on the sort of renaissance of esoterica that it inspired. This is only the first book I have read by Westcott, although I am much more familiar with the writings/translations by another Golden Dawn founder, S.L. MacGregor Mathers. So, I do not mean to judge Westcott entirely on this one work. I also plan to read his translation of the Sepher Yetzirah. But as for this one, “Numbers – Their Occult Power and Mystic Virtues” – I have to say it is inferior in every way to something like “777 and Other Qabalistic Writings of Aleister Crowley” if you’re interested in numbers / gematria / Kabbalah, etc. I highly recommend that instead. This book by Westcott really won’t make a lasting impact, like I said, beyond a passing reaction to some random fact. You might say “Oh wow that’s interesting,” and then move on and never think about it again. -------------------------------------- follow mother_lachrymarvm on instagram for occult content and more... https://www.instagram.com/mother_lach...
If not especially organized (something the author admits to), this book is very informative. The information given is often very interesting. Ultimately, though, it may not be terribly useful for my purposes. I’d like to be proven wrong about it, so I’ll keep it on hand to reference should the need arise.
This book is a train wreck of information. It’s like throwing numbers at you... There needs to be a better way to write the information without the level of confusion... or maybe its me??