Secrecy and Revelation

March 26, 2015 - March 28, 2015
Renaissance Society of America

Berlin
Germany

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In book three of De occulta philosophia, Agrippa von Nettesheim advises that whoever studies the divine, should “keep silence and constantly conceal within the secret closets of your Religious breast, so holy a determination; for … to publish to the knowledge of many a speech thoroughly filled with so great majesty of the Deity is a sign of irreligious spirit.”

 Agrippa articulates here a paradox in representations of divine knowledge. He posits that such knowledge should and even must be kept secret within the intimacy of one’s own heart; the attempt to communicate it can only express its falsity or absence. This may be because knowledge and experiences of the divine ontologically resist representation—they are by their very nature non-discursive; or it may be that silence is an epistemological condition for laying claim to possessing such knowledge.


Daniel Kazmaier ([email protected]) and Anthony Mahler ([email protected]).

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