MAFFEI, Francesco Scipione
WITCHCRAFT AND THE ENLIGHTENMENT
MAFFEI, Francesco Scipione. Arte magica dileguata
Verona, Agostino Carattoni, 1750.
Excellent copy of the second edition of this influential treatise against C16 and C17 theories of witchcraft. After studying at the Jesuit college in Parma, Francesco Scipione Maffei (1675-1755) served as officer in the Bavarian army and later returned to Italy. His intellectual production encompassed plays, an illustrated history of Verona, essays on medieval palaeography (based on Jean Mabillon s ground-breaking theories), treatises on politics and religion. Maffei adhered to the Enlightened Catholicism upheld by Ludovico Antonio Muratori, whereby faith and ritual were reassessed with new attention to the sound principle of reason so dear to the European Enlightenment. Arte magica dileguata criticised traditional notions of witchcraft and magic calling wizards tricksters , magic a chimera and witches Sabbaths laughable matter to all who are not stolid . With the help of ancient and more recent authorities, Maffei debunked the deep wisdom and knowledge assigned to witches and occult sciences and any positive correlation between supernatural spirits and human signs, acts or words. Even he had been supposed a wizard whilst experimenting with electricity, later discovering that lightning originates on earth and not in the sky. How could Christians, Maffei wonders, ever believe that God would wilfully allow the Devil to damage, hurt and even kill humans by means of magic? The work sparked heated debates in the form of 14 pamphlets theories which Maffei summarised and discredited in Arte magica annichilata in 1754.
Not in Caillet.