Hermes Trismegistus
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- Also spelled:
- Hermes Trismegistos
Hermes Trismegistus, the Greek name applied to the Egyptian god Thoth as the reputed author or source of the Hermetic writings, works of revelation on occult subjects and theology.
Thoth was the scribe of the gods, the inventor of writing, and the patron of all the arts dependent on writing, including medicine, astronomy, and magic. At least as early as Herodotus, Greeks had identified him with their god Hermes, and by the 3rd century bce the identification was official. On the Rosetta Stone (196 bce) Hermes “the great, the great” is evidently Thoth. The epithet Trismegistus (Greek: “thrice-greatest”) occurs only rarely outside the Hermetic texts. It represents a development from the Egyptian aa aa (“great, great”; that is, “greatest”), which is found as an epithet of Thoth in late hieroglyphics.
The writings ascribed to Hermes-Thoth fall into two main classes: “popular” Hermetism dealt with astrology and the other occult sciences, and “learned” Hermetism concerned itself with theology and philosophy. From the Renaissance until the end of the 19th century little attention was paid to the popular Hermetic literature. More recent study has shown that its development preceded that of the learned Hermetism and that it reflects ideas and beliefs that were widely held in the early Roman Empire and are therefore significant for the religious and intellectual history of the time.
In the Hellenistic Age it was chiefly works on astrology which were ascribed to Hermes; to these were later added treatises on medicine, alchemy, and magic. The concept which underlies astrology, that the Cosmos constitutes a unity and that all parts of it are interdependent, is basic also to the other pseudosciences. To make this principle effective in practice (and Hermetic “science,” unlike Aristotelianism, was intensely utilitarian), it was necessary to know the laws of sympathy and antipathy by which the parts of the universe were related. Since these assumed affinities did not in fact exist and hence could not be discovered by ordinary scientific methods, recourse was had to divine revelation. There was a growing distrust of traditional Greek rationalism and a breaking down of the distinction between science and religion. Hermes-Thoth was but one, if perhaps the most important, of the gods and prophets (chiefly of Middle Eastern origin) to whom knowledge seekers turned for a divinely revealed wisdom.
The theological writings are represented chiefly by the 17 treatises of the Corpus Hermeticum, by extensive fragments in Stobaeus, and by a Latin translation of the Asclepius, preserved among the works of Apuleius. These date probably from the first three centuries ce. All are marked by a sincere piety of a mystical type, but there is no single doctrine which is consistently set forth, and it is unlikely that there was any well-defined Hermetic community or “church.” Though the setting is Egyptian, the philosophy, like the language, is Greek.
Hermetism was extensively cultivated by the Arabs, and through them it reached and influenced such men as Albertus Magnus in the West. There are frequent allusions to Hermes Trismegistus in late medieval and Renaissance literature.