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Divination Overview

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Jaymes

The cake is a lie
Divination

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.


Divination is the practice of ascertaining information from supernatural sources. If a distinction is to be made with fortune-telling, divination has a formal or ritual and often social character, usually in a religious context; while fortune-telling is a more everyday practice for personal purposes. Advocates say there is plenty of anecdotal evidence for the efficacy of divination. Divination is a universal cultural phenomenon which anthropologists have observed as being present in many religions and cultures in all ages up to the present day.
Julian Jaynes categorized divination according to the following types:


  • Omens and omen texts. "The most primitive, clumsy, but enduring method...is the simple recording of sequences of unusual or important events." (1976:236) Chinese history offers scrupulously documented occurrences of strange births, the tracking of natural phenomena, and other data. Chinese governmental planning relied on this method of forecasting for long-range strategy. It is not unreasonable to assume that modern scientific inquiry began with this kind of divination; Joseph Needham's work considered this very idea.
  • Sortilege. This consists of the casting of lots whether with sticks, stones, bones, beans, or some other item. Modern playing cards and board games developed from this type of divination.
  • Augury. Divination that ranks a set of given possibilities. It can be qualitative (such as shapes, proximities, etc.) Dowsing (a form of rhabdomancy) developed from this type of divination. The Romans in classical times used Etruscan methods of augury such as hepatoscopy (actually a form of extispicy). Haruspices examined the livers of sacrificed animals.
  • Spontaneous. An unconstrained form of divination, free from any particular medium, and actually a generalization of all types of divination. The answer comes from whatever object the diviner happens to see or hear. Some Christians and members of other religions use a form of bibliomancy: they ask a question, rifle the pages of their holy book, and take as their answer the first passage their eyes light upon. Other forms of spontaneous divination include reading auras and New Age methods of Feng Shui such as "intuitive" and Fuzion.
Methods of Divination (incomplete)


  • Aeromancy (by atmospheric conditions)
  • Alectryomancy (by rooster)
  • Aleuromancy (by flour, including fortune cookies): (Note: Divination by fortune cookies is also a form of Stichomancy, see below)
  • Alomancy (by salt)
  • Alphitomancy (by barley)
  • Anemoscopy (by wind)
  • Anthropomancy (by human sacrifice)
  • Apantomancy (by seeing animals)
  • Arithmancy (by numerology)
  • Astragalomancy (by dice; see also Cleromancy)
  • Astrology (by celestial bodies)
  • Astro-Numerology (through an integration of Astrology and Numerology)
  • Astro-Tarot (through an integration of Astrology and Tarot)
  • Austromancy (by wind and clouds)
  • Axiomancy (by axes)
  • Belomancy (by arrows)
  • Bibliomancy (by books, especially the Bible; see also Stichomancy)
  • Biorhythms divination
  • Botanomancy (by burning plants)
  • Capnomancy (by smoke)
  • Cartomancy (by cards, e.g., playing cards, tarot cards, and non-tarot oracle cards; see also Taromancy)
  • Catoptromancy (by mirrors)
  • Causimomancy (by burning)
  • Cephalomancy (by skulls)
  • Ceraunoscopy (by thunder and lightning)
  • Ceromancy, or ceroscopy (by placing melted wax into cold water)
  • Chaomancy (by aerial visions)
  • Cheiromancy, or palmistry (by palms) where the grooves of the hand are interpreted as signs.
  • Chirognomy (by hands)
  • Cleromancy (by casting lots or by bones; including divination by use of dice or dominoes; For divination by use of dice, see also Astragalomancy)
  • Clidomancy, or cleidomancy (by keys)
  • Coffee Grounds Divination, Coffee Tasseography: see Tasseography
  • Cometomancy (by comet tails)
  • Coscinomancy (by hanging sieves)
  • Critomancy (by barley cakes)
  • Cromniomancy (by onion sprouts)
  • Crystallomancy/Scrying (by crystals or other reflecting objects)
  • Cybermancy (via computer oracles)
  • Cyclomancy (by wheels)
  • Daphnomancy (by burning laurel wreaths)
  • Demonomancy (by demons)
  • Dice divination (see also Astragalomancy and Cleromancy)
  • Dominoes divination (see also Cleromancy)
  • Empyromancy (by burning)
  • Extispicy (from the exta of sacrificed animals)
  • Favomancy (by beans; a form of cleromancy)
  • Floriography (the language of flowers)
  • Geomancy (by earth), includes Feng Shui divination
  • Geloscopy (by laughter)
  • Graphology (by handwriting)
  • Gyromancy (by dizziness)
  • Hepatoscopy, or haruspication or hepatomancy (by liver)
  • Hippomancy (by horses)
  • Hydromancy (by water)
  • I Ching divination (ancient Chinese divination using I Ching): (However, as performed by some diviners with heavy reliance on an accompanying I Ching manual, this is, in effect, also a form of Bibliomancy/Stichomancy)
  • Icthyomancy (by fish)
  • Lampadomancy (by light)
  • Lecanomancy (by a basin of water)
  • Libanomancy (by incense)
  • Literomancy (by a letter in a given written language)
  • Lithomancy (by precious stones)
  • Mahjong divination (by Mahjong tiles)
  • Margaritomancy (by bouncing pearls)
  • Metagnomy (by visions)
  • Meteormancy (by meteors)
  • Metoposcopy (by foreheads)
  • Moleosophy (by blemishes)
  • Myomancy (by rodent behaviour)
  • Myrmomancy (by ant behaviour)
  • Nephomancy (by clouds)
  • Nggàm (by spiders or crabs)
  • Numerology (by numbers)
  • Oculomancy (by eyes)
  • Oinomancy (by wine)
  • Omphalomancy (by umbilical chords)
  • Oneiromancy (by dreams)
  • Onomancy (by names)
  • Onychomancy (by fingernails)
  • Oomantia, or ooscopy or ovomancy (by eggs)
  • Ophiomancy (by snakes)
  • Oracle-books divination (e.g., Chinese: I Ching (Book of Changes), Ling Ch'i Ching (Spiritual Chess Classic), I Lin (Forest of Change), T'ai Hsüan Ching (Canon of the Supreme Mystery); African: Ifá; Western: Sabian Symbols): See also Stichomancy/Bibliomancy
  • Orniscopy, or orinthomancy (by birds of flight)
  • Ouija board divination
  • Palmistry (by palm inspection)
  • Pegomancy (by spring water)
  • Phrenology (by the shape of one's head)
  • Phyllorhodomancy (by rose petals)
  • Plastromancy (by cracks formed by heat on a turtle's plastron)
  • Pyromancy, or pyroscopy (by fire)
  • Rhabdomancy (by rod or stick)
  • Rhapsodomancy (by poetry)
  • Runecasting (by Runes)
  • Scatomancy (by droppings, usually animal)
  • Scapulimancy (by bovine or caprid scapulae, i.e. shoulder bones)
  • Sciomancy (by spirits)
  • Sideromancy (by burning of straw)
  • Slinneanachd (by animals' shoulderblades)
  • Spodomancy (by ash)
  • Stichomancy (by books/by lines; see also Bibliomancy)
  • Stolisomancy (by clothing)
  • Taromancy (by specially designed cards: Tarot; see also Cartomancy)
  • Tasseography (or Tasseomancy) (by tea leaves or by coffee grounds): From French tasse [cup], which in turn derives from Arabic tassa [cup].
  • Tephramancy (by bark ashes)
  • Tiromancy (by cheese)
  • Xylomancy (by burning wood)
 
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