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Prorok magnetyczny, czyli Andrzej Towiański wobec mesmeryzmu

Publication date: 20.12.2011

Studia Religiologica, 2011, Volume 44 , pp. 147 - 159

https://doi.org/10.4467/20844077SR.11.011.0255

Authors

Małgorzata Kowalczyk
Uniwersytet Jagielloński w Krakowie
, Poland
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Titles

Prorok magnetyczny, czyli Andrzej Towiański wobec mesmeryzmu

Abstract

The magnetic prophet, or Andrzej Towiański and mesmerism

Andrzej Towiański (1799–1878), philosopher, Messianist and religious leader, is one of the most interesting figures of 19th-century Polish emigre circles. As a result of the religious revelation he apparently experienced, he began to propagate the need for a Christian revolution for the authentic imitation of Christ. In 1840 he left for France, where he attracted many supporters to his ideas, including Adam Mickiewicz and Juliusz Słowacki. In Paris in 1841 they founded the Circle of God’s Cause, also known as the Circle of Towiańskiites. The author of this paper analyses the influence of the idea of mesmerism on Towiański’s concepts, although he himself firmly denied these influences. The author suggests that Towiański understood magnetism in much broader terms than his contemporaries, and did not want to be associated with the picture of magnetism popular in the social circles of the time; for him it was a practice leading solely to awakening of loving exaltation.

References


Information

Information: Studia Religiologica, 2011, Volume 44 , pp. 147 - 159

Article type: Original article

Titles:

Polish:

Prorok magnetyczny, czyli Andrzej Towiański wobec mesmeryzmu

English:

The magnetic prophet, or Andrzej Towiański and mesmerism

Authors

Uniwersytet Jagielloński w Krakowie
Poland

Published at: 20.12.2011

Article status: Open

Licence: None

Percentage share of authors:

Małgorzata Kowalczyk (Author) - 100%

Article corrections:

-

Publication languages:

Polish

View count: 1748

Number of downloads: 3062

<p> The magnetic prophet, or Andrzej Towiański and mesmerism</p>