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And what is an example of how each can be used by a witch.

2007-12-09 16:12:29 · 5 answers · asked by HoneyLuv 2 in Social Science Anthropology

5 answers

In homeopathic magic, the person performing the spell will act out what he wants to happen. A hunter will make a model of the animal he is hunting. The concept is he has a hope and wants to make that hope a reality.

Contagious magic comes in two parts. One is the use of amulets or lucky charms. As example Bruce Jenner wore his lucky socks in the Olympics. They were floppy and repeatedly darned but he believed in them. The other part is the belief things like fingernails or hair can be used to influence the person. You see this in Harry Potter when the heroes take hair from the people they want to take the shape of. Once gets a cat hair by mistake

2007-12-09 17:03:47 · answer #1 · answered by icabod 7 · 0 2

Contagious Magic

2016-09-28 23:59:31 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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RE:
What is the difference between contagious magic and homepathic magic?
And what is an example of how each can be used by a witch.

2015-08-13 21:16:22 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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This is something that I actually know a lot about, since I've studied Mental Fascination. Sympathetic Magic demands OBEDIENCE within the person of whom the spell is being placed upon. Contagious Magic, is when the spell has been placed upon the individual with the intention that it should spread like a virus from person to person. Association Repetition Imitation Obedience ARIO is the four main aspects of Mental Magic or Mental Fascination.

2016-04-01 08:35:52 · answer #4 · answered by Julie 4 · 0 0

Homeopathic, or sympathetic or imitative, magic, is the idea that a representation of something can influence the real world, as in voodoo dolls.
Contagious magic requires an object that has come in contact with the individual to whom the magic will be directed.

2007-12-10 15:48:19 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

detailed defination of both majics are as follows:

contagious magic :
contagious
Capable of being transmitted from animal to animal.


c. abortion — see brucellosis.
c. agalactia — acute mastitis, arthritis and ophthalmitis with painful joint swelling in goats and sheep caused by Mycoplasma agalactiae. Occurs on every continent but outbreaks and severe disease occur particularly in the Mediterranean area and Africa. A triad of mastitis, arthritis and ocular disease sometimes accompanied with respiratory disease, abortion and diarrhea. Mycoplasma agalactiae is the main causal agent in sheep and goats, but M. agalactiae, M. mycoides subsp. mycoides large colony type and M. capricolum subsp. capricolum produce a similar if not identical clinical presentation. The udder is permanently damaged and many animals die.
c. aphtha — see foot-and-mouth disease.
c. avian epithelioma — see fowlpox.
c. bovine pleuropneumonia — a highly infectious septicemia with a principal localization in the lungs, caused by Mycoplasma mycoides var. mycoides. It occurs only in cattle. The cardinal signs are cough, fever, dyspnea, pleuritic friction sounds and gurgling breath sounds on auscultation of the lungs. The case fatality rate is high. An important epidemiological characteristic is the common occurrence of carrier animals with sequestra of infected material in the lungs.
c. bovine pyelonephritis — infection of the urinary tract of cattle by Corynebacterium cystitidis with lesions in the kidney, ureters and bladder. Diagnostic signs are the passage of urine containing blood or discrete red cells and pus, dysuria and palpable abnormalities per rectum of affected organs. Culture of urine confirms the diagnosis.
c. caprine/ovine pleuropneumonia — highly infectious and fatal pleuropneumonia of goats and sheep caused by Mycoplasma capricolum subsp. capripneumoniae previously known as mycoplasma strain F38. The clinical picture includes a short course with cough, dyspnea, and abnormal lung and pleural sounds on auscultation.
c. ecthyma — see contagious ecthyma.
c. epididymitis and vaginitis — see epivag.
equine c. acne — see canadian horsepox.
c. equine metritis — a highly contagious venereal disease resident in mares and transmitted by the stallion, which shows no clinical signs. It is caused by Taylorella equigenitalis. Clinically there is a profuse purulent discharge from the vulva about a week after service, endometritis and cervicitis. Also associated with infertility and abortion. So highly contagious that most countries have strict control procedures to prevent entry or spread when detected.
c. equine pustular dermatitis — see canadian horsepox.
c. mastitis — see mastitis.
c. ophthalmia — see contagious ophthalmia.
c. ovine foot rot — see ovine footrot.
c. ovine/caprine ophthalmia — see contagious ophthalmia.
c. ovine pustular dermatitis — see contagious ecthyma.
c. porcine pyoderma — an infectious disease of young sucking pigs characterized by pustules on the face and neck from which streptococci and staphylococci are isolatable. The disease develops from infection of bite wounds inflicted by piglets whose needle teeth have not been removed.
c. pustular stomatitis — see horsepox.
c. pyoderma — see exudative epidermitis.
c. venereal infection of sheep — see ulcerative dermatosis.
c. venereal tumor — see canine transmissible venereal tumor

2007-12-09 16:26:17 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 1 3

i can catch magic? just like a cold?! :| hide me! i dont actually believe in magic, its all illusions, just like santa....

2007-12-09 17:21:23 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 3

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