The first thirteen chapters follow the thread of the Hermetic way of seeing the world and the most notable individuals practicing this art over the past three millennia. It provides fresh information to enhance our understanding of the Renaissance, the history of science, and the history of human development. But the authors' task is not only that for, as they explain in the introduction, "Hermeticism afforded more than a mere abstract or theoretical understanding, something more than a general philosophical orientation. It also ... enabled one to see how certain of its own essential principles and dynamics had been hijacked and implemented for ultimately venal ends. `Magic', at least in the modern world, emerged as a metaphor for certain insidious kinds of manipulation - for `the art of making things happen' in a fashion inimical to Hermeticism itself."
Thus, the seven chapters of Part Two offer a damning broadside of the way the media, and commercial and political interests work their control over the modern mind and obstruct and obfuscate our pursuit of the truthful and the numinous.
To those who might be surprized by this blend of current affairs with cosmic verities, it should be remembered that Thoth was the god of writing as well as magic. To quote Northrup Frye (in Neil Postman's damning indictment Amusing Ourselves to Death):"...the written word is far more powerful than simply a reminder: it re-creates the past in the present, and gives us, not the familiar remembered thing, but the glittering intensity of the summoned-up hallucination."
In general, the authors' mastery of the material is evident throughout and there are many passages where the writing is almost poetic:"Domains of knowledge which had previously been puddles now became bottomless wells or pools, wherein a researcher could sink for a lifetime, and often drown... The Renaissance concept of encyclopedic knowledge gave way to a plethora of specializations, each of which became ever more divorced and dissociated from all others. Integration was supplanted by fragmentation and the exaltation of fragments. Synthesis was supplanted by analysis - an analysis so intoxicated with its own capacity for dissection that it lost the capacity for reassembling what it had dismantled." (page 251)
My only criticism of the book probably falls to the publishers rather than the authors. Some chapter headings are incongruous with the actual content; for example, the above quote comes from a chapter entitled The Rise of Secret Societies, which really doesn't deal with secret societies at all. Furthermore, readers looking for pragmatic "magician training" will be disappointed despite the subtitle's claim.
However, this can easily be forgiven as Penquin Books not only have supported these authors' important work but have made it available in a low-cost, well-organized, and illustrated edition. Highly recommended.