{"id":28076,"date":"2021-03-17T10:21:07","date_gmt":"2021-03-17T09:21:07","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/?p=28076"},"modified":"2021-12-02T08:58:16","modified_gmt":"2021-12-02T07:58:16","slug":"keplers-witch-trial","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/en\/keplers-witch-trial\/","title":{"rendered":"Kepler\u2019s Witch Trial"},"content":{"rendered":"","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"","protected":false},"author":16,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"inline_featured_image":false,"footnotes":""},"project":[353,800],"project_type":[],"class_list":["post-28076","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","project-online-publications","project-on-the-occult-and-the-supernatural"],"acf":{"bgcolor":"","bgcolor_custom":"","custom_color_css_variable":"","content_type":[{"acf_fc_layout":"content_img","bgcolor":"","bgcolor_custom":"","layout_col_size":6,"img_gallery":false,"img":[28333],"img_gallery_format":""},{"acf_fc_layout":"content_txt","bgcolor":"","bgcolor_custom":"","layout_col_size":8,"txt_cols":"is-1-txtcol","txt":"Massive transformative developments in technology and science, and the brutal suppression of non-Christian beliefs, are the two known poles of an area of conflict in which realities of the early modern era are placed from our current perspective. The births of the natural sciences and the peak of femicides in the form of \u00bbwitch hunts\u00ab fall into this period.\r\n\r\nKatharina Kepler, the mother of the well-known mathematician and astronomer Johannes Kepler, was one of many women prosecuted at that time for being in a pact with the devil and using witchcraft. A brief analysis of this trial's circumstances, together with a wider view on the process of segregation in European systems of thought, questions the proclaimed inambiguity of that time. This text searches for a decolonial approach to\u00a0 history and European self-perception \u2013 following the mention by philosopher Isabelle Stengers that the term \u00bbanimism\u00ab (or \u00bbmagic\u00ab \u2013 note from the author) \u00bbcan hardly be disentangled from pejorative colonialist associations [or] associations with the idea of \u203astages\u2039.\u00ab<sup class=\"is-footnote\">1<\/sup>\r\n\r\nToday, it\u2019s still valid and almost undisputed to take \u00bbthe\u00ab Early Modern Age as a reference period for the birth of Modern Europe. As such, it has become a projection screen, and its achievements are interpreted as pointing beyond its time and space. The Haitian historian Michel-Rolph Trouillot writes about the production of the Renaissance period:\r\n\r\nThe historical itinerary was political, as evidenced by the now well-known names that it evokes \u2013 Columbus, Magellan, Charles V [\u2026] and the turning moments that set its pace [...] These political developments paralleled the emergence of a new symbolic order. The invention of the Americas [...], the simultaneous invention of Europe, the division of the Mediterranean by an imaginary line [\u2026], the westernization of Christianity, and the invention of a Greco-novel past to Western Europe were all part of the process through which Europe became the West. What we call Renaissance, much more an invention in its own right than a rebirth, ushered in a number of philosophical questions to which politicians, theologians, artists, and soldiers provided both concrete and abstract answers. What is Beauty, What is Order? What is the State? But also and above all: What is Man?<sup class=\"is-footnote\">2<\/sup>\r\n\r\nThe hegemony of \u00bbratio\u00ab started in the modern era in Europe and ran parallel to the idea of systematic order. It became one of the widespread ideas about this time that rational laws would ultimately replace the belief in magic and magical thinking and instead install a more relevant, universal order system. Magic has since been regarded as something foreign and other, far removed from Western culture. The very insistence on this clear separation points to a much more difficult mode of thought that has operated in Western and colonial systems of thought for centuries \u2013 that is segregation. What does this mean for the conception of our own history?\r\n\r\nOn closer examination, one can see quite quickly that the picture of the \u00bbratio\u00ab rising in the seventeenth century that replaced the until then predominant magic, is not correct. Practices classified as magic were found in almost all areas of personal and public life. Clairvoyance or divination in jurisdiction and administration, metaphysical considerations as part of (natural) scientific discourse, and the coexistence of faith and superstition even within the churches were nothing unusual. The scientist Johannes Kepler depicts in his biography the simultaneity of many such supposed contradictions. As a mathematician, he proved the laws of the heliocentric solar system and calculated the elliptic orbits of the planets. At the same time, he wrote horoscopes with scientific claims and was convinced that the stars, like the weather, had an influence on us humans. He was a devout Protestant and yet he suspected a force emanating from the sun, the <em>Anima motrix<\/em>, which unfolded throughout the solar system and had an effect on the bodies located there. Like those of many others, the transitions in his thinking were fluid.\r\n\r\nA completely different phenomenon in which transition blurs were the witch trials, which peaked in Kepler\u2019s time. These can be seen as a particular example of intricacy. Here, the objectivity of the institutions science, church, and law interacted in the most absurd way with a diffuse belief in magic. How dangerous the elaborate system was, which outwardly pretended to be objective and inwardly was full of contradictions, and how difficult it was to encounter it, Kepler had to personally experience when a neighbor accused his mother of witchcraft in her hometown of Leonberg and pressed charges. From 1615\u201321, Katharina Kepler had to defend herself against the accusation of witchcraft in civil and criminal proceedings. A neighbor accused her of trying to poison her with a potion, and a child indicated that his arm had become stiff after Katharina had grazed it in passing. Katharina Kepler was threatened with torture and death by fire at the stake. In 1620 Johannes Kepler personally came to W\u00fcrttemberg and took on the defense on behalf of the official lawyer. The danger to his mother was very real. More than 50,000 people were burned between 1550 and 1650 in Europe after court sentences, or died as a result of torture or witch-trial tests during the trials.\r\n\r\nIn his defense, Kepler had sought advice from lawyers and theologians that he knew. They informed him on the current status of relevant disputes. Even if the large number of trials that took place gave the impression that the trials were uncontroversial or at least would have been unquestionably enforced by the authorities, this was not the case. For years, scholars from various disciplines seriously discussed questions such as whether the general rules of procedure should be applied to witch trials, whether animal transformations could really take place and also the suitability of witch-trial tests (German: <em>Hexenprobe<\/em>), such as the ordeal of water. Rulers, too, whether Catholic or Protestant, had different opinions on it.\r\n\r\nAs a natural scientist and rational man, was Kepler suitable to defend in witch trials? Regardless of his personal stance on magical issues, at least from the perspective of the accused, he displayed many qualities that made him formally more suitable for defense than any local lawyer. He was networked with international scientific circles, familiar with critical text analysis, and trained in argumentation, which was reflected in his defense. He had applied for access to all statements which, according to the rules of procedure even then, had to be recorded in writing. He meticulously questioned the credibility of the individual witnesses and the conclusiveness of their statements.\r\n\r\nBut even this typical legal procedure was not enough to fully convince the court of his mother\u2019s innocence. The fact that she did not have to be burned at the stake was solely due to the fact that she was ultimately granted an additional ordeal, which she passed. The 73-year-old was led to the instruments of torture and given one last chance to confess to the charges against her before the interrogation under torture was to continue. However, since she still refused, this was eventually considered proof that she was not a witch. The trials by ordeal were not actually permitted in court, but were used repeatedly. Not infrequently, the tests themselves led to death, such as the ordeal of water. During the <em>Hexenbad<\/em> the woman was tied up and fastened to a rope, which was thrown into a lake or river. If she sank, her innocence was proved. The demonologists drew this conclusion from their assumption that water, as a \u00bbpure\u00ab element, would only \u00bbaccept\u00ab innocent women. The women who were in a pact with the devil would not be absorbed by the pure water and would thus float. Many women drowned during these tests because they were not pulled out in time.\r\n<blockquote>\u00bbOn closer examination, one can see quite quickly that the picture of the \u00bbratio\u00ab rising in the seventeenth century that replaced the until then predominant magic, is not correct. Practices classified as magic were found in almost all areas of personal and public life.\u00ab<\/blockquote>\r\nThat of all people, the members of the secular courts had an affinity to the belief in supernatural powers was one of the prerequisites for these trials\u2019 great effectiveness. Objective court rules and personal motives for believing in magical offenses were a dangerous, disastrous mixture. The insistence on supposed objectivity corresponded to the spirit of the times and did not stop at the realm of magic. Especially the debate about the distinction between white and black or natural and demonic magic was highly topical at that time. But there were also other lively discussions about the nature, possibilities, and legitimacy of magic in all important theory-forming areas of the time, such as theology, law, or (natural) philosophy. The natural sciences only began to emerge from other disciplines. Scholars such as Giordano Bruno or Agrippa von Nettesheim wrote important contributions and classifications that systematized and bundled knowledge and traditions about magical knowledge. In this way, they quasi-founded magic discourses and supplemented them with their own treatises. In terms of content, the focus was often formerly on metaphysical and cosmological questions, which today would be partly ascribed to the fields of physics and astronomy. Another form of theorizing was the <em>Hexenhammer <\/em><em>\u2013 Malleus Maleficus<\/em> (\u00bbWitches\u2019 Hammer\u00bb) written by a Dominican monk. In the eyes of the author, this work was an implementation of the papal bull of 1484, which condemned witchcraft in the sense of the Inquisition. With the <em>Hexenhammer<\/em>, in the form of a scientific treatise, definitions and rules for the persecution of \u00bbwitches\u00ab were written and distributed, and the book quickly became very popular. The subject struck a nerve, and even if the book was not officially recognized by the church and the courts as a theoretical basis for their work, the influence it had on its advocates at the level of opinion-forming, language use, and the encouragement of a certain basic mood was considerable. The book became the ideological basis of recognized demonologists, a subgroup of witchcraft theorists who studied the nature of black magic and often taught at universities. In general, both natural and demonic magic did not contrast with the notion of science at that time, but were often part of it.\r\n\r\nNevertheless there were differences. While for some, the increasingly differentiated observations of metaphysical questions and investigations of invisible forces of nature led to ever new knowledge and the development of new disciplines and let knowledge (literally) extend to infinity, the advocates of witch hunting used systematization and order as a pretext and motive for exclusion, marginalization, and persecution.\r\n<h3><span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\"><strong>The Inheritance: <\/strong><\/span><\/h3>\r\nCan we learn to endure and live the<em> Chaos-world<\/em>? How can we work against a hierarchy of knowledge that misses the multiplicity of all voices? The author \u00c9douard Glissant, who repeatedly dealt with questions of identity, relation, and the complication of narratives, demands:\r\n\r\nI claim for all the right to opacity that is not enclosure. It is to react in this way against so many reductions to the false clarity of universal models. It\u2019s not necessary to \u00bbunderstand\u00ab (or \u00bbgrasp\u00ab; French: \u00bbcomprendre\u00ab) who ever, individual, community, people, to \u00bbtake them with me\u00ab at the price of suffocate them, of losing them so in a numbing totality that I oversee in order to accept to live with them, to build with them, to risk with them. That the opacity, ours for the others and that of the others for us when they meet, doesn't close at obscurantisme or apartheid, but be a feast and not terror. [...] All this has the sole quality of opening the trace to other saying. It is on the joint poetics that I am calling at the moment. Our actions in the world are sterile if we do not change, as much as we can, the imaginary of the humanities that we constitute.<sup class=\"is-footnote\">3<\/sup>\r\n\r\nGlissant permanently designs models of thinking that act like networks and are dynamic, yet offer security. They are countermodels to monolithic, closed representations of history, which may sometimes seem tempting, but whose mechanisms function through exclusion and attempts at dominance. Whereas the pain that is caused is real, the disambiguity of European history in itself is only pretended. Unveiling its own fragility could be one of the many steps towards a decolonial approach to European national narratives. And by doing so putting a necessary end to what Sylvia Wynter calls the \u00bbfallacy of supraculturalism\u00bb<sup class=\"is-footnote\">4<\/sup> and re-open with Glissant to other saying.\r\n\r\n&nbsp;\r\n<p class=\"is-size-6\"><strong>Johanna Ziemer<\/strong> works as a dramaturge for music theater and opera performance. Her research revolves around possible formats for polyphonic representation as well as questions of de- and coloniality in her own theatrical practice.<\/p>\r\n<a href=\"#_ftnref1\" name=\"_ftn1\"><\/a>"},{"acf_fc_layout":"content_footnotes","bgcolor":"","footnotes_list_hide_numbers":false,"footnotes":[{"footnote":"Isabelle Stengers, Den Animismus zur\u00fcckgewinnen [Reclaiming Animism]<em>, in Animismus-Revisionen der Moderne, edited by I. Albers, A. Franke, p.111 <\/em>: \u00bbThe very name can hardly be disentangled from pejorative colonialist associations, also from associations with the idea of \u00bbstages\u00ab, a common (folk)lore shared by Sigmund Freud, James Frazer, and Edward Tylor. The mature (white) adult male, who has accepted the hard truth that he is alone in a mute, blind world, is then able to define the past as what leads toward him.\u00ab, see also:<em> eflux Journal #36, <\/em>2012, www.e-flux.com\/journal\/36\/61245\/reclaiming-animism (accessed February 05, 2021)"},{"footnote":"Michel-Rolph Trouillot: <em>Silencing the Past. Power and the Production of History<\/em>, 1995: p. 74<em>.<\/em>"},{"footnote":"\u00c9douard Glissant: <em>Trait\u00e9 du Tout-monde, Po\u00e9tique IV<\/em>, 1997: p. 29: <em>\u00bbJe r\u00e9clame pour tous le droit \u00e0 <\/em><em>l'opacit<\/em><em>\u00e9, qui n\u2019est pas le renfermement. C'est pour r\u00e9agir par l\u00e0 contre tant de r\u00e9ductions \u00e0 la fausse clart\u00e9 de mod\u00e8les universels. Il ne m'est pas n\u00e9cessaire de \u00bbcomprendre qui que ce soit, individu, communaut\u00e9, peuple, de le \u201eprendre avec moi\u201c au prix de l'\u00e9touffer, de le perdre ainsi dans une totalit\u00e9 assomante que je g\u00e9r\u00e9rais, pour accepter de vivre avec lui, de b\u00e2tir avec lui, de risquer avec lui. Que l'opacit\u00e9, la n\u00f4tre s'il se trouve pour l'autre, et celle de l'autre pour nous quand cela se rencontre, ne ferme pas sur l'obscurantisme ni l'apartheid, nous soit une f\u00eate, non une terreur. Que le droit \u00e0 <\/em><em>l'opacit<\/em><em>\u00e9, par o\u00f9 se pr\u00e9serverait aux mieux le Divers et par o\u00f9 se renforcerait l'acceptation, veille, \u00f4 lampes! Sur nos po\u00e9tiques. <\/em><em>Tout cela sommairement cont<\/em><em>\u00e9, a pour seul qualit\u00e9 d'ouvrir la trace \u00e0 d'autres dits. C'est aux po\u00e9tiques conjointes que je fais appel en ce moment. Nos actions dans le monde sont frapp\u00e9es de st\u00e9rilit\u00e9 si nous ne changeons pas, autant que nous y pouvons, l'imaginaire des humanit\u00e9s que nous constituons.\u00ab<\/em>"},{"footnote":"Sylvia Wynter, No Humans Involved: An Open Letter to My Colleagues, in: <em>Forum N. H. I- Knowledge for the 21st century, Knowledge on Trial<\/em>, vol. 1 no. 1, p. 42."}]}]},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/28076","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/16"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=28076"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/28076\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=28076"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"project","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/project?post=28076"},{"taxonomy":"project_type","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/project_type?post=28076"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}