- Transvection (flying)
Transvection is the
supernatural act of levitating, floating or more specifically flying through the air. While levitation and magical flight can equate to acts of stage magic orastral projection through the use of psychoactiveentheogen s, transvection usually refers to the experience of bodily movement in defiance of gravitational laws.Witches in medieval Europe were frequently depicted flying up chimneys and in the air by means of broomsticks, various wild animals, or even during acts of sexual intercourse; however the consensus of modern Neo-PagansFact|date=March 2008 is that these images remotely alluded to the practice of
entheogen use, either for folk shamanic purposes surviving from the stone age, or perhaps even as a form of recreational drug use.There is some pre-Christian evidence of transvection in
Norse Shamanism Fact|date=March 2008 that correlates with reports of flying and levitation in many earlyshamanic and mystical traditions around the globe.Flying saints and
Hindu and Buddhist mystical practitioners known asSiddhi s andIddhi s are known for acts of spontaneous levitation, reported during times of intense or particular religious or meditative devotion. Though this is not to be confused with Indian street performers, famous for climbing ropes that go nowhere and other kinds of stage magic adapted to street performance.In the 1986 film "
The Boy Who Could Fly ", the main character is an orphaned, autistic transvective.References
* http://www.britannica.com/eb/topic-603256/transvection
* Strange Histories by Darren Oldrige (ch. 6, "Werewolves and Flying Witches")
* The Complete Book of Magic and Witchcraft by Kathering Paulsen
* The Complete Book of Yogic Flying by Craig Pearson
* Long-Range Casimir Forces: Theory and Recent Experiments on Atomic Systems (Finite Systems and Multiparticle Dynamics) by Frank S. Levin and David A. Micha
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