Michael Hunter is Emeritus Professor of History, Birkbeck, University of London.
“[D]evelops a different argument in suggesting that it was
sceptical humanists and freethinkers, rather than scientists, who
did most to discredit traditional magic.”—Tony Barber, Financial
Times
"Next year will mark the 50th anniversary of Keith Thomas’s
Religion and the Decline of Magic, one of the 20th century’s
seminal historical texts. Hunter’s book has a similar-sounding
title, but develops a different argument in suggesting that it was
sceptical humanists and freethinkers, rather than scientists, who
did most to discredit traditional magic"—Tony Barber, Financial
Times 'Best Books of 2020: History'
“In forcing us all to think more critically about the ways in which
intellectual and cultural change happens, Hunter has again made a
major contribution to the history of early modern Britain.”—Dimitri
Levitin, Literary Review
“Hunter has taken us on a fascinating journey, providing us with
some astute case studies and pointed observations along the
way.”—Dr Jan Machielsen, Reviews in History
“Michael Hunter provides a route-map of sorts with which to
negotiate this sometimes precarious cognitive terrain.”—Mark Jones,
Albion Magazine
“[T]he author’s lucid and detailed exposition introduces us to a
cast of lesser known writers – such as Francis Hutchinson, Obadiah
Oddy and Richard Mead – as he sketches the broader context in which
the seismic shift in attitude occurred, while acknowledging the
gulf between educated and popular opinion.”—Paul Sieveking, Fortean
Times
“Although most of The Decline of Magic: Britain in the
Enlightenment is straightforward intellectual history,
folklorists will find two chapters exploring topics that are clear
folklore case studies.”—William Pooley, Folklore
“Hunter's book is particularly praiseworthy for its reflection on
the nature of intellectual change...He provides us with a
thoroughly engaging and stimulating study, which has a particular
resonance today.”—Audrey Borowski, Times Literary Supplement
"An original examination of the evolution of ideas that influenced
the processes of community regulation such as medicine, justice,
witchcraft and the supernatural”—Elizabeth Tingle, Family &
Community History
"Hunter’s book weaves a gripping account...He provides a compelling
and erudite account that shines light on the origins of the English
Enlightenment, while teasing out the complex processes of
intellectual change that underpins his study.”—Stephen Brogan,
Interlib
"Hunter’s fascinating study sheds light on the roots of this
tradition and opens new directions for research."—Kathryn
Morris, The Canadian Journal of History
"In 1971, Keith Thomas published what became a classic study on
Religion and the Decline of Magic. Half a century later, Michael
Hunter approaches that decline from another angle and offers an
alternative explanation. Learned, lucid, acute and balanced,
Hunter’s book deserves to become another classic."—Peter Burke,
author of A Social History of Knowledge
"This is an important and remarkable book, the product of a
master of the subject and period. It completely overhauls our view
of that subject, answering questions which have hung over it for
decades, and raises some exciting and disturbing questions for the
present."—Ronald Hutton, author of The Witch
“Michael Hunter, a pre-eminent historian of early modern science,
redresses a balance in recent scholarship by examining skepticism
towards magical phenomena among British intellectuals of the early
Enlightenment. The result is a readable, thought-provoking
book that places scientific inquiry firmly within broader
historical trends.”—Paul Kléber Monod, author of Solomon's Secret
Arts
“Definitely a book to think with. Hunter brings new figures to
scrutiny—Obadiah Oddy, Richard Mead, John Wagstaffe, Francis
Hutchinson—and expertly weaves them into this tapestry of
intellectual and cultural change.”—Justin Champion, author of The
Pillars Of Priestcraft Shaken
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