having legal names treated by authorities as "real" names has convinced so many people that its bizarre to have more than one name throughout one's life, when the opposite is true.
names are gifts. we receive many throughout our lives. we always give ourself this gift (though many of us lie to ourselves about it). and sometimes we share that gift to ourselves with others.
a name has power given the social world that carries it. remember this every time youre given a name, every time you gift others a name, and every time you share the gift of your name with others.
philosophy; Agamben, Magic, Happiness, Names
"Only someone who is enchanted can say "I" with a smile, and the only happiness that is truly deserved is the one we could never dream of deserving.
That is the ultimate reason for the precept that there is only one way to achieve happiness on this earth: to believe in the divine and not to aspire to reach it (there is an ironic variation of this in a conversation between Franz Kafka and Gustav Janouch, when Kafka affirms that there is plenty of hope - but not for us). This apparently ascetic thesis becomes intelligible only if we understand the meaning of this "not for us." It means not that happiness is reserved only for others (happiness is, precisely, for us) but that it awaits us only at the point where it was not destined for us.
That is: happiness can be only ours through magic. At that point, when we have wrenched it away from fate, happiness coincides entirely with our knowing ourselves to be capable of magic, with the gesture we use to banish that childhood sadness once and for all..."
philosophy; Agamben, Magic, Happiness, Names
"If this is so, if there is no other happiness than feeling capable of magic, then Kafka's enigmatic definition of magic becomes clear. He writes that if we call life by its right name, it comes forth, because "that is the essence of magic, which does not create but summons." This definition agrees with the ancient tradition scrupulously followed by kabbalists and necromancers, according to which magic is essentially a science of secret names.
Each thing, each being, has in addition to its manifest name another, hidden name to which it cannot fail to respond. To be a magus means to know and evoke these archi-names. Hence the interminable discussions of names (diabolical or
angelic) through which the necromancer ensures his mastery over spiritual powers. For him, the secret name is only the seal of his power of life and death over the creature that bears it.
But according to another, more luminous tradition, the secret name is not so much the cipher of the thing's subservience to the magus's speech as, rather, the monogram that sanctions its liberation from language. The secret name was the name by which the creature was called in Eden. When it is pronounced, every manifest name - the entire Babel of names - is shattered. That is why, according to this doctrine, magic is a call to happiness. The secret name is the gesture that restores the creature to the unexpressed. In the final instance, magic is not a knowledge of names but a gesture, a breaking free from the name. That is why a child is never more content than when he invents a secret language. His sadness comes less from ignorance of magic names than from his own inability to free himself from the name that has been imposed on him. No sooner does he succeed, no sooner docs he invent a new name, than he holds in his hands the laissez-passel' that grants him happiness. To have a name is to be guilty. And justice, like magic, is nameless. Happy, and without a name, the creature knocks at the gates of the land of the magi, who speak in gestures alone."
-Agamben, Profanations, "Magic and Happiness"
@exiliaex i can’t find the relevant liturgy for it in my siddur, but there’s a custom among jews of changing your name when grievously ill. i’m not sure how widely practiced it is, just know of it from my family + etc, so it came to mind
@roundtit oh that sounds really interesting, if you find it let me know, i might do a little searching myself
@exiliaex i’ll dig it up tmrw once i wake back up ^^
i know it’s in there somewhere - probably some variation of מי שברך, if i had to guess
@exiliaex it’s the last page past the book of psalms, since there’s a specific order of psalms recited before this for this particular ritual that i honestly have no idea about since i’ve never participated in this before.
philosophy; Agamben, Magic, Happiness, Names
@exiliaex oh shit he’s talking abt the thing i was talking abt
philosophy; Agamben, Magic, Happiness, Names
@exiliaex i was like “why is it reblogging my posts” and then i read this, saw, kabbalist, secret name,and was like oh. yeah. makes perfect sense actually
philosophy; Agamben, Magic, Happiness, Names
@roundtit yeah! what you were talking about was just so directly relevant i couldn't help but but reblog em! they're so cool thank you for finding those sections!!
philosophy; Agamben, Magic, Happiness, Names
@exiliaex for shore happy to be of service there
there’s lots of (i assume to be) plenty engaging commentary on the concept,,,, but it’s all in hebrew and i don’t read that well enough to read the talmud commentaries lmao
philosophy; Agamben, Magic, Happiness, Names
@exiliaex relevant, if digressive: some jews (usually chasidic, but it’s not exclusive to them) will refer to Hashem - literally meaning “the name” instead of speaking the name of g-d, except in prayer. (though, those names are themselves removed from the literal, true name of god in jewish tradition - even the tetragrammaton isn’t REALLY the name!)
it’s all very interesting, the way kabbalistic literature plays with names ………
@exiliaex pretty much the entire city I live in with people my age called me by one nickname, and the college I went to basically the entire campus had another name for me. Was very interesting when one person from each group of name users was around me at the same time then I’d have to explain the stories behind each name 😂😂😂
yknow i think i'm going to turn this into a little thread of different things i've read on names; benjamin, scholem, d&g, bataille, etc