Cartomancy

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Template:NPOV Cartomancy is a form of fortune-telling or divination using a deck of cards. The practice of cartomancy has been observed since playing cards first came into use in Europe in the 14th century. Some practitioners (known as cartomancers) have claimed its origins date back to Egyptian times, the art being derived from wisdom given to the ancient Egyptians by the scribe-god Thoth, although this belief is by no means common today.

A standard deck of Anglo-American playing cards (i.e. 52-card, four suit set) can be used for the purpose of providing a cartomancy reading. Cartomancy, the art of divination using the standard playing deck, was the most popular form of providing "fortune telling" card readings in the 19th and 20th centuries. In recent years, however, the popularity of Tarot readings have eclipsed the popularity of the once-common cartomancy readings using standard playing cards.

According to tradition, a deck that is used for cartomancy should not be used for any other purpose. It should be treated as a tool and cared for accordingly. Some cartomancers also feel that the cards should never be touched by anyone other than their owner.

Methods of Cartomancy

Although a standard card deck is used for cartomancy, many other decks have also been designed that are intended specifically for use for divination, the best known of which are Tarot decks. According to the Aeclectic Tarot, any deck that is not a Tarot deck is referred to simply as a "cartomancy deck"; however any use of cards in this way is still cartomancy.

The Tarot deck differs somewhat from the standard deck used for cartomancy. The Tarot deck consists of 22 Major Arcana cards, and 56 Minor Arcana cards (Arcana means "hidden things"). Each Minor Arcana suit consists of 4 court cards (usually king, queen, knight and page) along with 10 numbered, or pip, cards. The fifty-six minor cards are similar to the regular deck of playing cards most people know today, while the Major Arcana are present only in the Tarot deck.

Playing Card Suit and Tarot Suit Equivalents:

  • Spades = Swords (intellect; education) Wind element
  • Hearts = Cups (emotions) Water element
  • Diamonds = Coins or disks, aka Pentacles (health; material matters) Earth element
  • Clubs = Wands, aka Batons (power) Fire element
It should be noted that the suits "Swords" and "Wands" are disputed between cartomancers, especially those that follow a Pagan path that believes each suit belongs to a special element of nature. Some consider the suits, Swords and Wands, to be switched in their meanings.

Despite its heretical reputation, the best known Tarot deck, Rider-Waite, includes a great deal of Judaic and Christian symbolism, from the Torah to the Pope. The symbolism in the Tarot marries this symbolism with astrological, numerological and Egyptian and Kabbalistic symbolism.

Criticism

Cartomancy along with other forms of divination are dismissed by most scientists as lacking in any evidence. See for example the work of the Australian Skeptics and CSICOP.et:Kartomantia fa:فال ورق fr:Cartomancie de:Kartenlegen

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