Chakravarti
New member
- Joined
- Nov 2, 2025
- Messages
- 14
What I'm about to say will shock you: The most popular hermetic books are fake. They are 20th century New Age inventions.
You can tell whether a hermetic text is real by checking its original language. If it was written in some older language and translated into English, it is real. However, if you can only find it in English or some other modern language but claims to come from ancient sources, it is fake.
These two books are extremely popular and what most people associate with hermeticism, but they are fake:
The Emerald Tablets is a classical channeled text. The author claims he channeled some ancient Atlantean tablets from Thoth and translated them.
Both have three similarities:
There may be other fake texts I'm not aware of.
Now, what about the real ones? The main authentic hermetic collection is The Corpus Hermeticum. The best translation is Brian P. Copenhaver's, which you can find in his book Hermetica, together with the Asclepius, another authentic text.
There are several others, which include the fragments of Stobaeus and other recently discovered texts in the Nag Hammadi library. There is also the Emerald Tablet (not to be confused with the Emerald Tablets above, in fact the author of the fake text named it after the Emerald Tablet so it can appear legitimate).
You can tell these are real because they were translated from Greek or Latin or Arabic (which was a translation from Greek or Latin) and are cryptic and complex and require you to think, compared to the watered down New Age texts above.
Finally, there's a book which is based on selections from real texts, but is heavily watered down:
You can tell whether a hermetic text is real by checking its original language. If it was written in some older language and translated into English, it is real. However, if you can only find it in English or some other modern language but claims to come from ancient sources, it is fake.
These two books are extremely popular and what most people associate with hermeticism, but they are fake:
- The Kybalion
- The Emerald Tablets of Thoth the Atlantean
The Emerald Tablets is a classical channeled text. The author claims he channeled some ancient Atlantean tablets from Thoth and translated them.
Both have three similarities:
- They were written in English with no original text in ancient languages found
- Their teachings have many similarities with and were influenced by Theosophy, New Thought and other 19th-20th Century movements, but not with ancient teachings.
- They are heavily watered down.
There may be other fake texts I'm not aware of.
Now, what about the real ones? The main authentic hermetic collection is The Corpus Hermeticum. The best translation is Brian P. Copenhaver's, which you can find in his book Hermetica, together with the Asclepius, another authentic text.
There are several others, which include the fragments of Stobaeus and other recently discovered texts in the Nag Hammadi library. There is also the Emerald Tablet (not to be confused with the Emerald Tablets above, in fact the author of the fake text named it after the Emerald Tablet so it can appear legitimate).
You can tell these are real because they were translated from Greek or Latin or Arabic (which was a translation from Greek or Latin) and are cryptic and complex and require you to think, compared to the watered down New Age texts above.
Finally, there's a book which is based on selections from real texts, but is heavily watered down:
- The Hermetica by Timothy Freke