Studying Esoteric Practices: Towards a Praxeological Methodology

By Bernd-Christian Otto

Praxis-Knowledge 5 (2026)

https://doi.org/10.61149/BNTF1018

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Abstract: This article argues that the study of esotericism has long been characterized by a structural overemphasis on texts, doctrines, and worldviews, accompanied by a relative neglect of practices and practice-induced experiences. While recent scholarship has increasingly acknowledged the importance of ritual, embodiment, and ethnographic methods, no coherent methodology for the systematic analysis of esoteric practices has yet been established. Addressing this lacuna, the article proposes a praxeological framework for the study of esoteric practices that integrates four analytical dimensions: descriptions, prescriptions, experience reports, and – where appropriate – scholar-practitionership. After outlining a pragmatic working definition of esoteric practices, the article demonstrates how each of these source types offers distinct yet partial perspectives on practice, and how their triangulation can generate more nuanced and reliable analyses. Drawing on the late medieval Ars notoria as a case study, it illustrates both the limitations of textual approaches and the analytical gains afforded by incorporating experience reports and first-person perspectives. The article further argues that methodologically reflexive scholar-practitionership, grounded in radical agnosticism and careful self-observation, can provide additional insights into the experiential domain without collapsing critical distance or endorsing emic truth claims. By foregrounding practice, experience, performance, and embodiment, the proposed framework seeks to complement existing text-centered approaches and to facilitate comparative analyses of esoteric practices across different historical, cultural, and religious contexts. More broadly, the article aims to contribute to an emerging methodological debate on how esoteric practices can be studied as dynamic, embodied, and experiential phenomena rather than purely textual or doctrinal reverberations.

Keywords: esoteric practices, praxeology, experience reports, scholar-practitionership, predictive processing