Updates
Welcome to Charming
Welcome to Charming, the year is now 1896. It’s time to join us and immerse yourself in scandal and drama interlaced with magic both light and dark.

Where will you fall?

Featured Stamp

Add it to your collection...

Did You Know?
One of the cheapest homeless shelters in Victorian London charged four pennies to sleep in a coffin. Which was... still better than sleeping upright against a rope? — Jordan / Lynn
If he was being completely honest, the situation didn't look good, but Sylvano was not in the habit of being completely honest about anything. No reason to start now.
you & me & the war of the endtimes


Read Only
Journal of Advanced Herbology January 1896
#1
Proceedings of the Society for
Advanced Herbology
Ten knuts
Vol 12 #4, January 1896 page 7
Theoretical and Ethical Considerations around Necrobotany
Written by Miss Antelope Eugenia Grace

An introduction

What is necrobotany? The term itself is as easy to dissect as the bulb of a plant. Formed by combining the ancient Greek-derived prefix necro, meaning dead body or death and the suffix botany, which is the study of plants. What the subject is however is much more nuanced and subject to debate amongst academics. There are those such as Ricardo Pesanta who write that necrobotany is the animation of the dead stitched together with plant matter as a replacement for decomposed tissue1. Whereas Clarence Walters considers the subject to be one akin to Necromancy, but simply using those dark magics on plant matter as opposed to animal matter2.

There is much cross over on these academic theories and it is my opinion that the pair are mostly divided by their approach to the ethical quandary that has always been a problem in the field of Necromancy. Is it ethical to remove the deceased from their rest, this paper will seek to address that question and also how my personal approach to necrobotany might prove an answer to the problem. I shall undertake a theoretical analysis of the subject, touching on the connection between necromantic energy and the spirit and I will review the papers so far published to come to a conclusion.

My hypothesis is that Pesanta's approach and that of his peers does indeed breach ethical boundaries as. However by applying the work of Walters and to a lesser extent Blake3 (this work has been discredited but his theories do still add to the discussion) we can come to a place where Necrobotany is a positive addition to the herbological field whilst avoiding the negative connotations associated with its necromantic sibling.

Pesanta's Inferis Botanicus

We are all familiar with the existence of Inferi, undead puppets raised and controlled by the dark energies of Necromancy. What less people are aware of is the process in the late 18th century by which Pesanta's sought to produce a similar end result using necrobotany1. He would take the remains of a creature and infuse its remains with a fungal mixture that had been treated alchemically to encourage it to proliferate into all parts of the body. He initially did this with mice, then swine and then in two cases with medical cadavers. His notes do not give much clarity to the genus of mushrooms used, he mentions Death Cap Mycorrhiza and alludes to a source he uses from the tropics. My theory based on his drawings and the behaviours exhibited in his subjects was that he was unknowingly using a fungus related to the Ophiocordyceps unilateralis fungus discovered by Wallace in 18594. This fungus seemingly controls the motor functions of insects, so it would be a reasonable academic assumption that it may have been involved in the puppeting of Pesanta's creations.

He would allow this fungus to grow until a point that it would respond to his magical commands. He was never able to progress to a stage where verbal commands were useful so it is impossible to say what level he could have achieved. However, after his death, his research was subject to ethical scrutiny which made further study inappropriate.

One such critic, who himself has now been widely discredited was Blake. He noted that the more recently deceased the corpse was, the more responsive to commands the resulting necrobotanic creation would appear to be. He devised the theory of “Necromantic Energy Transfer”3 where the spiritual energy would be absorbed by the fungus in a magically symbiotic relationship.

His equation was as follows

NET = (plant energy x spirit energy) / decay

This suggests that both plant and spirit play a part in the animation process and that transfer of necromantic energy cannot occur without both being present.

Unfortunately Blake's theorem was shown to fail several arithmantic tests5,6 and he was unable to categorically prove either the existence of spirit energy or give a quantifiable figure for decay. I include it here as while his results were flawed, his observation that more recently deceased bodies are easier to animate with necrobotany, mirrors the observations of those that study necromantic methods and as such his ethical concerns are still considered valid7.

These concerns are that although the methods are botanical, the spirit of the deceased is still involved and as such it would likely be subject to the same metaphysical suffering involved in traditional necromancy.


Walters resurrection plants

Clarence Walter's approach2 is much more in line with traditional necromancy, except his subjects were plants and no animal matter was involved in any of his studies.

What Walter first did was take vegetable matter that had died and by applying magical techniques to it was able to bring the material back to life. This is a very simplistic form of necrobotany and is seen more as an extension of the Herbivicous spell with the added benefit of being able to work on completely dead matter. While the benefits of this are very clear, it is of limited scope and lacks the more practical applications provided by the reanimation of a musculoskeletal system. His further work is what draws the attention of this academic. He was able to animate this dead matter, allowing it to engage in very menial tasks. The greatest drawback though is that it was never able to achieve any form of autonomy so all actions needed to be performed by direct magical puppetry. There was some success using more animated plants such as the venomous tentacula but the processes that could be carried would extremely simple and the plants would very quickly deviate from any magical instruction.

This is a significant argument in favour of supporting Pesanta's methods over Walter's. As an addition, Hansel Mason had similar success in replicating these results using resurrected whomping willow material8. However his results were poorly documented and hard to clearly interpret.

Ethical Debate and the sentience threshold

To many the ethical debate regarding necromancy has been put to rest3,9. It is widely accepted by most including this academic that interfering with recently deceased and entrapping their spirits in order to animate their remains is abhorrent, and summoning new spirits into a longer departed is almost equally so, there has been little debate since Blake regards necrobotany. If one was to use a suitably vigorous plant to replace both the physical and mental impulse of the human condition, it would open up avenues of Necromancy that were metaphysically neutral, and an even greater victory would be if necrobatically animated plants were able to entirely replace the use of creatures.

The question of necrobotany's ethics is two fold. Firstly it is whether we subscribe to Blake's ideas that the animated plants are functioning symbiotically with the human spirit, if this is so, then necrobotany simply becomes necromancy with extra steps and as such would be subject to same negative connotations as the latter. If we can escape Blake's hypothesis then we are left with a cadaver that is now entirely controlled by the plant, but as Walter has demonstrated, plants alone appear to lack the impulse to perform useful tasks.


Proceedings of the Society for Advanced Herbology
Ten knuts
Vol 12 #4, January 1896 page 8


The second aspect of the necrobotanical debate is that of what I will refer to as the sentience threshold. Certain plants are more likely to be useful in necrobotany, these are as follows such as mandrakes, whomping willows and venomous tentacular. All of these plants have something in common, they all exhibit characteristics that are akin to sentience. This is likely what makes these plants more useful in necrobotany, but also then leads to the question of whether we are simply moving the crime against person onto plant. When casting a necromantic spell we may ask, would this person want this? Well perhaps we must be asking the same of these plants, where must we draw the line of sentience in order to allow this neglected field of research to progress.

The ethical arguments in favour of this research, at least in the opinion of this academic, are overwhelming. There have been several cases of attempts to use necromancy for benevolent purposes9,10,11 including the latter when Professor Yoshida was dismissed for attempting to replace elves at Mahoutokoro school of magic with domesticated inferi. His prosecution cites unsanctioned use of plague victims as his primary crime12 but the judge in the case does reduce his sentence based on the ethical intent despite the unethical methods. Should we find a way to use necrobotany to fulfill the same duties then we may be able to replace elves and other creatures of burden with animated plants corpses. In order to do this however we would need to either challenge the ill defined sentience threshold, or find a method for installing a simulacrum of sentience into lesser plants.

The future of Necrobotany

I shall continue to study the subject of course and intend to pick up where my forebears have left off. I hope to correct Blake's theorem as I believe that there is merit there for the purposes of calculating just how involved the human spirit is in the process. Should the figure be low enough, then there is argument for a level of acceptable compromise, for instance if the spirit is merely a key but is unaware of its use in the process then we may be able to avoid the need to develop entire spell lines based on granting sentience to deceased plant material. My personal academic hypothesis is that the spirit is indeed essential, however I do believe that the process can be carried out in a metaphysically ethical manner.

I intend to seek consent from the Flint institute for access to medical cadavers and certain other apparati in order to carry out my research. There are also texts that I believe would be extremely useful if they were allowed to be used more freely. One such text is Liber Floris Animarum, currently held in the Hogwarts restricted section. This book allegedly13 contains stories of how armies of sentient necrobotanic creations were raised against the Roman Empire, whilst I do not suggest we do anything of the sort, it may contain useful advice and techniques.

We as academics must remain open minded and as such I suggest that further research should also be carried out into the use of said spell lines. If there is no way to entirely divorce the spirit from the necrobotanic then alternative should be sought to prevent this pursuit falling into obscurity again.

Conclusion

This theoretical analysis undertaken confirms that Necrobotany, as a field, stands at a critical ethical crossroads. While Pesanta’s application achieved a degree of functional success, it is critically hampered by the ethical concerns raised by Blake and later academics regarding the potential entrapment of the human spirit. This academic aligns with the view that any process involving the unwilling co-option of a deceased spirit for animation, even via botanical means, is difficult to justify from a moral standpoint and essentially an extension of traditional necromancy.

​Conversely, Walters' work on the resurrection and simple animation of purely plant matter offers a metaphysically neutral alternative, though its current scope lacks the practical utility required to replace creatures of burden. The key challenge, therefore, lies in merging the functional success of Pesanta's methods with the ethical nature of Walters' approach. This can only be achieved by finding a way to ensure the plant component is the sole source of all impulse and command, significantly reducing entirely removing the requirement for any human spiritual co-factor.

​The future of Necrobotany rests on two primary lines of inquiry. Firstly, the empirical correction of Blake's theorem to accurately quantify the spirit's involvement and determine an 'acceptable compromise' threshold. And secondly, intensive research into methods for developing an magically novel simulacrum of sentience in lesser, ethically neutral plant material, bypassing the moral quandary of the sentience threshold posed by highly animated specimens such as Mandrakes and Whomping Willows. By pursuing this ethical path, Necrobotany can transition from a discredited dark art into a powerful, benevolent contributor to the herbological and magical sciences, offering a sustainable and morally sound alternative to the use of creatures in servitude.
References
Society of Advanced Herbology educational press. Copyright London 1895
1 — Pesanta, R. Inferis Botanicus: A Practical Application of Re-animation and Fungal Symbiosis. Journal of Experimental Necromancy (1781), pp. 45-62.

2 — Walters, C. Animus Herbivicus: Magical Techniques for the Resurrection and Movement of Dead Vegetable Matter. Proceedings of the Society for Advanced Herbology, Vol. 5, No. 1 (1855), pp. 112-125.

3 — Blake, E. On the Co-option of Spiritual Energy in Necrobotanic Processes: The Necromantic Energy Transfer Theorem (NET). The Oxford Occult Review, Vol. 21 (1861)

4 — Wallace, A. R. On the Zoology of the Eastern Archipelago. Proceedings of the Linnean Society of London, Vol. 3, (1859), pp. 248-271.

5 — Gilderoy, A. A Critical Dissection of the NET Theorem: Arithmantic Failures and Quantifiable Limitations. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society for the Study of the Undead (1864), pp. 88-101.

6 — Hawthorne, P. Disproving the Existence of a 'Spirit Energy' Constant in Re-animation Research. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society for the Study of the Undead (1869), pp. 15-29.

7 — Crouch, P. S. Ethical Boundaries of Necromancy: A Review of Modern Magical Jurisprudence. Wizards' Law Quarterly, Vol. 33, No. 1 (1870), pp. 5-22.

8 — Mason, H. Preliminary Notes on the Animated Whomping Willow: An Exploration of Autonomous Botanical Movement. Unpublished Manuscript, The Mason Family Archives (c. 1875).

9 — Bones, A. The Benevolent Intent vs. Unethical Means: The Legal Precedent in Necromantic Trials. The International Review of Magical Law, Vol. 18, No. 3 (1878), pp. 245-260.

10 — Prewitt, H. Attempts at Ethical Necromantic Servitude: A Historical Account. A History of Modern Magical Ethics, Chapter 4 (1882), Ministry Academic Press.

11 — Maruhami, S. My encounters with Professor Yoshida. Personal retirement memoirs of Professor S Maruhami, (1875).

12 — Ministry of Magic, Japan. Prosecutor's Summary and Sentencing Notes: The Case of Professor Yoshida. Magical Law Enforcement Records, File NECRO-75-44B (1868).

13 — Unknown. Liber Floris Animarum (Book of the Flower of Souls). Restricted Section, Hogwarts Library (Date unknown, c. 3rd Century A.D.).

Permission given by Olive for use and modification of her code, thank you.

The following 6 users Like Antelope Grace's post:
   Anne Moony, Charley Goode, Henry Bythesea, Millie Potts, Silas Merlion, Victor Frey

[Image: duX9SvE.png]

Her name is pronounced similarly to Penelope


Possibly Related Threads…
Thread / Author Replies Views Last Post
Last Post by January Lynch
July 31, 2021 – 7:05 AM
Last Post by Lily Huddleston
January 3, 2021 – 12:50 AM
View a Printable Version


Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)
Forum Jump:
·