In religion, folklore, and mythology
a demon (or daemon, deamon, daimon
from Greek: δαίμων daimōn) is a
supernatural being that is generally
described as a malevolent spirit. In
Christian terms demons are generally
understood as fallen angels,
formerly of God. A demon is
frequently depicted as a force that
may be conjured and insecurely
controlled. The "good" demon in
recent use is largely a literary
device (e.g., Maxwell's demon),
though references to good demons can
be found in Hesiod and Shakespeare.
In colloquial parlance, to
"demonize" a person means to
characterize or portray them as
evil, or as a source of evil. The
mythical Sweeney Todd was accorded
the title Demon Barber of Fleet
Street in a 1936 film. The
19th-century Australian cricketer
Fred Spofforth was nicknamed "the
Demon (Bowler)", partly because of
his tactic of inspiring fear in
batsmen.
History
The Greek conception of
a daemon (< δαίμων daimōn) appears
in the works of Plato and many other
ancient authors, but without the
evil connotations which are apparent
in the Septuagint translation of the
Hebrew Bible and in the Greek
originals of the New Testament. The
medieval and neo-medieval conception
of a "demon" in Western civilization
(see the Medieval grimoire called
the Ars Goetia) derives seamlessly
from the ambient popular culture of
Late (Roman) Antiquity. Greco-Roman
concepts of daemons that passed into
Christian culture are discussed in
the entry daemon, though it should
be duly noted that the term referred
only to a spiritual force, not a
malevolent supernatural being. The
Hellenistic "daemon" eventually came
to include many Semitic and Near
Eastern gods as evaluated by
Christianity.
The supposed existence of demons is
an important concept in many modern
religions and occultist traditions.
In some present-day cultures, demons
are still feared in popular
superstition, largely due to their
alleged power to possess living
creatures.
In the contemporary Western
occultist tradition (perhaps
epitomized by the work of Aleister
Crowley), a demon, such as Choronzon,
the "Demon of the Abyss", is a
useful metaphor for certain inner
psychological processes, though some
may also regard it as an objectively
real phenomenon.
Some scholars believe that large
portions of the demonology (see
Asmodai) of Judaism, a key influence
on Christianity and Islam,
originated in Zoroastrianism, and
were transferred to Judaism during
the Persian era.
Etymology
The idea of demons is as
old as religion itself, and the word
demon seems to have ancient origins.
The Merriam-Webster dictionary gives
the etymology of the word as Greek
daimon, probably from the verb
daiesthai meaning "to divide,
distribute." The Proto-Indo-European
root *deiwos for god, originally an
adjective meaning "celestial" or
"bright, shining" has retained this
meaning in many related
Indo-European languages and cultures
(Sanskrit deva, Latin deus, German
Tiw, Welsh [Duw],]), but also
provided another other common word
for demon in Avestan daeva.
In modern Greek, the word daimon
(Greek: δαίμων) has the same meaning
as the modern English demon. But in
Ancient Greek, δαίμων meant "spirit"
or "higher self", much like the
Latin genius. This should not,
however, be confused with the word
genie, which is a false friend or
false cognate of genius.
Psychological history
Psychologist Wilhelm
Wundt remarks that "among the
activities attributed by myths all
over the world to demons, the
harmful predominate, so that in
popular belief bad demons are
clearly older than good ones."
Sigmund Freud develops on this idea
and claims that the concept of
demons was derived from the
important relation of the living to
the dead: "The fact that demons are
always regarded as the spirits of
those who have died recently shows
better than anything the influence
of mourning on the origin of the
belief in demons."
Hebrew Bible
Demons as described in
the Tanakh are the same as "demons"
commonly known in popular or
Christian culture.
Those in the Hebrew Bible are of two
classes, the se'irim and the shedim.
The se'irim ("hairy beings"), to
which some Israelites offered
sacrifices in the open fields, are
satyr-like creatures, described as
dancing in the wilderness, and which
are identical with the jinn, such as
Dantalion, the 71st spirit of
Solomon. (But compare the completely
European woodwose.) Possibly to the
same class belongs Azazel, the
goat-like demons of the wilderness,
probably the chief of the se'irim,
and Lilith. Possibly "the roes and
hinds of the field", by which
Shulamit conjures the daughters of
Jerusalem to bring her back to her
lover, are faunlike spirits similar
to the se'irim, though of a harmless
nature.
The evil spirit that troubled Saul
(I Samuel 16:14 et seq.) may have
been a demon, though the Masoretic
text suggests the spirit was sent by
God.
Some benevolent shedim were used in
kabbalistic ceremonies (as with the
golem of Rabbi Yehuda Loevy), and
malevolent shedim (mazikin, from the
root meaning to damage) are often
responsible in instances of
possession. Instances of idol
worship were often the result of a
shed inhabiting an otherwise
worthless statue; the shed would
pretend to be a God with the power
to send pestilence, although such
events were not actually under his
control.
Influences from Chaldean
mythology
In Chaldean mythology the seven evil
deities were known as shedu, meaning
storm-demons. They were represented
in winged bull form, derived from
the colossal bulls used as
protective genii of royal palaces,
the name "shed" assumed also the
meaning of a propitious genius in
Babylonian magic literature.
It was from Chaldea that the name "shedu"
came to the Israelites, and so the
writers of the Tanach applied the
word as a dylogism to the Canaanite
deities in the two passages quoted.
But they also spoke of "the
destroyer" (Exodus xii. 23) as a
demon whose malignant effect upon
the houses of the Israelites was to
be warded off by the blood of the
paschal sacrifice sprinkled upon the
lintel and the door-post (a
corresponding pagan talisman is
mentioned in Isaiah lvii. 8). In II
Samuel xxiv; 16 and II Chronicles
xxi. 15 the pestilence-dealing demon
is called "the destroying angel"
(compare "the angel of the Lord" in
II Kings xix. 35; Isaiah xxxvii.
36), because, although they are
demons, these "evil messengers"
(Psalms lxxviii. 49; A. V. "evil
angels") do only the bidding of God;
they are the agents of His divine
wrath.
There are indications that popular
Hebrew mythology ascribed to the
demons a certain independence, a
malevolent character of their own,
because they are believed to come
forth, not from the heavenly abode
of God, but from the nether world.
Hebrew demons were workers of harm.
To them were ascribed the various
diseases, particularly such as
affect the brain and the inner
parts. Hence there was a fear of "Shabriri"
(lit. "dazzling glare"), the demon
of blindness, who rests on uncovered
water at night and strikes those
with blindness who drink of it; also
mentioned were the spirit of
catalepsy and the spirit of
headache, the demon of epilepsy, and
the spirit of nightmare.
These demons were supposed to enter
the body and cause the disease while
overwhelming or "seizing" the victim
(hence "seizure"). To cure such
diseases it was necessary to draw
out the evil demons by certain
incantations and talismanic
performances, in which the Essenes
excelled. Josephus, who speaks of
demons as "spirits of the wicked
which enter into men that are alive
and kill them", but which can be
driven out by a certain root,
witnessed such a performance in the
presence of the Emperor Vespasian,
and ascribed its origin to King
Solomon.
King and queen
In some rabbinic
sources, the demons were believed to
be under the dominion of a king or
chief, either Asmodai or, in the
older Haggadah, Samael ("the angel
of death"), who kills by his deadly
poison, and is called "chief of the
devils". Occasionally a demon is
called "satan": "Stand not in the
way of an ox when coming from the
pasture, for Satan dances between
his horns".
According to some texts, the queen
of demons is Lilith, pictured with
wings and long flowing hair, and
called the "mother of Ahriman".
"When Adam, doing penance for his
sin, separated from Eve for 130
years, he, by impure desire, caused
the earth to be filled with demons,
or shedim, lilin, and evil spirits."
Demonology never became an essential
feature of Jewish theology. The
reality of demons was never
questioned by the Talmudists and
late rabbis; most accepted their
existence as a fact. Nor did most of
the medieval thinkers question their
reality. Only rationalists like
Maimonides and Abraham ibn Ezra,
clearly denied their existence.
Their point of view eventually
became the mainstream Jewish
understanding.
Jewish rabbinic literature
Rabbinical demonology
has three classes of, demons, though
they are scarcely separable one from
another. There were the shedim, the
mazziḳim ("harmers"), and the ruḥin
("spirits"). Besides these there
were lilin ("night spirits"), ṭelane
("shade", or "evening spirits"),
ṭiharire ("midday spirits"), and
ẓafrire ("morning spirits"), as well
as the "demons that bring famine"
and "such as cause storm and
earthquake" (Targ. Yer. to
Deuteronomy xxxii. 24 and Numbers
vi. 24; Targ. to Cant. iii. 8, iv.
6; Eccl. ii. 5; Ps. xci. 5, 6.)
New Testament and
Christianity
"Demon" has a number of meanings,
all related to the idea of a spirit
that inhabited a place, or that
accompanied a person. Whether such a
daemon was benevolent or malevolent,
the Greek word meant something
different from the later medieval
notions of 'demon', and scholars
debate the time in which first
century usage by Jews and Christians
in its original Greek sense became
transformed to the later medieval
sense. It should be noted that some
denominations asserting Christian
faith also include, exclusively or
otherwise, fallen angels as de facto
demons; this definition also covers
the "sons of God" described in
Genesis who abandoned their posts in
heaven to mate with human women on
Earth before the Deluge.
In the Gospel of Mark, Jesus casts
out many demons, or evil spirits,
from those who are afflicted with
various ailments. Jesus is far
superior to the power of demons over
the beings that they inhabit, and he
is able to free these victims by
commanding and casting out the
demons, by binding them, and
forbidding them to return. Jesus
also apparently lends this power to
some of his disciples, who rejoice
at their new found ability to cast
out all demons.
By way of contrast, in the book of
Acts a group of Judaistic exorcists
known as the sons of Sceva try to
cast out a very powerful spirit
without believing in or knowing
Jesus, but fail with disastrous
consequences. However Jesus himself
never fails to vanquish a demon, no
matter how powerful (see the account
of the demon-possessed man at
Gerasim), and even defeats Satan in
the wilderness (see Gospel of
Matthew).
There is a description in the Book
of Revelation 12:7-17 of a battle
between God's army and Satan's
followers, and their subsequent
expulsion from Heaven to earth to
persecute humans — although this
event is related as being foretold
and taking place in the future. In
Luke 10:18 it is mentioned that a
power granted by Jesus to control
demons made Satan "fall like
lightning from heaven."
Augustine of Hippo's reading of
Plotinus, in City of God (ch.11) is
ambiguous as to whether daemons had
become 'demonized' by the early 5th
century:
"He [Plotinus] also states that the
blessed are called in Greek
eudaimones, because they are good
souls, that is to say, good demons,
confirming his opinion that the
souls of men are demons.
The contemporary Roman Catholic
Church unequivocally teaches that
angels and demons are real personal
beings, not just symbolic devices.
The Catholic Church has a cadre of
officially sanctioned exorcists
which perform many exorcisms each
year. The exorcists of the Catholic
Church teach that demons attack
humans continually but that
afflicted persons can be effectively
healed and protected either by the
formal rite of exorcism, authorized
to be performed only by bishops and
those they designate, or by prayers
of deliverance which any Christian
can offer for themselves or others.
Christianity
Building upon the few
references to daemons in the New
Testament, especially the visionary
poetry of the Apocalypse of John,
Christian writers of apocrypha from
the 2nd century onwards created a
more complicated tapestry of beliefs
about "demons" that was largely
independent of Christian scripture.
Origin
According to the Bible,
the fall of the Adversary is
portrayed in Isaiah 14:12-14 and
Ezekiel 28:12-19. However, the
connection between Isaiah 14:12-14
and the fall is mostly based on
mistranslation and tradition. The
King James Version (KJV), popular
among most Christian sects, reads:
"How art thou fallen from heaven, O
Lucifer, son of the morning! [how]
art thou cut down to the ground,
which didst weaken the nations! For
thou hast said in thine heart, I
will ascend into heaven, I will
exalt my throne above the stars of
God: I will sit also upon the mount
of the congregation, in the sides of
the north: I will ascend above the
heights of the clouds; I will be
like the most High" (Isaiah
14:12:-14).
The word "Lucifer" was inspired by
the Latin Vulgate, a translation
that the authors of the KJV adhered
to in several occasions to elucidate
Christian traditions (see KJV, "The
Project"). Lucifer is a Latin word
meaning "light-bearer" (from lux,
lucis, "light", and ferre, "to bear,
bring"), a Roman astrological term
for the "Morning Star", the planet
Venus. The word Lucifer was the
direct translation of the Septuagint
Greek heosphoros, ("dawn-bearer");
(cf. Greek phosphoros,
"light-bearer") and the Hebrew Helel,
("Bright one"). The word does not
specifically refer to Satan. To the
contrary, in context, Isaiah
14:12-14 actually refers to one of
the popular honorific titles of a
Babylonian king (see Isaiah 14:4 for
context); however, later
interpretations of the text, and the
influence of embellishments in works
such as Dante's The Divine Comedy
and Milton's Paradise Lost, led to
the common idea in Christian
mythology and folklore that Lucifer
was a poetic appellation of Satan
(see Lucifer for more information).
Ezekiel 28:12-19, in context, refers
to the King of Tyrus (see Ezekiel
28:2 for context). The passage,
however, is popularly attributed as
a reference to, or allegory of,
Satan, and even by some
commentators, an allegory of the
fall of Adam. Many Christian
teachings are built upon later
Jewish traditions that the Adversary
and the Adversary's host declared
war with God, but that God's army,
commanded by the archangel Michael,
defeated the rebels. Their defeat
was never in question, since God is
by nature omnipotent, but Michael
was given the honour of victory in
the natural order; thus the rise of
Christian veneration of the
archangel Michael, beginning at
Monte Gargano in 493, reflects the
full incorporation of demons into
Christianity.
According to tradition, God then
cast God's enemies from Heaven to
the abyss, into a newly created
prison called Hell, where all God's
enemies should be sentenced to an
eternal existence of pain and
misery. This pain is not all
physical; for their crimes, these
angels, now called demons, would be
deprived of the sight of God, this
being the worst possible punishment.
An indefinite time later (some
biblical scholars believe that the
angels fell sometime after the
creation of living things), when God
created the earth and life, the
Adversary and the other demons were
allowed to tempt humans or induce
them to sin by other means. The
first time the Adversary did this
was as a serpent in the earthly
paradise called the "Garden of Eden"
to tempt Eve, who became deceived by
Satan's evil trickery. Eve then gave
Adam some of the forbidden fruit and
both of their eyes were opened to
the knowledge of good and evil.
Demonologies
At various times in
Christian history, attempts have
been made to classify these beings
according to various proposed
demonic hierarchies.
According to most Christian
demonology demons will be eternally
punished and never reconciled with
God. Other theories postulate a
Universal reconciliation, in which
Satan, the fallen angels, and the
souls of the dead that were
condemned to Hell are reconciled
with God. This doctrine is today
often associated with the
Unification Church. Origen, Jerome
and Gregory of Nyssa also mentioned
this possibility.
In contemporary Christianity, demons
are generally considered to be
angels who fell from grace by
rebelling against God. Some contest
that this view, championed by
Origen, Augustine and John
Chrysostom, arose during the 6th
century. Another theory that may
have preceded or co-existed with the
hypothesis of fallen angels was that
demons were ostracized from Heaven
for the primary sin of mating with
mortal women, giving rise to a race
of half-human giants known as the
Nephilim. That theory is accepted by
some contemporary Christian sects.
There are still others who say that
the sin of the angels was pride and
disobedience. It seems quite certain
that these were the sins that caused
Satan's downfall (Ezek. 28). If this
be the true view then we are to
understand the words, "estate" or
"principality" in Deuteronomy 32:8
and Jude 6 ("And the angels which
kept not their first estate, but
left their own habitation, he hath
reserved in everlasting chains under
darkness unto the judgment of the
great day.") as indicating that
instead of being satisfied with the
dignity once for all assigned to
them under the Son of God, they
aspired higher.
Hinduism
Hindu mythology include
numerous varieties of
anthropomorphic beings that might be
classified as demons, including
Rakshasas (belligerent,
shapechanging terrestrial demons),
Asuras (demigods), Vetalas (bat-like
spirits), and Pishachas
(cannibalistic demons).
Asuras
Originally, Asura, in
the earliest hymns of the Rig Veda,
meant any supernatural spirit—good
or bad. Hence even some of the devas
(demigods), especially Varuna, have
the epithet of Asura. In fact, since
the /s/ of the Indic linguistic
branch is cognate with the /h/ of
the Early Iranian languages, the
word Asura, representing a category
of celestial beings, became the word
Ahura (Mazda), the Supreme God of
the monotheistic Zoroastrians. But
very soon, among the Indo-Aryans,
Asura came to exclusively mean any
of a race of anthropomorphic but
hideous demons. All words such as
Asura, Daitya (lit., sons of the
demon-mother "Diti"), Rakshasa (lit.
from "harm to be guarded against")
are translated into English as
demon. These demons are inherently
evil and are in a constant battle
against the demigods. Hence in Hindu
iconography, the gods and demigods
are shown to carry weapons to kill
the asuras. Unlike Christianity, the
demons are not the cause of the evil
and unhappiness in present mankind
(which occurs on the account of
ignorance from recognizing one's
true self). In later Puranic
mythology, exceptions do occur in
the demonic race to produce
god-fearing Asuras like Prahalada.
Also, many Asuras are said to have
been granted boons from one of the
members of the Hindu trinity, viz.,
Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva when the
latter had been appeased from
penances. All Asuras, unlike the
devas, are said to be mortals
(though they vehemently wish to
become immortal). Many people
metaphorically interpret these
demons as manifestations of the
ignoble passions in human mind.
Evil spirits
On the account of the Hindu theory
of reincarnation and transmigration
of souls according to one's Karma,
other kinds of demons can also be
enlisted. If a human does extremely
horrible and sinful karmas in his
life, his soul (Atman) will, upon
his death, directly turn into an
evil ghostly spirit, many kinds of
which are recognized in the later
Hindu texts. These demons could be
Grimnex Vetalas, Pishachas, Bhūtas
etc.
Pre-Islamic Arab culture
Pre-Islamic mythology
does not discriminate between gods
and demons. The jinn are considered
as divinities of inferior rank,
having many human attributes: they
eat, drink, and procreate their
kind, sometimes in conjunction with
human beings. The jinn smell and
lick things, and have a liking for
remnants of food. In eating they use
the left hand. Usually they haunt
waste and deserted places,
especially the thickets where wild
beasts gather. Cemeteries and dirty
places are also favorite abodes.
When appearing to man, jinn
sometimes assume the forms of beasts
and sometimes those of men.
Generally, jinn are peaceable and
well disposed toward men. Many a
pre-Islamic poet was believed to
have been inspired by good jinn, but
there are also evil jinn, who
contrive to injure men.
Islam
Islam recognizes the
existence of the jinn. Jinns are not
the "genies" of modern lore, and
they are not all evil, as demons are
described in Christianity, but as
creatures that co-exist with humans.
In Islam the evil jinns are referred
to as the shayātīn, or devils, and
Iblis (Satan) is their chief. Iblis
was the first Jinn who disobeyed
Allah. According to Islam, the jinn
are made from the light of flame of
fire (ناَر [nɛ:r] deviation of نور [nu:r]
"light") (and mankind is made of
clay). According to the Qur'an,
Iblis was once a pious servant of
Allah, but when Allah created Adam
from clay, Iblis became very
jealous, and arrogant and disobeyed
Allah.
Adam was the first man, and man was
the greatest creation of Allah.
Iblis could not stand this, and
refused to acknowledge a creature
made of "dirt" (man). Allah
condemned Iblis to be punished after
death eternally in the hellfire.
Allah had created hell. Iblis asked
Allah if he may live to the last day
and have the ability to mislead
mankind and jinns, Allah said that
Iblis may only mislead those whom
have forsaken Allah. Allah then
turned Iblis's countenance into
horridness and condemned him to only
have powers of trickery. Adam and
Eve (Hawwa in Arabic) were both
together misled by Iblis into eating
the forbidden fruit, and
consequently fell from the garden of
Eden to Earth.
The word "genie" comes from the
Arabic jinn. This is not surprising
considering the story of `Alā' ad-Dīn,
(anglicized as Aladdin), passed
through Arabian merchants en route
to Europe.
New Age / Shamanism
Carlos Castaneda
referred to demonic predators called
"flyers" which have the appearance
of frightening dark shadows and
which vampirize human energy.
According to this view ancient
humans were complete, with much
greater energetic resources than
effete, decadent, modern humans
possess. At the time when
agriculture was invented the flyers
gave human beings their mind
(constant internal dialogue of
beliefs, ideas, social mores,
expectations, and dreams of success
or failure). By playing on this
self-reflection, sucking the angry
and worried energy it generates, the
flyers began to farm human beings
for energy, just as humans began
farming animals. Modern humans are
the hypnotized slaves of these
flyers; and the pseudo concerns of
modern society are a flyer mechanism
of mind control.
Science
In thought experiments
scientists occasionally imagine
entities with special abilities in
order to pose tough intellectual
challenges or to highlight apparent
paradoxes. Examples include:
-
Descartes’ malicious demon -
Cartesian skepticism (also
called methodological
skepticism) advocates the
doubting of all things which
cannot be justified through
logic. Descartes uses three
arguments to cast doubt on our
ability to objectively know: The
dream argument, the deceiving
God argument, and the malicious
demon argument. Since our senses
cannot put us in contact with
external objects themselves, but
only with our mental images of
such objects, we can have no
absolute certainty that anything
exists in the external world. In
the evil demon argument
Descartes proposes an entity who
is capable of deceiving us to
such a degree that we have
reason to doubt the totality of
what our senses tell us.
-
Laplace's demon - A hypothetical
all-knowing entity (later called
"Laplace's Demon") who knows the
precise location and momentum of
every atom in the universe, and
therefore could use Newton's
laws to reveal the entire course
of cosmic events, past and
future. Based upon the
philosophical proposition of
causal determinism. (See also
causality).
-
Maxwell's demon - A demon able
to distinguish between fast and
slow moving molecules. If this
demon only let fast moving
molecules through a trapdoor to
a container, the temperature
inside the container would
increase without any work being
applied. Such a scenario would
violate the second law of
thermodynamics. See also:
Epicurean paradox#Epicurus
-
Morton's demon - A demon who
stands at the gateway of a
person's senses and lets in
facts that agree with that
person's beliefs while
deflecting those which do not.
Used to explain the phenomenon
of confirmation bias.
Psychiatry
M. Scott Peck, an American
psychiatrist, wrote two books on the
subject. Peck describes in some
detail several cases involving his
patients. In People of the Lie: The
Hope For Healing Human Evil he gives
some identifying characteristics for
evil persons whom he classifies as
having a character disorder. In
Glimpses of the Devil, A
Psychiatrist's Personal Accounts of
Possession, Exorcism, and Redemption
Peck goes into significant detail
describing how he became interested
in exorcism in order to debunk the
"myth" of possession by evil spirits
– only to be convinced otherwise
after encountering two cases which
did not fit into any category known
to psychology or psychiatry. Peck
came to the conclusion that
possession was a rare phenomenon
related to evil. Possessed people
are not actually evil; they are
doing battle with the forces of
evil. His observations on these
cases are listed in the Diagnostic
and Statistical Manual of Mental
Disorders (IV) of the American
Psychiatric Association.
Although Peck's earlier work was met
with widespread popular acceptance,
his work on the topics of evil and
possession has generated significant
debate and derision. Much was made
of his association with (and
admiration for) the controversial
Malachi Martin, a Roman Catholic
priest and a former Jesuit, despite
the fact that Peck consistently
called Martin a liar and
manipulator. Other criticisms
leveled against Peck include
misdiagnoses based upon a lack of
knowledge regarding dissociative
identity disorder (formerly known as
multiple personality disorder), and
a claim that he had transgressed the
boundaries of professional ethics by
attempting to persuade his patients
into accepting Christianity.
A
demon is, in conventional thought, a
being of pure malevolence -
essentially, an element of evil
consisting of the Devil and his many
minions. Demons not in the
underworld are either free on Earth
or living temporarily in the abyss
before going back to Gehenna, the
"lake of fire," to join Satan, other
demons, and the unsaved.
One
similarity in demons among several
cultures that embrace Christianity
is the origin of the "head demon."
It is frequently believed that the
head demon started out as an angel
in good standing with God, then
after quarreling with God and being
defeated, was condemned to rule the
underworld. In the Bible, Lucifer
begins as an angel, battles God, and
is sent to rule the underworld after
his defeat. In most cultures ,
demons personify evil, pain and
suffering. A demon either exploits a
specific weakness in man, creates a
certain suffering for man, or wants
some special thing from man. Demons
are said to have many powers, such
as prophecy, that are alluring to
men.
One
significant finding in the study of
demons is that multiple demons exist
in most documented cases, frequently
in a hierarchy where each demon has
its own name and unique
characteristics. To the Ancient
Greeks, daimons were minor deities -
not necessarily good or evil. The
good demons were called Eudemons,
and evil demons were called
Cacodemons. Many Eastern religions
recognize a number of different
demons. For example, ancient
Buddhists had the Mira, which
embodied all that was evil; and the
Indian demons are lead by the
powerful Ravana, which is believed
by that group of people to change
shape and remain invulnerable to all
spirits.
Only
in its modern connotation does the
word, "demon," evoke the idea of
evil spirits. The Greek word daemon,
as stated earlier, from which the
words daimon and demon are
ultimately derived, means "genius
and intelligence," and has been
applied indiscriminately to all
spiritual beings whether good or
evil.