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The place of magic in the intellectual history of Europe cover

The place of magic in the intellectual history of Europe

Chapter 2: ERRATA
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About This Book

The study traces belief in magic from antiquity through the early modern period, surveying popular and learned acceptance of witchcraft, astrology, and ceremonial arts. It analyzes classical and medieval sources to illustrate how scholars and practitioners attributed occult virtues to animals, plants, minerals, and stars, and how astrological doctrine informed medicine and policy. Chapters treat origins and defining features of magic, its praeternatural character, major historical exemplars, and the gradual interaction and partial fusion between magical thought and emerging scientific inquiry, concluding with reflections on the persistence and transformation of occult ideas in European intellectual life.

ERRATA

Page 21, line 19, instead of verbe read verbo.
Page 49, lines 9 and 10, instead of marvelour read marvelous.
Page 58, at close of first foot-note, instead of 66 read 67.
Page 71, line 10 of foot-note, instead of άλλὰ read ἀλλὰ.
Page 101, line 8 of foot-note, instead of factorum read fatorum.
Page 105, line 2 of second foot-note, instead of εἷναι read εἶναι.