A History of Magic and Experimental Science, Volume 1 (of 2) by Lynn Thorndike
59. ALBERTUS MAGNUS 517
I. Life 521
II. As a Scientist 528
III. His Allusions to Magic 548
IV. Marvelous Virtues in Nature 560
V. Attitude Toward Astrology 577
Chapters
- Chapter 1 Ch.1
- BOOK I. THE ROMAN EMPIRE Ch.2
- 2. PLINY’S NATURAL HISTORY 41 Ch.3
- 4. GALEN 117 Ch.4
- 5. ANCIENT APPLIED SCIENCE AND MAGIC: VITRUVIUS, Ch.5
- 9. LITERARY AND PHILOSOPHICAL ATTACKS UPON SUPERSTITION: Ch.6
- 10. SPURIOUS MYSTIC WRITINGS OF HERMES, ORPHEUS, AND Ch.7
- 11. NEO-PLATONISM AND ITS RELATIONS TO ASTROLOGY AND Ch.8
- BOOK II. EARLY CHRISTIAN THOUGHT Ch.9
- 21. CHRISTIANITY AND NATURAL SCIENCE: BASIL, EPIPHANIUS, Ch.10
- 23. THE FUSION OF PAGAN AND CHRISTIAN THOUGHT IN Ch.11
- 24. THE STORY OF NECTANEBUS, OR THE ALEXANDER LEGEND Ch.12
- 27. OTHER EARLY MEDIEVAL LEARNING: BOETHIUS, ISIDORE, Ch.13
- 29. LATIN ASTROLOGY AND DIVINATION, ESPECIALLY IN THE Ch.14
- 31. ANGLO-SAXON, SALERNITAN AND OTHER LATIN MEDICINE Ch.15
- 33. TREATISES ON THE ARTS BEFORE THE INTRODUCTION OF Ch.16
- 34. MARBOD 775 Ch.17
- 35. THE EARLY SCHOLASTICS: PETER ABELARD AND HUGH Ch.18
- 38. SOME TWELFTH CENTURY TRANSLATORS, CHIEFLY OF Ch.19
- BOOK V. THE THIRTEENTH CENTURY Ch.20
- 57. EARLY THIRTEENTH CENTURY MEDICINE: GILBERT OF Ch.21
- 59. ALBERTUS MAGNUS 517 Ch.22
- 61. ROGER BACON 616 Ch.23
- 72. CONCLUSION 969 Ch.24
- Introduction à l’étude de la chimie des anciens et du moyen âge, 1889. Ch.25
- 1911. Popular. Ch.26
- INTRODUCTION Ch.27
- BOOK I. THE ROMAN EMPIRE Ch.28
- Chapter 2. Pliny’s Natural History. Ch.29
- BOOK I. THE ROMAN EMPIRE Ch.30
- CHAPTER II Ch.31
- CHAPTER III Ch.32
- CHAPTER IV Ch.33
- CHAPTER V Ch.34
- CHAPTER VI Ch.35
- CHAPTER VII Ch.36
- CHAPTER VIII Ch.37
- CHAPTER IX Ch.38
- CHAPTER X Ch.39
- introduction, which may be regarded as a piquant appetizer to whet the Ch.40
- CHAPTER XI Ch.41
- CHAPTER XII Ch.42
- BOOK II. EARLY CHRISTIAN THOUGHT Ch.43
- Chapter 13. The Book of Enoch. Ch.44
- BOOK II. EARLY CHRISTIAN THOUGHT Ch.45
- CHAPTER XIII Ch.46
- CHAPTER XIV Ch.47
- CHAPTER XV Ch.48
- CHAPTER XVI Ch.49
- CHAPTER XVII Ch.50
- CHAPTER XVIII Ch.51
- CHAPTER XIX Ch.52
- CHAPTER XX Ch.53
- CHAPTER XXI Ch.54
- 329. When or where the nine homilies which compose his _Hexaemeron_ Ch.55
- CHAPTER XXII Ch.56
- CHAPTER XXIII Ch.57
- Chapter 24. The Story of Nectanebus. Ch.58
- CHAPTER XXIV Ch.59
- prologue which is found only in the oldest extant manuscript, a Bamberg Ch.60
- CHAPTER XXV Ch.61
- CHAPTER XXVI Ch.62
- CHAPTER XXVII Ch.63
- CHAPTER XXVIII Ch.64
- CHAPTER XXIX Ch.65
- CHAPTER XXX Ch.66
- introduction? Ch.67
- introduction, it would be a more valuable bit of evidence as to his Ch.68
- CHAPTER XXXI Ch.69
- introduction of Arabic medicine to the western world. Ch.70
- CHAPTER XXXII Ch.71
- introduction of translations from the Arabic is comparatively free from Ch.72
- CHAPTER XXXIII Ch.73
- CHAPTER XXXIV Ch.74
- introduction of Arabic alchemy, 773; Ch.75
- 106. M. A. Ruffer, _Palaeopathology of Egypt_, 1921. Ch.76
- 8. Daimon and Hero, with Excursus on Ritual Forms preserved in Greek Ch.77
- 1921. See also Thompson (1913), p. 14. Ch.78
- 99. “Phyteuma quale sit describere supervacuum habeo cum sit usus eius Ch.79
- 4838. Arsenal 981, in an Italian hand, is presumably incorrectly dated Ch.80
- 1507. See Justin Winsor, _A Bibliography of Ptolemy’s Geography_, 1884, Ch.81
- 1895. Since then I believe that the only work of Galen to be translated Ch.82
- 66. Also II, 216; XIX, 19 and 41. Ch.83
- 330. Pliny, too (XXI, 88), states that trefoil is poisonous itself and Ch.84
- 1867. In English we have _The Pneumatics of Hero of Alexandria_, Ch.85
- 1890. I have found that Riess, while including some of the passages Ch.86
- 53. See below, II, 220-21. Ch.87
- 1860. Greek text in PG, vol. XVI, part 3; English translation in AN, Ch.88
- 3836. Other MSS are: BN 11624, 11th century; BN 12135, 9th century; BN Ch.89
- 1888. Schanz (1905) 138, mentions only continental MSS, although there Ch.90
- introduction by A. von Premerstein, C. Wessely, and J. Mantuani Ch.91
- 177. This is not, however, to be regarded as the invention of lead Ch.92