03125nam a22003614a 4500001001200000003000800012006001900020007001500039008004100054010001700095020004200112020003900154040002100193035002100214050002400235082002400259100002100283245010200304260003800406300001400444490007300458500002500531504005300556505172500609533015202334650001102486650001702497655002902514710001702543830006202560856012602622999001502748ebr10270878CaPaEBRm u cr cn|||||||||070702s2007 ne sb 001 0 eng  z 2007027417 z9789004160989 (hardback : alk. paper) z9004160981 (hardback : alk. paper) aCaPaEBRcCaPaEBR a(OCoLC)30363715214aBF1593b.Z36 2007eb04a133.4/3094090242221 aZambelli, Paola.10aWhite magic, Black magic in the European Renaissanceh[electronic resource] /cby Paola Zambelli. aLeiden ;aBoston :bBrill,c2007. ax, 282 p.1 aStudies in medieval and Reformation traditions,x1573-4188 ;vv. 125 aSubtitle from cover. aIncludes bibliographical references and indexes.00tIntroduction : must we really re-appropriate magic? --tWhite magic, black magic.tContinuity in the definition of natural magic from Pico to Della Porta : astrology and magic in Italy and north of the Alps ;tScholastic and humanist views of Hermetism : witchcraft, "natural magic", Trithemius' magic and Agrippa's critical turn of mindt(Medieval Hermetic antecedents ;tFicino and Pico ;tHermetists in Germany) ;tMagic, pseudepigraphy, prophecies and forgeries in Trithemius' manuscripts : from Cusanus to Bovelles?t(To publish or not to publish? ;tTrithemius' passion for magic ;tTrithemius as a prophet or prognosticator ;tMagical authorities and forgeries ;tBlessings and exorcisms ;tTrithemius and his German contemporaries ;tAncient and medieval occult sources ;tDenunciations and self-defences ;tSocratism and Cusanian ignorance or simplicity) ;tAppendix I : Trithemius' bibliography for necromancers --tAgrippa as an author of prohibited books.tAgrippa of Nettesheim as a critical Magus ;tMagic and radical Reformation in Agrippa of Nettesheim ;tAppendix II : recent studies on Agrippa --tBruno as a reader of prohibited books.tThe initiates and the idiot : conjectures on some Brunian sourcest(Bruno as a reader of the necromancers' 'theoricae' ;tBruno and the Paracelsian revival ;tBruno as a reader of Lullian and pseudo-Lullian works) ;tHermetism and magic in Giordano Bruno : some interpretations from Tocco to Corsano, from Yates to Cilibertot(F.A. Yates, D.P. Walker and other scholars in the Warburg Institute ;tRenaissance magic as seen by Yates and Walker ;tMagic tricks of Professor Ciliberto) ;tAppendix III : a Nolan before Bruno : Momus and Socratism in the Renaissance. aElectronic reproduction.bPalo Alto, Calif. :cebrary,d2013.nAvailable via World Wide Web.nAccess may be limited to ebrary affiliated libraries. 0aMagic. 0aRenaissance. 7aElectronic books.2local2 aebrary, Inc. 0aStudies in medieval and Reformation traditions ;vv. 125.40uhttp://site.ebrary.com/lib/rucke/Doc?id=10270878zAn electronic book accessible through the World Wide Web; click to view c7978d7978