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agrippa3
Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa: Of Occult Philosophy, Book III (part 1)
This HTML edition by Joseph H. Peterson, Copyright © 2000. All rights reserved.The copyright to theTwilit Grotto Esoteric Archivesis owned by Joseph H. Peterson and is protectedby the copyright laws of the United States and the Universal Copyright Convention.The materials on the Twilit Grotto Esoteric Archives (including all texts, translations, images,descriptions, drawings etc.) are provided for the personal use of students, scholars, and the public.Any commercial use or publication of them without authorization is strictly prohibited. All materialsare copyrighted and are not in the public domain. Copying of materials on the Twilit Grotto EsotericArchives Web pages is not permitted.Individuals distributing illegal copies will be pursued legally along with their Internet ServiceProviders.You will need aHebrew fontinstalled to read some of this book.
Three Books of OCCULT PHILOSOPHY OR MAGICbyHenry Cornelius Agrippa
BOOK THREE - CEREMONIAL MAGIC
[Contents:]
Chapter i:Of the necessity, power, and profit of Religion.Chapter ii:Of concealing of those things which are secret in religion.Chapter iii:What dignification is required, that one may be a true magician and a worker of miracles.Chapter iv:Of the two helps of Ceremonial magic, religion and superstition.Chapter v:Of the three guides of Religion, which bring us to the path of truth.
Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa: Occult Philosophy, Book III (part 1)file:///M|/PDF-Bücher/Esoterik & Magie/HTML/Agrippa3/agrippa3.htm (1 von 33) [20.02.2001 16:14:39]
 
Chapter vi:How by these guides the soul of man ascendeth up into the Divine nature, and ismade a worker of Miracles.Chapter vii:That the knowledge of the true God is necessary for a Magician, and what the oldMagicians and Philosophers have thought concerning God.Chapter viii:What the Ancient Philosophers have thought concerning the Divine Trinity.Chapter ix:What the true and most Orthodox faith is concerning God and the most holy Trinity.Chapter x:Of Divine emanations, which the Hebrews call Numerations, others attributes; Thegentiles gods and Deities; and of the ten Sephiroths and ten most sacred names of God which rule them, and the interpretation of them.Chapter xi:Of the Divine names, and their power and vertue.Chapter xii:Of the influence of the divine names through all the middle causes into these inferiorthings.Chapter xiii:Of the members of God, and of their influence on our members.Chapter xiv:Of the Gods of the gentiles, and souls of the Celestiall bodies, and what places wereconsecrated in times past, and to what Deities.Chapter xv:What our Theologians think concerning the Celestiall souls.Chapter xvi:Of Intelligences and spirits, and of the threefold kind of them, and of their diversenames, and of Infernall and subterraneall spirits.Chapter xvii:Of these according to the opinion of the Theologians.Chapter xviii:Of the orders of evil spirits, and of their fall, and divers natures.Chapter xix:Of the bodies of the Devils.Chapter xx:Of the annoyance of evil spirits, and the preservation we have by good spirits.Chapter xxi:Of obeying a proper Genius, and of the searching out the nature thereof.Chapter xxii:That there is a threefold keeper of man, and from whence each of them proceed.Chapter xxiii:Of the tongue of Angels, and of their speaking amongst themselves, and with us.Chapter xxiv:Of the names of Spirits, and their various imposition; and of the Spirits that are setover the Stars, Signs, Corners of the Heaven, and the Elements.Chapter xxv:How the Hebrew Mecubals draw forth the sacred names of Angels out of the sacredwrit, and of the seventie two Angels, which bear the name of God, with the Tablesof Ziruph, and the Commutations of letters, and numbers.Chapter xxvi:Of finding out of the names of spirits, and Genius's from the disposition of Celestiallbodies.Chapter xxvii:Of the calculating Art of such names by the tradition of Cabalists.Chapter xxviii:How sometimes names of Spirits are taken from those things over which they areset.Chapter xxix:Of the Characters and Seals of spirits.Chapter xxx:Another manner of making Characters, delivered by Cabalists.Chapter xxxi:There is yet another fashion of Characters, and concerning marks of spirits whichare received by revelation.Chapter xxxii:How good spirits may be called up by us, and how evil spirits may be overcome byus.Chapter xxxiii:Of the bonds of spirits, and of their adjurations, and castings out.Chapter xxxiv:Of the Animasticall order, and the Heros.Chapter xxxv:Of the Mortall and Terrestrial Gods.
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Chapter xxxvi:Of Man, how he was created after the Image of God.Chapter xxxvii:Of mans soul and through what means it is joyned [joined] to the body.Chapter xxxviii:What Divine gifts man receiveth from above, from the severall Orders of theIntelligences and the heavens.Chapter xxxix:How the superior Influences, seing they are good by nature, are depraved in theseinferior thing, and are made causes of evil.Chapter xl:That on every man a divine character is imprinted, by the vertue of which man canattain the working of miracles.Chapter xli:What concerning man after death, diverse Opinions.Chapter xlii:By what wayes the Magicians and Necromancers do think they can call forth thesouls of the dead.Chapter xliii:Of the power of mans soul, in the mind, reason and imagination.Chapter xliv:Of the degrees of souls, and their destruction, or Immortality.Chapter xlv:Of Soothsaying, and Phrensie [phrensy].Chapter xlvi:Of the first kind of phrensie [phrensy] from the Muses.Chapter xlvii:Of the second kinde from Dionysius [Dionysus].Chapter xlviii:Of the third kind of phrensie [phrensy] from Apollo.Chapter xlix:Of the fourth kinde of Phrensie [phrensy], from Venus.Chapter l:Of rapture, and extasie [ecstasy], and soothsayings, which happen to them which aretaken with the falling sickness, or with a swoune [swoon], or to them in an agonie[agony].Chapter li:Of Prophetical Dreams.Chapter lii:Of Lots and marks possessing the sure power of Oracles.Chapter liii:How he that will receive Oracles must dispose himself.Chapter liv:Of cleanness, and how to be observed.Chapter lv:Of abstinence, fastings, chastity, solitariness, the tranquillity and ascent of the mind.Chapter lvi:Of Penitency, and Almes.Chapter lvii:Of those things which being outwardly administred conduce to Expiation.Chapter lviii:Of Adorations, and vowes.Chapter lix:Of sacrifices and oblations, and their kinds and manners.Chapter lx:What imprecations, and rites the ancients were wont to use in sacrifices, andoblations.Chapter lxi:How these things must be performed, as to God, so as to inferiour dieties [deities].Chapter lxii:Of Consecrations, and their manner.Chapter lxiii:What things may be called holy, what consecrated, and how these become sobetwixt us and the Dieties [deities]; and of sacred times.Chapter lxiv:Of certain Religious observations, ceremonies, and rites of perfumings, unctions,and such like.Chapter lxv:The Conclusion of the whole Work.To The Reverend Father, and Doctor of Divinity, ...Unto the Same Man.To a Certain Friend of the King's Court.The Censure, or Retraction...
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