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|
Its Ceremonies |
500 |
Power and Malignity of the Witch |
501 |
The Church Helpless to Counteract her Spells |
506 |
Belief Stimulated by Persecution |
508 |
Witches Lose Power when Arrested |
509 |
Secular and Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction over Witchcraft |
511 |
Inquisitorial Process as Applied to Witchcraft |
513 |
Case of the Witches of the Canavese |
518 |
Case of the Vaudois of Arras |
519 |
Slow Development of the Witchcraft Craze |
534 |
Stimulated by the Inquisition and the Church |
538 |
Influence of the Malleus Maleficarum |
543 |
Opposition to the Inquisition.—France.—Cornelius Agrippa |
544 |
Opposition of Venice.—The Witches of Brescia |
546 |
Terrible Development in the Sixteenth Century |
549 |
|
CHAPTER VIII.—Intellect and Faith. |
Intellectual Aberrations not Dangerous |
550 |
Theological Tendencies and Development |
551 |
Roger Bacon |
552 |
Nominalism and Realism |
555 |
Rivalry between Philosophy and Theology |
557 |
Averrhoism |
558 |
Toleration in Italy in the Fifteenth Century |
565 |
Modified Averrhoism.—Pomponazio.—Nifo |
574 |
Raymond Lully |
578 |
Evolution of Dogma.—The Beatific Vision |
590 |
The Immaculate Conception |
596 |
Censorship of the Press |
612 |
|
CHAPTER IX.—Conclusion. |
Omissions of the Inquisition.—The Greek Heretics |
616 |
Quæstuari, or Pardoners |
|