| PAGE |
| Preface | ix |
| Abbreviations | xiii |
| Designation of Manuscripts | xv |
| List of Works Frequently Cited by Author and Date ofPublication or Brief Title | xvii |
| CHAPTER |
| 1. | Introduction | [1] |
| [BOOK I]. THE ROMAN EMPIRE |
| Foreword | [39] |
| 2. | Pliny’s Natural History | [41] |
| I. | Its Place in the History of Science | [42] |
| II. | Its Experimental Tendency | [53] |
| III. | Pliny’s Account of Magic | [58] |
| IV. | The Science of the Magi | [64] |
| V. | Pliny’s Magical Science | [72] |
| 3. | Seneca and Ptolemy: Natural Divination and Astrology | [100] |
| 4. | Galen | [117] |
| I. | The Man and His Times | [119] |
| II. | His Medicine and Experimental Science | [139] |
| III. | His Attitude Toward Magic | [165] |
| 5. | Ancient Applied Science and Magic: Vitruvius,Hero, and the Greek Alchemists | [182] |
| 6. | Plutarch’s Essays | [200] |
| 7. | Apuleius of Madaura | [221] |
| 8. | Philostratus’s Life of Apollonius of Tyana | [242] |
| 9. | Literary and Philosophical Attacks upon Superstition:Cicero, Favorinus, Sextus Empiricus, Lucian | [268] |
| 10. | Spurious Mystic Writings of Hermes, Orpheus, andZoroaster | [287] |
|
| 11. | Neo-Platonism and Its Relations to Astrology andTheurgy | [298] |
| 12. | Aelian, Solinus, and Horapollo | [322] |
| [BOOK II]. EARLY CHRISTIAN THOUGHT |
| Foreword | [337] |
| 13. | The Book of Enoch | [340] |
| 14. | Philo Judaeus | [348] |
| 15. | The Gnostics | [360] |
| 16. | The Christian Apocrypha | [385] |
| 17. | The Recognitions of Clement and Simon Magus | [400] |
| 18. | The Confession of Cyprian and Some Similar Stories | [428] |
| 19. | Origen and Celsus | [436] |
| 20. | Other Christian Discussion of Magic Before Augustine | [462] |
| 21. | Christianity and Natural Science: Basil, Epiphanius,and the Physiologus | [480] |
| 22. | Augustine on Magic and Astrology | [504] |
| 23. | The Fusion of Pagan and Christian Thought inthe Fourth and Fifth Centuries | [523] |
| [BOOK III]. THE EARLY MIDDLE AGES |
| 24. | The Story of Nectanebus, or the Alexander Legendin the Early Middle Ages | [551] |
| 25. | Post-Classical Medicine | [566] |
| 26. | Pseudo-Literature in Natural Science | [594] |
| 27. | Other Early Medieval Learning: Boethius, Isidore,Bede, Gregory | [616] |
| 28. | Arabic Occult Science of the Ninth Century | [641] |
| 29. | Latin Astrology and Divination, Especially in theNinth, Tenth, and Eleventh Centuries | [672] |
| 30. | Gerbert and the Introduction of Arabic Astrology | [697] |
| 31. | Anglo-Saxon, Salernitan and Other Latin Medicinein Manuscripts from the Ninth to the Twelfth Century | [719] |
| 32. | Constantinus Africanus (c. 1015-1087) | [742] |
| 33. | Treatises on the Arts Before the Introduction ofArabic Alchemy | [760] |
| 34. | Marbod | [775] |
| Indices: |
| [General] | [783] |
| [Bibliographical] | [811] |
| [Manuscripts] | [831] |
|
| BOOK IV. THE TWELFTH CENTURY |
| 35. | The Early Scholastics: Peter Abelard and Hughof St. Victor | 3 |
| 36. | Adelard of Bath | 14 |
| 37. | William of Conches | 50 |
| 38. | Some Twelfth Century Translators, Chiefly ofAstrology from the Arabic | 66 |
| 39. | Bernard Silvester; Astrology and Geomancy | 99 |
| 40. | Saint Hildegard of Bingen | 124 |
| 41. | John of Salisbury | 155 |
| 42. | Daniel of Morley and Roger of Hereford | 171 |
| 43. | Alexander Neckam on the Natures of Things | 188 |
| 44. | Moses Maimonides | 205 |
| 45. | Hermetic Books in the Middle Ages | 214 |
| 46. | Kiranides | 229 |
| 47. | Prester John and the Marvels of India | 236 |
| 48. | The Pseudo-Aristotle | 246 |
| 49. | Solomon and the Ars Notoria | 279 |
| 50. | Ancient and Medieval Dream-Books | 290 |
| BOOK V. THE THIRTEENTH CENTURY |
| Foreword | 305 |
| 51. | Michael Scot | 307 |
| 52. | William of Auvergne | 338 |
| 53. | Thomas of Cantimpré | 372 |
| 54. | Bartholomew of England | 401 |
| 55. | Robert Grosseteste | 436 |
| 56. | Vincent of Beauvais | 457 |
| 57. | Early Thirteenth Century Medicine: Gilbert ofEngland and William of England | 477 |
| 58. | Petrus Hispanus | 488 |
| 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 |
|
| 60. | Thomas Aquinas | 593 |
| 61. | Roger Bacon | 616 |
| I. | Life | 619 |
| II. | Criticism of and Part in Medieval Learning | 630 |
| III. | Experimental Science | 649 |
| IV. | Attitude Toward Magic and Astrology | 659 |
| 62. | The Speculum Astronomiae | 692 |
| 63. | Three Treatises Ascribed to Albert | 720 |
| 64. | Experiments and Secrets: Medical and Biological | 751 |
| 65. | Experiments and Secrets: Chemical and Magical | 777 |
| 66. | Picatrix | 813 |
| 67. | Guido Bonatti and Bartholomew of Parma | 825 |
| 68. | Arnald of Villanova | 841 |
| 69. | Raymond Lull | 862 |
| 70. | Peter of Abano | 874 |
| 71. | Cecco d’Ascoli | 948 |
| 72. | Conclusion | 969 |
| Indices: |
| General | 985 |
| Bibliographical | 1007 |
| Manuscripts | 1027 |