[210] Causa, Lag. 271: on Averroes cf. Op. Lat. i. 1. 221, 224, 337, 338, etc.

[211] Her. Fur. Lag. 677.

[212] Op. Lat. i. 1. 16. Albertus lived from 1193 to 1280 A.D. There are frequent references to the spurious writings attributed to him, in Bruno’s De Magia Mathematica, etc.

[213] i. 2. 415. Cf. Sig. Sig. ii. 2. 190, for a reputed miracle related of Saint Thomas.

[214] Cf. the ridicule in Lag. 361 and 563.

[215] Causa, Lag. 246.

[216] Tocco, Fonti piu recenti, etc., p. 538.

[217] Besides the several works on the Art of Reasoning, Lully had written also on theology and on medicine, and Bruno, in his (posthumous) Medicina Lulliana, gave a compendium of the latter group of writings.

[218] De Lampade Combinatoria, Op. Lat. ii. 2. 234.

[219] Faber Stapulensis (c. 1500), and Carolus Bovillus (c. 1470–1553). Both were rather followers of Cusanus.