[197] Van Hoogstraten, in Frédéricq, as cited below. [↑]

[198] Dr. Frazer’s assumption (Golden Bough, 3rd ed. pt. i, i, 224) that magic assumes an invariable order of nature, is unsubstantiated even by his vast anthropological erudition. Magic varies arbitrarily, and the idea of a fixed “order” does not belong to the magician’s plane of thought. [↑]

[199] Maury, La Magie et l’Astrologie, 4e éd. pp. 214–16. [↑]

[200] “Judicial astrology ... which supplanted and degraded the art of medicine” (Prof. Clifford Allbutt, Harveian Oration on Science and Medieval Thought, 1901, App. p. 113). There is a startling survival of it in the physiology of Harvey. Id. p. 45. [↑]

[201] Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa von Nettesheim. [↑]

[202] Above, p. 385. [↑]

Chapter XI

THE REFORMATION, POLITICALLY CONSIDERED