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Paracelsiana
Paracelsus’s Biography among His Detractors.....Charles D. Gunnoe Jr.
Paracelsus and the Boundaries of Medicine in Early Modern Augsburg.....Mitchell Hammond
To Be or Not to Be a Paracelsian: Something Spagyric in the State of Denmark.....Jole Shackelford
“A Spedie Reformation”: Barber-Surgeons, Anatomization, and the Reformation of Medicine in Tudor London.....Lynda Payne
Seeing “Microcosma”: Paracelsus’s Gendered Epistemology.....Hildegard Elisabeth Keller
Paracelsus on Baptism and the Acquiring of the Eternal Body....Dane Thor Daniel
Paracelsus and van Helmont on Imagination: Magnetism and Medicine before Mesmer.....Heinz Schott
Natural Magic and Natural Wonders
Unholy Astrology: Did Pico Always View It That Way?.....Sheila Rabin
Wine and Obscenities: Astrology’s Degradation in the Five Books of Rabelais.....Dené Scoggins
Robert Boyle, “The Sceptical Chymist,” and Hebrew.....Michael T. Walton
Johannes Praetorius: Early Modern Topography and the Giant Rübezahl.....Gerhild Scholz Williams
Demons, Natural Magic, and the Virtually Real: Visual Paradox in Early Modern Europe.....Stuart Clark
“In its visually and intellectually enjoyable presentation, and in
the unity of its composition, Paracelsian Moments shows conference
proceedings at their finest. To a large part, this is due to the
expertise of the contributing authors. Their detailed footnotes and
acknowledgments of collaborations with international Paracelsus
scholars attest to the fact that they have a genuine interest in
unraveling the figure of Paracelsus from the mythical web that his
contemporaries had spun around him.”—Ambix
“The editors and contributors are to be commended for addressing
narrowly defined topics and beginning a discussion of larger
broader themes: historical authority and validity, early modern
perceptions of reality and certainty. Although many of these essays
will invite debate, this volume is a notable
accomplishment.”—Renaissance Quarterly
“A worthwhile volume full of exciting new work on early modern
science and medicine.”—Journal of Early Modern History
“The collection also has a useful if hardly exhaustive bibliography
of Paracelsus and Paracelsianism, and a good index.... It will be
of interest primarily to specialist historians of early modern
science, magic, and medicine.”—Sixteenth Century Journal
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