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| 56 | On the haruspicy Divination by interpreting natural signs, especially entrails or lightning. of lightning and thunder, and how portents and prodigies are to be interpreted | 72 |
| 57 | On Geomancy, Hydromancy, Aeromancy, and Pyromancy: the divinations of the four elements | 73 |
| 58 | On the revival of the dead, and on long-term sleeping and fasting | 74 |
| 59 | On divination that occurs through dreams | 77 |
| 60 | On frenzy and divinations that occur while awake; on the power of the humor of melancholy, by which even demons are sometimes lured into human bodies | 78 |
| 61 | On the formation of man, the external and internal senses, and the mind; on the triple appetite of the soul and the passions of the will | 80 |
| 62 | On the passions of the mind: their origin, differences, and types | 82 |
| 63 | How the passions of the mind change one's own body by altering its qualities and moving the spirit | 83 |
| 64 | How the passions of the mind change the body through imitation and likeness. Also on the transformation and transport of men, and what powers the imaginative faculty holds over both the body and the soul | 84 |
| 65 | How the passions of the mind also operate outside themselves upon another person's body | 86 |
| 66 | That the passions of the mind are greatly aided by celestial opportunity, and how necessary the constancy of the mind itself is in every work | 87 |
| 67 | How the human soul can be joined with celestial souls and intelligences, and together with them, imprint certain marvelous virtues upon inferior things | 88 |
| 68 | How our soul can alter and bind inferior things toward that which it desires | 89 |
| 69 | On speech and the virtues of words | 90 |
| 70 | On the virtue of proper names | on the same page |
| 71 | On complex speeches, songs, and the virtues and bindings of incantations | 91 |
| 72 | On the marvelous power of incantations | 93 |
| 73 | On the virtue of writing, and on the making of imprecations and inscriptions | 94 |
| 74 | On the proportion, correspondence, and reduction of letters to celestial signs and planets according to various languages, with a table indicating this | on the same page |
| 1 | On the necessity of Mathematical disciplines, and on many wondrous works performed by the mathematical arts alone | 99 |
| 2 | On numbers, and their power and virtue | 101 |
| 3 | How great a virtue numbers possess in both natural and trans-natural That is, supernatural or metaphysical. things | 102 |
| 4 | On unity and its scale In this context, a "scale" or ladder is a table showing how a specific number manifests across different levels of reality—from God down to the elements. | 103 |
| 5 | On duality and its scale | 104 |
| 6 | On the triad and its scale | 106 |
| 7 | On the quaternary The number four. and its scale | 108 |
| 8 | On the quinary and its scale | 111 |
| 9 | On the senary and its scale | 113 |
| 10 | On the septenary and its scale | 114 |
| 11 | On the octonary and its scale | 122 |
| 12 | On the nonary and its scale | 124 |
| 13 | On the decad The number ten. and its scale | 126 |
| 14 | On the eleven and twelve, with the double scale of the twelve, both Cabalistic and Orphic | 130 |
| 15 | On numbers above twelve, and their power and virtues | 136 |
| 16 | On the signs of numbers established in certain gestures | 138 |
| 17 | On various signs of numbers observed among the Romans | 139 |
| 18 | On the signs of the Greeks | 140 |
| 19 | On the signs of the Hebrews and Chaldeans, and certain other signs of the Magi | 141 |
| 20 | Which numbers are attributed to letters, and on divination through them | 143 |
| 21 | Which numbers are sacred to which gods, and which are assigned to which elements | 144 |
| 22 | On the tables original: "mensulis"; referring to magic squares used in planetary magic. of the Planets, their virtues and formulas, and the divine names, intelligences, and spirits set over them | 145 |
| 23 | On Geometric figures and solids, what virtue they possess in magic, and which ones suit which elements and the heavens | 154 |
| 24 | On Musical harmony, its strength and power | 155 |
| 25 | On sound and symphony, and the source of their wonder in operation | 156 |
| 26 | On their agreement with celestial things: which symphonies and sounds correspond to individual stars | 158 |
| 27 | On the proportion, measurement, and harmony of the human body | 160 |
| 28 | On the composition and harmony of the human soul | 170 |
| 29 | On the observation of celestial things, necessary in every magical work | 171 |
| 30 | When the planets are of more powerful influence | 172 |
| 31 | On the observation of the fixed stars and their natures | on the same page |
| 32 | On the Sun and Moon, and their magical reasonings | 174 |
| 33 | On the twenty-eight mansions of the Moon and their powers | 175 |
| 34 | On the true motion of the heavens to be observed in the eighth sphere, and on the reasoning of planetary hours | 178 |
| 35 | How artificial things, such as images, seals, and the like, may obtain some virtue from the celestial bodies | on the same page |
| 36 | On the images of the Zodiac, and the virtues they conceive from their stars when engraved | 179 |
| 37 | On the images of the "faces" The 10-degree subdivisions of the zodiac, also called decans. and their virtues, and those images outside the zodiac | 180 |
| 38 | On the images of Saturn | 182 |
| 39 | On the images of Jupiter | 184 |
| 40 | On the images of Mars | on the same page |
| 41 | On the images of the Sun | on the same page |
| 42 | On the images of Venus | 185 |
| 43 | On the images of Mercury | on the same page |
| 44 | On the images of the Moon | on the same page |
| 45 | On the images of the head and tail of the lunar dragon The North and South Nodes of the Moon. | 186 |
| 46 | On the images of the Mansions of the Moon | on the same page |
| 47 | On the images of the fixed Behenian stars A set of fifteen stars considered particularly powerful in medieval magic and astrology. | 188 |
| 48 | On geomantic figures, which are intermediate between images and characters, and a table of them | 189 |
| 49 | On images whose figure is not according to the likeness of a celestial shape, but according to the likeness of that which the mind of the operator desires | 191 |
| 50 | On certain celestial observations and the practice of some images of the same | on the same page |
| 51 | On characters made according to the celestial norm and imitation, and how they are derived from geomantic figures, with a table of them | 194 |
| 52 | On characters that are abstracted from the things themselves by a certain likeness | 196 |
| 53 | That no divination is perfect without astrology | 198 |
| 54 | On lots Divination by chance, such as drawing straws or casting dice., and when and from where the virtue of divination happens to them | 199 |
| 55 | On the soul of the world and of the celestial bodies, according to the traditions of poets and philosophers | 200 |
| 56 | The same is confirmed by reason | 201 |
| 57 | That the soul of the world and the celestial souls are rational and participants in the divine mind | 203 |