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| 24 | On Musical harmony and its forces and power | 256 |
| 25 | On sound and concord, and from where their wonder in operation arises | 259 |
| 26 | On their correspondence with celestial things: and which concords and which sounds respond to each star | 261 |
| 27 | On the proportion, measure, and harmony of the human body | 265 |
| 28 | On the composition and harmony of the human soul | 278 |
| 29 | On the observation of celestial bodies, necessary in every magical work | 280 |
| 30 | When the planets possess a more powerful influence | 281 |
| 31 | On the observation of the fixed stars and their natures | 282 |
| 32 | On the Sun and Moon, and their magical reasons original: "rationibus." This refers to the underlying principles or rationales for using these luminaries in magic. | 284 |
| 33 | On the twenty-eight mansions of the MoonA system of dividing the Moon's path through the sky into 28 segments, each used for different magical or astrological purposes. and their powers | 287 |
| 34 | On the true motion of celestial bodies to be observed in the eighth sphere, and on the method of planetary hours | 292 |
| 35 | How all artificial things, such as images, seals, and the like, obtain some virtue from celestial bodies | 293 |
| 36 | On the images of the Zodiac, and the virtues they conceive from their stars when engraved | 294 |
| 37 | On the images of the facesoriginal: "facierum." Also known as decans, these are ten-degree subdivisions of the zodiac signs, each with its own specific imagery and influence. and their virtues, and on those images which are outside the zodiac | 296 |
| 38 | On the images of Saturn | 301 |
| 39 | On the images of Jupiter | 302 |
| 40 | On the images of Mars | 303 |
| 41 | On the images of the Sun | 303 |
| 42 | On the images of Venus | 304 |
| 43 | On the images of Mercury | 305 |
| 44 | On the images of the Moon | 305 |
| 45 | On the images of the Head and Tail of the Dragon of the Moonoriginal: "Draconis Lunæ." These are the North and South Nodes of the Moon, the points where the Moon's orbit crosses the ecliptic. | 306 |
| 46 | On the images of the mansions of the Moon | 307 |
| 47 | On the images of the Behenianoriginal: "beheniarum." Derived from the Arabic word "bahman," these are fifteen specific fixed stars considered particularly powerful for making talismans. fixed stars | 310 |
| 48 | On geomanticoriginal: "geomanticis." A form of divination using patterns of dots; the "figures" are the sixteen symbols resulting from this practice. figures, which are intermediate between images and characters, and a table of the same | 312 |
| 49 | On images whose shape is not according to the likeness of any celestial figure, but according to the likeness of that which [one] desires |