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Compositions of what materials the Devil creates. G. q. 6. n. 11.
One who provides a poison of conception without the intention to kill is not punished by the Cornelian Law concerning assassins, even if death follows. G. q. 12. n. 7. But he is banished. ibid. n. 8 & 19.
The confession of witches original: lamiarum; sorceresses is erroneous and to be rejected because they have been deluded. P. n. 5.
The confession of the accused suffices for condemnation in the case of heresy alone. P. n. 70. A confession sufficient for condemnation must be likely and not equivocal. n. 71. A confession made in the forum of penitence does not suffice for condemnation. n. 72. In criminal matters, it is generally not relied upon. n. 52.
One who confesses that he had previously renounced heresy in court before another inquisitor is not considered a relapsed heretic based on a new confession. P. n. 72.
One who prepares harmful poisons is punished. G. q. 3. n. 26.
It is left to the discretion of the judge to determine which conjectures are sufficient in the crime of heresy. P. n. 89.
Accomplices in a crime are not admitted to give testimony in the case of a denunciation to the gathering of demons. P. n. 65.
Whether it is lawful to consult sorcerers original: Maleficos. G. q. 6. n. 20 & q. 11. n. 5 & 12.
Those who despise doctors of law are to be loathed like cattle. P. n. 20.
Only God can search the secrets of the human heart. G. q. 10. n. 2.
The penalty of the Cornelian Law concerning assassins is today the capital penalty. G. q. 12. n. 5.
By what methods the bodies of witches original: Lamiarum seu Strigarum; sorceresses or night-hags can be brought to the gathering of demons. G. q. 7. n. 7.
Bodies assumed by demons are not true and natural, but quasi-natural and imitative. G. q. 7. n. 10. From what matter they are composed. ibid. n. 11.