About This Book
The author challenges prevailing popular accounts of witchcraft by arguing that many reported phenomena stem from fraud, melancholic temperament, or superstition rather than any corporeal league with the devil. He distinguishes active impostors from passively deluded individuals, advises magistrates and physicians to examine motives, conditions, and natural explanations, and rejects claims of diabolic intercourse or metamorphosis while treating the existence of angels, apparitions, astral spirits, charms, and philters. The work blends case observation, theological and philosophical reasoning, and practical guidance for legal and medical handling of alleged witchcraft.
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