"As after the zeal of research and the satisfaction of learning displayed in a memorable pageant, Cornelius Agrippa became convinced that the sciences of his period were vain, including his own, so was he disillusionised in matters of official religion. But he did not become a protestant. His position is comparable to that of Paracelsus, who wished Luther and the chaos of reformers well, believing doubtless that something would evolve therefrom, but he did not join the reformers."
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Arthur Edward Waite, The Works of Thomas Vaughan: Eugenius Philalethes, (1919)Anthroposophia Theomagica(1650) footnote #5, p. 50
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Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa
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