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![[Greek: Antikrisis] ad responsum Florentini de Valentia: das ist: Kurtze Duplic unnd Defension](/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fimages.sourcelibrary.org%2Fcropped%2F6970e37e9b09d309d780a2c6%2F6975125b043fef7271614cf3.jpg&w=3840&q=75)
[Greek: Antikrisis] ad responsum Florentini de Valentia: das ist: Kurtze Duplic unnd Defension
No prior complete English translation of this text has been found.
No English translations of this work were found in any of the searched catalogs, including the UNESCO Index Translationum, Brill, and Open Library. This text is a specific polemical tract from the 17th-century Rosicrucian controversy; while the primary manifestos of this movement have been translated, secondary responses like this 'Duplic' by Friedrich Grick (writing as Irenaeus Agnostus) generally remain untranslated and are primarily of interest to specialists in German bibliography.
Verified Mar 8, 2026 via local catalogs, local catalogs, local catalogs, open library, google books, ustc, google books, ustc · methodology
Step into the heart of a 17th-century intellectual firestorm where Friedrich Grick peels back the veil of Rosicrucian secrecy to expose the boundary between divine mystery and dangerous illusion. This gripping rejoinder challenges the very foundation of belief, asking whether the 'hidden sciences' are a path to enlightenment or a descent into madness. Readers will discover a profound meditation on the limits of human reason and the terrifying majesty of nature’s untold secrets.
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