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Decorative woodcut initial 'D' with floral motifs.
A declamation invective, as if Cynical, on the uncertainty and vanity of the Sciences and Arts, by which it is taught that nowhere does any certain, perpetual, or divine thing lie, unless it be in the solid utterances of God and the eminence of the Word of God. page 1.
Apology for the defense of the Declamation on the Vanity of the Sciences and the Excellence of the Word of God, against the theologians of Louvain. 257
Complaint concerning the same Declamation against those who [laid it] before the Imperial Majesty. 407
Commentary on the Art of Memory of Raymund Lull. 334
Abridged table on the Art of Memory of Raymund Lull. 460
On the threefold way of knowing God, one book. 480
Dehortation from Gentile Theology. 502
Expostulation with Johannes Catilinetus, Doctor of Theology, concerning his exposition on the book of Johannes Capnio (Reuchlin) on the Miraculous Word. 508
Declamation or little book on the nobility and preeminence of the female sex. 518
Declamation on the Sacrament of Matrimony. 544
Declamation on original sin, of debatable opinion. 553
Sermon on the monastic life, delivered by a venerable Abbot at Brauweiler. 565
Sermon on the discovery of the relics of Blessed Anthony the Hermit, written for a certain venerable religious of his Order. 573
Regimen or antidotes against the plague. 578
Abridged and articulated propositions on the monogamy of the most blessed Lady Anne, and her single childbirth. 588