Tabula smaragdina
There is a legend according to which Hermes carved a text of wisdom with the tip of a diamond on an emerald tablet.
There is a legend according to which Hermes carved a text of wisdom with the tip of a diamond on an emerald tablet.
John Everard is the author of the first English translation of the Corpus Hermeticum, known as The Divine Pymander. He was a Hermetic thinker, Neoplatonist, alchemist, and advocate of familism.
The Scotian edition of Tractatus acutissimi, utillimi et mere peripatetici (arte et sumptibus haeredum Octaviani Scoti) was published in Venice, in 1525.
The editio princeps of the Tractatus de immortalitate animae was printed in Bologna in 1516 (per Iustinianum Leonardi Ruberiensem).
Pomponazzi published his Tractatus de intensione et remissione formarum in Bologna in 1514 (per Hieronymum Platonidem de Benedictis).
Also titled Liber de iudiciis urinae sine visu eiusdem urinae the treatise is anonymous or attributed to Hermes.
In the XXXII chapter of the secondo book of De occulta philosophia Cornelius Agrippa quotes an advice by the Arabian astronomer Thabit, about how to capture a specific star virtus, by picking up the stone and the herb associated to it, when the Moon stands in good aspect with the star itself.
In the Antipalus maleficiorum by Trithemius - an index of necromantic books - there is a quoting of this liber, attributed to the prophet Enoch.
The Tractatus de reactione was published in Bologna in 1515 (in aedibus Benedicti Hectoris Bononiensis), and includes the Quaestio de actione reali.