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John Dee
John Dee (1527–1609) was an English mathematician, astronomer, and occultist, best known for his contributions to Renaissance science and his interest in alchemy and magic. He served as an advisor to Queen Elizabeth I and was deeply involved in efforts to create a British empire. Dee authored several works, including "Monas Hieroglyphica," which explored mystical and mathematical symbols, and "Mathematical Preface," a prelude to Euclid's works that emphasized the importance of mathematics in scientific progress. His interests in divination led him to attempt communication with angels, a pursuit that heavily influenced his later life.
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John Dee
PREFACE. The present volume contains two curious documents concerning Dr. Dee, the eminent philosopher of Mortlake, now for the first time published from the original manuscripts. I. His Private Diary, written in a very small illegible hand on the margins of old Almanacs, discovered a few years ago by Mr. W. H. Black, in the library of the Ashmolean Museum at Oxford. II. A Catalogue of his Library...
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John Dee
â§ The Translator to the Reader. Here is (gentle Reader) nothing (the word of God onely set apart) which so much beautifieth and adorneth the soule and minde of mã, as doth the knowledge of good artes and sciences: as the knowledge of naturall and morall Philosophie. The one setteth before our eyes, the creatures of God, both in the heauens aboue, and in the earth beneath: in which as in a...
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