• a disciple of Albertus Magnus

    The first such disciple of Albertus Magnus was his student Thomas Aquinas, who was
    the greatest medieval systematizer of knowledge in the Aristotelian mode of division
    and subdivision and by no means a proselytizer for alchemy. Albertus Magnus, it should
    be noted, was for a time the bishop of Regensburg, the nearest principal medieval
    city on the Danube to the north of Ingolstadt, the university city to which Victor
    travels in the next chapter (I:2:8). Though he attributes the choice of university
    to his parents (I:2:1), perhaps Victor's sense of discipleship to the bishop contributed
    to his acquiescence.