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  1. Lutherans and vampires, medicine and faith: an early dissertation on the bloodsucking at Medvedia (1732).Damian Shaw & Matthew Gibson - 2024 - History of European Ideas 50 (7):1169-1186.
    One of the earliest refutations of the Visum et Repertum (1732) by Johann Flückinger was from Johann Wilhelm Nöbling, a young student of philosophy and theology at the University of Jena, who attacked the findings from a position of scientific scepticism enshrouded with Lutheran theology in his thesis Concerning the Blood-Sucking Corpses of those so-called Vampires or People-Suckers. While he is best remembered for first proposing the incubus or nightmare of sleep paralysis as being the real cause of the superstition, (...)
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