![]() The last is Sancroft's reading that in the text, Roeper's.ġ2 This passage is quoted by those who impugn the authorship of Origen on the ground of his never having been a bishop of the Church. has-"the profane opinion and unreasonable attempt."ġ0 "And those that are irrational animals do not attempt," (or) "because irrational," etc. designed for more general diffusion.Ĩ One ms. To favour this view, the text should be altered into kai adhmoj, i.e., apodhmoj = from home, not domestic.Ĥ Some hiatus at the beginning of this sentence is apparent.ĥ An elaborate defence of this position forms the subject of Cudworth's great work, The True Intellectual System of the Universe.Ħ This statement has been urged against Origen's authorship, in favour of Epiphinius, who wrote an extended treatise on the Heresies, with an abridgment.ħ That is, their esoteric mysteries, intended only for a favoured few, as contrasted with the exoteric. The two last would seem to indicate the character rather than the philosophy of Pyrrho. The same subject is discussed in Ritter's History of Philosophy (translated by Morrison).ģ This word is variously given thus: Academian, Academeian, Academaic, Academe, Cademian, and Cadimian. Maurice's History of (Ancient) Metaphysical and Moral Philosophy. 13-46 (Bohn's Classical Library), also to the translator's analysis prefixed to this work, pp, 17-25 See also Diogenes' Lives of the Philosophers, and Tenneman's Manual of Philosophy (translated in Bohn's Library) Plutarch, De Placitis Philosophorum Lewes' Biographical History of (Ancient) Philolophy and Rev. The English reader is referred to the Metaphysics, book i. Deor., of the tenets of the ancient philosophers, is to be found in Aristotle's Metaphysics. The ablest resume followed by Cicero in the De Nat. Hippolytus' (Bishop and Martyr) Refutation of all Heresies what remains of the ten books."Ģ Most of what follows in book i. The title might have been, "Philosophumena, and the Refutation (therefrom) of all Heresies." There were obviously two divisions of the work: (1) A resume of the tenets of the philosophers (books i., ii., iii., iv.), preparatory to (2) the refutation of heresies, on the ground of their derivative character from Greek and Egyptian speculation. "Origen's Philosophumena, or the Refutation of all Heresies." The last is Stiller's in his Oxford edition, 1851. of Origen's Refutation of all Heresies" (Wolf and Gronovius) 2. ![]() itself in the margin has the words, "Origen, and Origen's opinion." The title, as agreed upon by modern commentators, is: 1. "Being estimable (Dissertations) by Origen, a man of the greatest wisdom." The recently discovered MS. "Refutation by Orison of all Heresies " 2. of the first book extant prior to the recent discovery of seven out of the remaining nine books of The Refutation, concur in ascribing it to Origen. 415, 460, this series.ġ5 Introduction to Greek Classics, p.228.ġ The four of the MSS. 1845.ġ0 Bunsen gives it as the thirty-fifth, vol. iv p 114, Elucidation II., this series.ĩ Even Quinet notes this. In England the "supremacy" was never acknowledged nor in France, until now.Ĩ Vol. He speaks of "the insignificance of the first Popes,"-meaning the early Bishops of Rome, men who minded their own business, but could not have been "insignificant" had they even imagined themselves "Popes."Ĥ See Bossuet, passim, and all the Callican doctors down to our own times. ![]() ![]() p 166, dropping, into the old ruts of fable, after sufficiently proving just before, what I have maintained. Schaff, in his useful compilation, History of the Christian Church, vol. 28, 29), Latin Christianity.ġ I venture to state this to encourage young students to keep pen in hand in all their researches, and always to make notes.Ģ Pompey and others were called imperatoresbefore the Caesars, but who includes them with the Roman emperors?ģ How St.
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