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Elucidations.
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I.
(Substance or accident, p.
54.)
This essay is
“rather the work of a philosopher than a bishop,” says
Dupin. He assigns it to an age when “Aristotle began to
be in some reputation,”—a most important concession as
to the estimate of this philosopher among the early faithful. We
need not wonder that such admissions, honourable to his candour and to
his orthodoxy, brought on him the hatred and persecutions of the
Jesuits. Even Bossuet thought he went too far, and wrote against
him. But, the whole system of Roman dogma being grounded in
Aristotle’s physics as well as in his metaphysics,
Dupin was not orthodox in the eyes of the society that framed Aristotle
into a creed, and made it the creed of the “Roman-Catholic
Church.” Note, e.g., “transubstantiation,”
which is not true if Aristotle’s theory of accidents,
etc., is false.460
460 See
Bacon’s apophthegm, No. 275, p. 172, Works, London,
1730. | It assumes an
exploded science.
II.
(Prerogative of the soul, p. 56.)
If this “Discourse” be worthy of
study, it may be profitably contrasted, step by step, with
Tertullian’s treatises on kindred subjects.461
461 Vol. iii.
pp. 175–235, this series. | That the early Christians should
reason concerning the Soul, the Mind, the immortal Spirit, was natural
in itself. But it was also forced upon them by the
“philosophers” and the heretics, with whom they daily came
into conflict. This is apparent from the
Anti-Marcion462
462 Vol.
iii. pp. 463, 474; also pp. 532, 537, 557, 570, and 587. | of the great
Carthaginian. The annotations upon that treatise, and those On
the Soul’s Testimony and On the Soul, may suffice as
pointing out the best sources463
463
Compare, also, Bishop Kaye’s Tertullian, p. 199,
etc. |
of information on speculative points and their bearings on
theology. Compare, however, Athenagoras464
464 E.g.,
vol. ii. p. 157, etc. | and the great Clement of
Alexandria.465
465 Vol. ii.
pp. 440, 584 (Fragment), and what he says of free-will. | E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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