(Some corrections of mistakes in names and references, as given in the foregoing work, have been silently effected in the following Index) I. OF SUBJECT-MATTERS
339-341 Cambridge Platonists, the, II. 371 Camillus of Lellis, St., I. 129 n. 2 Campanaro Family, of Genoa, I. 101 Campion, Blessed Edmund, S.J., I. 64; II. 129 Campofregoso, Paolo, of Genoa, I. 101 Canada, II. 141 Canticle of Canticles, I. 258, 356 its imagery dear to V. Battista Vernazza, I. 111, 356, 432 remote from St. Catherine’s mind, I. 229, 258, 432; II. 100, 101, 107 Capuchins, I. 311, 340, 341 Caraccioli, Cardinal, Archbishop of Naples, II. 139 Caraffa, Cardinal, see also Paul IV. (Pope), I. 327, 340 Carenzio, Don Jacobo, 155 n. 1, 175, 202, 204 n. 1, 213, 216, 217, 295, 299, 301, 307-309, 310 n. 1, 384, 464; II. 26 his fate, I. 307-309 Carenzio, Don Jacobo, his funeral, I. 381 Carlyle, Thomas, II. 271 Cassian, I. 78 Cassino, Monte, I. 103 n. 1 Castagneto, Brigidina, I. 175 Catherine, of Alexandria, St., I. 97, 348 Catherine of Genoa, St. (Caterinetta Fieschi Adorno), I. 86, 95, 97, 98 n. 1, 100, 101, 102, 103, 103 n. 1, 104, 105, 111, 112, 113, 123, 151, 168, 169, 170, 171, 338, 339, 376, 382, 387, 388, 389; II. 42, 50, 56, 58, 63, 64, 96, 97, 98, 109, 131, 136, 142, 146, 170, 172, 206, 208, 209, 218, 288, 289, 297, 298, 304, 306, 395, 396 Catherine, St., her AFTER-LIFE CONCEPTIONS, II. 199-218 her apparitions after death, I. 216, 218 her external appearance, I. 97 ecclesiastical approbation of her doctrine, I. 255, 256, 413, 448, 449, 464 and Argentina del Sale, I. 170, 171, 203, 209, 210, 213, 217, 298 her Baptism, I. 97 and Baptism, I. 436; II. 76 her birth, I. 93, 97 her breadth of sympathy and unsuspiciousness, II. 83, 84 her brothers, I. 97, 167, 172, 176 her burial, I. 296, 297 her burial-place, shifting of, I. 152, 185-187, 213 and business, I. 154, 186 the three Categories of her teaching, ‘In,’ ‘Out,’ ‘Over,’ I. 273-276 her codicils of 1503, I. 168, 169, 380 of 1508, I. 175, 176, 380 of 1510, I. 212-214, 380 colours, her sensitiveness to, I. 208, 210, 298; II. 17, 24 compared with St. Augustine, II. 211-214, 216, 225, 248, 293, 294 with Clement and Origen of Alexandria, II. 219, WARFARE, method of her spiritual, II. 34-39 and the two ways, negative and positive, I. 276-280 words, her last, I. 216, 465 her Wills, i, I. 152, 153, 377-378 ii, I. 152-154, 380 iii, I. 172-174, 380 iv, I. 172-173, 174, 176, 185-187, 202, 203, 308, 380 her wills in general, I. 297-299; II. 26 her “writings” not her composition, I. 87, 407, 433, 447, 448, 466 her YOUTH, I. 99-101 of Siena, I. 87, 94, 306, 341, 382; II. 42, 47, 306, 307 Catholicism, its three elements, I. 63-64 Catholic mind, its characteristics, I. 122-123 Caussade, PÈre de, S.J., II. 143 Censor, Dominican, the, of the Vita, I. 372, 413, 464 Centurione, Adam, Lord, I. 385 Ginetta, Lady, I. 385 Orientina, Donna, I. 385, 391 Cesarini, Cardinal, I. 305 Chantal, St. Jane Frances de, II. 142, 143, 363 Child, the, its apprehension of religion, I. 51 China, II. 182, 183 Chios, Isle of, I. 101, 151; II. 27, 83 Christian conception of life, I. 48-49 doctrine (survey of), I. 25-28 its three N. T. presentations, I. 28-39 Christianity, conflicts between its Intuitive-Emotional and its other elements, I. 70-77 excludes Pantheism, II. 334-335 its preliminary Pessimism and ultimate Optimism, II. 358-361 its three elements, II. 61 in the Humanist Renaissance, I. 62 the Middle Ages, I. 61-62 the Protestant Reformation, I. 62-63 Christina, Queen of Sweden, I. 305, 305 n. 1 Christofero of Chiavari, I. 168, 298 Chronici, Spedale dei, Genoa, I. 173, 174, 317, 319, 326, 327, 333; II. 10 Protectors of, I. 318, 326 Sindaco of, I. 319 Chroniclers of St. Catherine, rivalry between them, I. 216 Chronicles, Books of, David in, I. 373 Church, the, her life and spirit, I. 123 Cibo Donna Maddalena (born Vernazza), I. 322 Cicero, Don Blasio, I. 152 Clement of Alexandria, I. 61, 78; II. 131, 142, 166, 219, 235, 239, 268, 282, 306, 333 Clement XI, Pope (Albani), II. 131, 161 FÉnelon’s letter to, I. 69 X, Pope (Altieri), I. 305 XII, Pope (Orsini), I. 306 his Bull of Catherine’s Canonization, I. 466 Cogoleto, on Riviera, I. 318 Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, II. 371 Collino, Padre Serafino, C.R.L., I. 364, 366 Colonna, Vittoria, I. 341, 342 n. 2 Chrysostom, St. John, II. 225 Columbus, Christopher, I. 94, 146 Confucianism, II. 182, 183 Confucius, II. 183 Constance, Council of, I. 94, 342 Constantinople, I. 94 Contarini, Gaspar, Cardinal, I. 342 n. 2 Contemplation and Social Christianity, II. 355-358 Conversione-booklet, I. 449, 464 Convertite the, Genoa, I. 327 Corsica, I. 156 Counter-reformation, I. 62 Covenant, Book of the, I. 373 Criticism, of the writings of Saints, how far allowed, I. 254 and foll. Croton, II. 188 Crusading Age, the, II. 380 Cynic school, I. 23 Cyprian, St., II. 43 Cyrenaic school, I. 23 Dante, II. 271, 291, 296, 371 Hegelian school, II. 269 Hell, St. Catherine and, II. 218-230 disposition of souls in, II. 221-225 endlessness of, II. 227-230 fire of, II. 215-218 mitigation of its pains, II. 225-227 St. Catherine’s doctrine concerning, I. 281-283 Hellenism, I. 11-25 its qualities, I. 48 its three religious elements, I. 60 Henry VI, of England, I. 96 VII, of England, I. 200, 201, and n. 2 VIII, of England, I. 311 Hensel, Luise, I. 334 Heraclitus, I. 11, 12; II. 188 his doctrine, I. 4, 11 Herder, J. G., II. 327, 371 Hermann, Prof. Wilhelm, II. 263, 264, 265 impossible simplification of religion, II. 269-272 Panchristism of, II. 266 Heroes, Cultus of, II. 187 Hezekiah, II. 190 Hildegard of Bingen, St., I. 64 Hindooism, II. 273 Historical element of Religion, its division, I. 85 science, see Science Hobbes, Thomas, I. 7 HÖffding, Prof. Harald, on religious “Agnosticism,” II. 287, 288 Holtzmann, Prof. H., on retaining vivid sense both of determinist physical law and of libertarian spiritual life, II. 377, 378 on Conditional Immortality, II. 229 on Metaphysical factors in N. T. writings, II. 269, 270 Holtzmann, Prof. H., on category of time, as secondary in man’s spiritual life, II. 247, 248 Hume, David, II. 272 Hus, John, I. 94 Huxley, Prof. Thomas, II. 272 Huysmans, J. K., II. 56 Hylozoism, I. 12 Hysteria, St. Catherine’s condition only superficially like, II. 22-27 three popular errors concerning, II. 22, 23 Ignatius, of Antioch, St., I. 219 n. 2; II. 43, 133 n. of Loyola, St., I. 68, 80; II. 142 Illingworth, Rev. J. B., II. 333 Illuminists, I. 9 Imagery, Battista Vernazza’s, I. 409, 432 St. Catherine dominates her own imagery, I. 237, 238 St. Catherine’s imagery, I. 266-268, 270, 277, 284-285, 287-293 compared to B. Vernazzas, I. 409, 432 Immanence, Divine, II. 287-290, 336-340 facts indicative of the, II. 280-284 in V. Battista Vernazza, I. 352; II. 289 St. Catherine, I. 261-263; II. 347 St. Paul, II. 70 Plotinus, II. 92, 96 St. Teresa, II. 324, 79 its three elements, I. 61; II. 388, 389, 392 Judas Maccabaeus, II. 233, 292 Juliana, Mother, of Norwich, on Eternal Punishment, II. 218, 219 on negative character of Evil, II. 394 and Direction, II. 363 her Christian optimism, II. 305, 306 Julianus, Monk, Pelagianizer, II. 293 Julius II, Pope (Rovere), I. 94, 146, 155 Justina, Benedictine, Congregation of St., Padua, I. 103 n. 1 Justin, St., Martyr, II. 268, 333 Kabbala, II. 392 Kant, Immanuel, I. 43; II. 27, 42, 168, 179, 247, 261, 264, 275, 295, 370, 371, 392 deepens contrast between quantitative science and qualitative spiritual life, I. 43 his defective religious sense, II. 260-262 on disinterested religion, II. 177-179 his dualistic assumption in epistemology, II. 278 on Evil as positive and radical, II. 295, 296 on obscure apprehensions, II. 265 Keble, Rev. John, I. 63 Kempen, Thomas of, I. 62 Kepler, Johann, I. 7; II. 27 Kierkegaard SÖren, his radical Asceticism, II. 345, 346, 353 on God’s utter difference from Man, II. 287, 288 on “Repetition,” II. 285 Knowledge, its three constituents, I. 54-57 LaberthonniÈre, AbbÉ L., Annales de Philosophie ChrÉtienne, 1905, 1906, II. 307 Lallemant, Louis, PÉre, S.J., I. 64; II. 365 Lancisius, Nicolas, S.J., I. 89 Laplace, P. S. de, II. 272 Lateran, Fourth Council of, I. 120, 121 Laud, William, Anglican Archbishop, I. 63 Laurence, St., quarter of, Genoa, I. 377 Lavagna, on Riviera, I. 95 Lazaretto, Genoa, I. 332 Lazzaro, S., Genoa, I. 406 poor of, I. 145 n. 1 Leibniz, I. 42, 113; II. 145, 177, 231, 261, 271, 282, 291 on dim Presentations, II. 338 on Pure Love, II. 176 his share in development of modern scientific spirit, I. 42, 43 Leo X (Medici), Pope, I. 259, 311, 321, 322 Bull “Exurge Domine,” I. 340, 448 Lessing, G. E., II. 271, 374-386 in Spinoza, secret of its power, II. 326-329 ultimate, not Christian, nor generally religious, II. 334, 335 Paracelsus, I. 7 Paris, II. 389 University of, I. 62 Parker, Rev. James, I. 250, 266 n. 3 Parmenides, I. 11; II. 188 his doctrine, I. 11 Parousia, the, II. 380 Parpera, Giacinto, P., Oratorian, I. 92, 390 Pascal, I. 78; II. 261, 331 Pascoli, Giovanni, II. 199 Passivity, see Quietism Pattison, A. S. Pringle, II. 329, 330, 333, 370 Paul, Saint, I. 111, 256, 265, 320, 363, 361, 373, 453; II. 43, 44, 47, 80, 82, 87, 122, 124, 125, 129, 131, 142, 181, 186, 209, 237, 253, 298, 324, 333, 356 and Joannine writings, II. 84-88 and Synoptic Gospels, II. 65, 122-125, 157, 158 anthropology of, II. 64-67 his conceptions of God, II. 69-71 of Spirit, II. 67-69, 320-322 of reconciliation, justification and sanctification, II. 71-74 ecstasies and psycho-physical peculiarities of, II. 43-44 Epistles of, I. 162, 234, 235, 258, 353, 374; II. 62, 63, 116, 202, 205 Eschatology of, II. 76-79, 209, 210 Judaic conceptions of, II. 69, 71, 72 Platonic influences in, II. 64, 66, 67, 69, 122, 123 and the Risen Christ, II. 234-236 Catherine’s conceptions of, harbour two currents of thought, II. 232 Catherine’s doctrine concerning, I. 179. 189, 283-294; II. 230-246 the three sets of theological “corrections” of, traceable in Trattato’s text, I. 434-449 and the New Testament, II. 233, 239, 240 initial experience and act of the soul in, I. 283-285 subsequent state of the soul in, I. 285-294 change of feeling among Protestant thinkers concerning, II. 230-232 fire of, II. 215-218 Judaeo-Roman conceptions of, II. 239-245 Luther’s theses concerning, I. 311, 448 Orphic conception and, II. 237, 238 Platonic conception of, II. 206-211 a truly purging, and Suarez’ simple Satisfactorium, II. 240-245 “PuritÀ,” I. 266 n. 3 Puritan excesses, I. 10 Pusey, Dr. Edward B., I. 63 Pythagoras, II. 188, 192 Quietism, II. 130, 131, 133, 135, 138, 139, 142, 143, 144, 145, 147, 148, 160, 168 four aberrations of, II. 136-139 Rome’s condemnation of, II. 139-143 distinct from Pure Love question, II. 152, 193 four needs recognized by, II. 148-150 Rome’s alleged change of front concerning, II. 143-148 Rabbinism, II. 63, 213, 214, 233, 234, 268, 388 Rafael Sanzio, the painter, II. 132, 165 Ranke, Leopold von, II. 271 Rationalism, I. 8, 9; II. 260-263, 275, 276, 382-387, 389, 390 Rauwenhoff, Prof. L. W. E., on Mysticism as a necessary form of religion, II. 268, 269 Realism, I. 61, 62 advantages of, II. 318-319 Pantheistic trend of strict, II. 314-319 Reason, goddess of, II. 389 Redactor of Conversione-booklet, I. 464 of Dicchiarazione-booklet, I. 464 1 of Vita-proper, I. 162 n. 3, 188 n. 1, 372, 414 2 of Vita-proper, I. 159, 162 n. 3, 372 of Vita-Dicchiarazione-Dialogo, I. 464 Reformation, Protestant, I. 62, 282, 339-341, 448; II. 365 and Direction, II. 363 on occu(The more general literary references given under names of authors in Part I) Holy Scripture—Old Testament - Daniel ix. 24; I. 408
- xii. 2; II. 190
- Ecclesiasticus vii. 17; II. 224
- Ezekiel i. 1-28, etc.; II. 45 n.
- iv. 1-3, 7, etc.; II. 45 n.
- iv. 4-8; II. 45, 46 n.
- viii. i-ix. 11, etc.; II. 45 n.
- viii. 16, xi. 13, xxiv. 1; II. 45 n.
- Genesis i. 5, iii. 18; II. 89
- xv. 1; I. 348
- Isaiah vi. 3; I. 352
- xxvi. 1-19; II. 190
- xliii. 10, xliv. 1, xlviii. 10; I. 349
- xlix. 6; I. 351
- Job xix. 25, 26; II. 190
- Maccabees, Book of, ii. 43-45; II. 233
- Psalms lxxiii. (lxxii.) 25; II. 159
- ci. 13; I. 362
- ciii. 13, 14; II. 69
- cix. 31; I. 358
- Solomon, Cant. v. 10; I. 349
- Prov. viii. 31; I. 360
- Wisd. of., ix. 15; II. 66, 123
- Tobit, Book of, xii. 8, 9; II. 154
New Testament - Acts of the Apostles xxvi. 9-10; I. 33
- John, St., Apocalypse, v. 11; I. 349
- vii. 9; II. 254
- 1 Ep., i. 1; I. 36
- i. 2; I. 37
- iii. 2; II. 82, 257
- iii. 14; I. 39; II. 89
- v. 10; I. 37
- v. 20; I. 39; II. 84
- Gospel according to, i. 4, 5; II. 82
- i. 9-11; II. 79
- i. 14; I. 36
- i. 17; II. 79
- i. 18; I. 358; II. 81
- i. 29; II. 85
- ii. 11; I. 37; II. 86
- ii. 23, 24; I. 38
- iii. 2-5; I. 38
- iii. 16; II. 79-80, 83
- iii. 18; II. 89
- iii. 19; II. 82
- iii. 21; I. 37; II. 79-83, 82
- iii. 31; II. 82
- iii. 34; II. 84
- iii. 36; I. 39
- iv. 18; II. 160
- iv. 24; I. 37; II. 80, 88
- iv. 31; II. 81
- iv. 42; I. 38; II. 79-80
- v. 6; I. 38
- v. 24; II. 88-89, 90
- v. 28-29; I. 36
- vi. 27; II. 88
- vi. 35; I. 37; II. 90
- vi. 44; I. 37; II. 87
- vi. 61, 63; II. 88
- vi. 69; II. 86, 88
- viii. 21; II. 80
- viii. 23; II. 81
- viii. 44; II. 80
- ix. 41; II. 80
- x. 8; II. 80
- x. 38; I. 360
- xiii. 23; I. 358
- xiv. 6; I. 37
- xiv. 10; II. 80
- xiv. 11; I. 38
- xiv. 20-21; I. 39
- xiv. 23; I. 360
- xvii. 1-13; I. 210 n. 1
- xvii. 3; II. 82, 90
- xvii. 6; II. 90
- xvii. 8, etc.; II. 82
- xvii. 18; I. 37
- xvii. 21; II. 83
- xviii. 9; I. 362
- xviii. 37; II. 79
- xix. 24; II. 83
- xx. 8; II. 86
- xx. 29; I. 38; II. 86
- Luke, St., Gospel according to, ii. 32; I. 351
- vi. 33, 34; II. 158
- vi. 38; II. 155
- vii. 47; II. 157
- ix. 23-24; I. 31
- ix. 51-56; I. 27-28
- x. 7; II. 154
- xii. 6; II. 254
- xiv. 27; I. 31
- xvi. 23; I. 358
- xvii. 10; II. 157
- xvii. 33; I. 31
- xx. 34-38; I. 32
- xxii. 3-11; I. 33
- xxii. 15-19; I. 31
- xxvi. 9-18; I. 33
- Mark, St., Gospel according to, i. 13; II. 122
- iv. 27-28; I. 30
- vii. 14, 15; I. 31
- viii. 34; I. 31
- ix. 30-32; I. 27-28
- ix. 35-36; I. 32
- ix. 38-41 (& Par.); II. 84
- ix. 41; II. 154
- x. 13-16; I. 27-28
- x. 14, 15; I. 32
- x. 21; II. 154
- x. 23; II. 155
- xii. 28-34 (& Par.); II. 254
- xii. 36; II. 322
- xiv. 22-25; I. 31
- xiv. 25; II. 254
- xiv. 38 (& Par.); II. 122
- Matth., St., Gospel according to, iii. 13-19; I. 31
- v. 3; I. 31
- v. 5; II. 155
- v. 7; II. 154
- v. 8; I. 31; II. 154, 155
- v. 12; II. 154
- v. 17; I. 30
- v. 23; I. 30
- v. 44, 45, 48; II. 157
- vi. 4, 6; II. 154
- vi. 16; I. 30
- vi. 14, 18, 20; II. 154
- vi. 23, 26, 28; I. 30
- vi. 33; II. 157
- x. 29; II. 254
- xii. 24-27; I. 32
- xiii. 30-32; II. 122
- xvi. 24, 25; I. 31
- xvii. 12-14; II. 255
- xviii. 32; II. 154
- xxii. 3; II. 155
- xxii. 11; II. 156
- xxii. 12; II. 155-156
- xxii. 29-33; I. 32
- xxiv. 47; II. 155
- xxv. 10; II. 254
- xxv. 14-30; II. 157
- xxv. 21; II. 155
- xxvi. 26-29; I. 31
- xxxiv. 42; II. 122
- xxxvi. 51, 52; II. 27-28
- Paul, St., Ep. to Col. i. 15-17; I. 35
- i. 26; I. 34
- ii. 2; I. 34
- iii. 1; I. 35
- iii. 3-4; I. 34
- iii. 4; II. 322
- 1 Ep. to Cor. i. 18; I. 33
- i. 22-25; I. 33
- ii. 6; I. 34
- ii. 10; I. 34
- ii. 11; I. 34; II. 321
- ii. 14, 15; I. 33; II. 321
- iii. 1; I. 34
- iii. 10-15; II. 239
- v. 5; II. 68
- v. 11; II. 67
- vi. 19; II. 72, 321
- vii. 7; II. 43
- x. 3; II. 76
- x. 4; I. 35
- xi. 7; II. 75
- xi. 11; I. 32; II. 75
- xi. 23, 26; I. 32
- xii.; I. 33; II. 65-66
- xiii. 7; II. 160
- xiv.; I. 33
- xiv. 25; II. 65
- xv. 3-8; I. 32
- xv. 19, 32; II. 158
- xv. 35, 53; II. 64
- 2 Ep. to Cor. i. 22; II. 65
- ii. 4; II. 65
- iii. 17; II. 70, 88
- iii. 18; I. 35
- iv. 4; II. 68, 321
- iv. 16; II. 64, 159
- v. 1-4; II. 66, 77, 123
- v. 4; II. 66
- v. 11; II. 73
- vi. 14; II. 73, 77
- vii. 1; II. 68, 73, 321
- x. 10; II. 43
- xii. 9; II. 159
- xiii. 4; II. 78
- xviii. 7-8; II. 43
- Ep. to Eph. i. 10; I. 35
- i. 18; II. 65
- iii. 5; I. 35
- iv. 13; I. 35
- Ep. to Gal. ii. 20; I. 35; II. 322
- iv. 6; II. 65
- iv. 14-15; II. 43
- iv. 30; II. 160
- Ep. to Phil. i. 23; II. 77
- iii. 12; II. 257
- iv. 1; I. 361
- Ep. to Rom. ii. 5; II. 65
- ii. 6; II. 158
- iii.-xi.; I. 32
- v. 5; I. 360; II. 65, 72
- v. 15-19; I. 352
- vi. 6, 8; I. 35
- vi. 12-13; II. 68, 73
- vi. 14; II. 68-69
- vii. 18; II. 123
- vii. 23; II. 65, 68
- vii. 24; II. 123
- viii. 4-13; II. 68-69
- viii. 10; II. 68
- viii. 11; I. 35; II. 321
- viii. 16; II. 68
- viii. 19; II. 74
- viii. 31; II. 159
- viii. 35, 37-39; II. 159
- x. 9; II. 65
- xii. 2; II. 65
- xiii. 11-14; II. 73
- xiv. 14-20; II. 74
- 1 Ep. to Thess. iv. 15, 16; II. 77
- v. 4-8; II. 73
- Peter, St., 2 Ep. of, iii. 12; II. 239
ue, 1856, Vol. II.; II. 217 Grafe, E., “VerhÄltniss der paulinischen Schriften zur Sapientia Salomonis,” in Theol. Abhandl. C. von. WeizsÄcker Gewidmet, 1892; II. 66 Grandgeorge, M. L., St. Augustin et le Neo-Platonisme, 1896; I. 126, 127, 130, 131; II. 293 Greg, W. E., Enigmas of Life; II. 227, 231 Gregory, St., of Nazianzum, Poema de Seipso; I. 546; II. 216 St., of Nyssa, Catecheticus, VIII. c. 35; II. 244 Orationes, XL. 36; II. 216 Grou, Jean N., S.J., MÉditations sur l’Amour de Dieu; II. 307 Gunkel, Prof. H., die Wirkungen des H. Geistes, ed. 1899; II. 6 n. 1 Harnack, Prof. A., Das Wesen des Christenthums, 1902; II. 352 Lehrbuch der Dogmengeschichte, ed. 1888, Vol. II.; II. 351 Hase, Carl von, Handbuch der protest. Polemik, ed. 1864; II. 231 n. 1 Hedley, Bishop J. C., The Spiritual Letters of FÉnelon, 1892, Vol. I. Preface; II. 161 Heppe, Heinrich, Prof., Geschichte der Quietistischen Mystik, 1875; II. 139-140 Hermann, Wilhelm, Prof., Der Verkehr des Christen mit Gott, 1892; II. 263-265, 332, 333 Hesiod, Works and Days, II. 187 HÖffding, H., Prof., SÖron Kirkegaard, 1896; II. 285, 288, 345, 346, 353 Holtzmann, H. J., Prof., Lehrbuch der Neutestamentlichen Theologie, 1897; I. 30 n.; II. 153 n. Vol. II., ch. i.; II. 63 n. 2, 72, 73, 321, 322 Vol. II., ch. iii.; II. 79 n., 190 Richard Rothe’s Speculative System, 1899; II. 229, 247, 248, 269, 270, 377, 378 Homer, Iliad, VIII. 17-20; II. 93 XX. 232 seq.; II. 186-187 Od. IV. 560-568; II. 186-187 Hurter, H., Father, S.J., Theologiae Dogmaticae Compendium, 1893, Vol. III.; II. 242 Inge, W. R., Prof., Christian Mysticism, 1897; I. 30 n. 1; II. 305 n. Jacopone da Todi, Laudi Spirituali, ed. Florence, 1490; I. 259-260 Lauda, XIII. v. 1-7, 8; II. 102 XXIII. v. 1-6, 10; ibid. XXV. v. 7, 10, 11; ibid. XLV.; II. 103 LVIII. a, v. 10, 11, 12; ibid. LVIII. b, 1-9; II. 204 LVIII. v. 3, 8, 11-14, 16, 19, 20-22; II. 104 LVIII. v. 23; II. 104, 186 II. 364, b, c, e; II. 235 II. 364 e; II. 236 V. 471 c-VIII.; II. 186 VI. 508 c; II. 94, 312 VII. 517 b; II. 312 VII. 518 b; I. 18 IX 560 d-588 a; II. 186 X. 595 a-608 b; II. 186 X. 616 b, c; II. 93 X. 617 e, 619 e, 920 e; II. 210 Symposium, 197 a; II. 104 216 e; II. 64 Theaetetus, 153 c; II. 93, 94 168 a; I. 18 176 a; I. 19 Timaeus, 28 a, c; II. 312 29 e seq.; II. 334 41 d, e, 42 d; II. 206 92 c; II. 312 Plotinus, Enneads, I. vii. 1, 61 d; II. 312 I. viii. 2, 72 e; II. 312 V. i. 3, 6; II. 323 V. ii.; II. 326 V. v. 8; II. 95 VI. viii. 16; II. 312 VI. ix. 4; II. 192 VI. ix. 8-9; II. 96 VI. ix. 9; II. 91 VI. ix. 9-11; II. 323 VI. ix. 11; II. 95, 104 Proclus, In Cratylum, 103, 107; II. 93 Institutio Theologica, c. 31, 35; II. 91 c. 129; II. 99 In Parmenidem, IV. 34; II. 93, 100 VI. 52; II. 95 In Platonis Alcibidem, II. 78; II. 93 Platonic Theology, III. 132; II. 95 Rauwenhoff, L. W. E., Prof., Religions-philosophie, Germ. tr., 1894; II. 269 n. 2, 291 n. 1, 328 Reinach, S., Cultes, Mythes et Religions, Vol. I. 1905; II. 233, 234 Reumont, Alfred von, Vittoria Colonna, 1881; I. 341 n. 1 Reusch, F. H., Der Index der verbotenen BÜcher, 1885, Vol. II.; II. 141 Rhode, Erwin, Psyche, ed. 1898, Vol. I.; II. 185, 188 Vol. II.; II. 125 n. 1, 185, 235, 237, 356, 357, 368 Rickert, H., Prof., die Grenzen der naturwissenschaftlichen Begriffsbildung, 1902; II. 370 n. Royce, Josiah, Prof., The World and the Individual, 1901, Vol. II.; II. |
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