History of European Morals From Augustus to Charlemagne

Chapter 46

Daemons, Apuleius' disquisition on the doctrine of, i. 323.

The doctrine supersedes the Stoical naturalism, i. 331.

The daemons of the Greeks and Romans, 380.

And of the Christians, 382

Dale, Van, his denial of the supernatural character of the oracles, i. 374

Dead, Roman wors.h.i.+p of the, i. 168

Death, calmness with which some men of dull and animal natures can meet, i. 89.

Frame of mind in which a man should approach death, according to Epictetus, 195.

Preparation for death one of the chief ends of the philosophy of the ancients, 202.

Bacon's objection to the Stoics' view of, 202.

The Irish legend of the islands of life and death, 203.

The literature of "Consolations," 204.

Death not regarded by the philosophers as penal, 205.

Popular terrors of death, 205, 206.

Instances of tranquil pagan deaths, 207.

Distinctions between the pagan and Christian conceptions of death, 208

Decius, persecution of the Christians under, i. 449, 450

Defoe, Daniel, his tract against beggars, ii. 98, and _note_

Delphi, oracle of, its description of the best religion, i. 167

Deogratias, his ransom of prisoners, ii. 72

Despotism, Helvetius' remarks on the moral effects of, i. 129, _note_

Diagoras, his denial of the existence of the G.o.ds, i. 162

Diodorus, the philosopher, his suicide, i. 215

Dion Chrysostom, his denunciation

His life and works, 312

Dionysius of Halicarna.s.sus, on the creed of the Romans, i. 167

Disinterestedness, Bentham's remarks on, quoted, i. 32, _note_

Disposition, what const.i.tutes, according to the theory of a.s.sociation, i.

30

Divination, a favourite subject of Roman ridicule, i. 166.

Belief of the ancients in, 363

Divorce, unbounded liberty of, among the Romans, ii. 306-308.

Condemned by the Church, 350, 351

Docetae, their tenets, ii. 102

Dog-star, legend of the, ii. 162

Dolphin, legends of the, ii. 162, and _note_

Domestic laws, Roman, changes in, i. 297, 298

Domestic virtues, destruction of the, by the ascetics, ii. 125

Domitian, his law respecting suicide, i. 219.

Anecdote of his cruelty, 289.

His law as to slaves, 307.

His persecution of the Stoics and Christians, 431, 432

Domitilla, banishment of, i. 433

Domnina, her suicide with her daughters, ii. 46

Donatists, their intolerance, ii. 195

Dowry of women, rise of the, ii. 277 and _note_

Dreams, opinions of the Romans concerning, i. 366, 367, _note_

Dumont, M., on vengeance quoted, i. 41, _note_

Duty, theory of morals must explain what is, and the notion of there being such a thing as, i. 5.

Paley on the difference between it and prudence, 15, 16, _note_.

Distinction between natural duties and those resting on positive law, 93.

Duty a distinct motive, 180

Dwarfs, combats of, in the arena, i. 281

Earthquakes, how regarded by the ancients, i. 369.

Cause of persecutions of the Christians, 408

Easter controversy, bitterness of the, ii. 198

Eclectic school of philosophy, rise of the, i. 242.

Its influence on the Stoics, 245

Eclipses, opinions of the ancients concerning, i. 366

Education, importance ascribed to, by the theory of the a.s.sociation of ideas, i. 30.

Contrast between that adopted by the Catholic priesthood and that of the English public schools, 114.

Its influence on the benevolent feelings, 133, 134.

Two distinct theories of, 187

Egypt, the cradle of monachism, ii. 105.



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