preface.—of what great value the knowledge of the truth is and always has been.
Chap. i.— of religion and wisdom.
Chap. II.—That there is a providence in the affairs of men.
Chap. III.—Whether the universe is governed by the power of one god or of many.
Chap. IV.—That the one god was foretold even by the prophets.
Chap. V.—Of the testimonies of poets and philosophers.
Chap. VI.—Of divine testimonies, and of the sibyls and their predictions.
chap. VII.—Concerning the testimonies of apollo and the gods.
Chap. viii.—that god is without a body, nor does he need difference of sex for procreation.
Chap. IX.—Of hercules and his life and death.
Chap. xi.—of the origin, life, reign, name and death of jupiter, and of saturn and uranus.
Chap. xii.—that the stoics transfer the figments of the poets to a philosophical system.
Chap. xiv.—what the sacred history of euhemerus and ennius teaches concerning the gods.
Chap. xv.—how they who were men obtained the name of gods.
Chap. xviii.—on the consecration of gods, on account of the benefits which they conferred upon men.
Chap. xix.—that it is impossible for any one to worship the true god together with false deities.
Chap. xx.—of the gods peculiar to the Romans, and their sacred rites.
Chap. xxiii.—of the ages of vain superstitions, and the times at which they commenced.
Chap. iii.—that cicero and other men of learning erred in not turning away the people from error.
Chap. vI.—that neither the whole universe nor the elements are god, nor are they possessed of life.
Chap. viii.—of the use of reason in religion and of dreams, auguries, oracles, and similar portents.
Chap. ix.—of the devil, the world, god, providence, man, and his wisdom.
Chap. X.—Of the World, and Its Parts, the Elements and Seasons.
Chap. XI.—Of Living Creatures, of Man Prometheus, Deucalion, the ParcÆ.
Chap. XV.—Of the Corruption of Angels, and the Two Kinds of Demons.
Chap. XVI.—That Demons Have No Power Over Those Who are Established in the Faith.
Chap. XVII.—That Astrology, Soothsaying, and Similar Arts are the Invention of Demons.
Chap. XVIII.—Of the Patience and Vengeance of God, the Worship of Demons, and False Religions.
Chap. XIX.—Of the Worship of Images and Earthly Objects.
Chap. XX.—Of Philosophy and the Truth.
Chap. II.—Of Philosophy, and How Vain Was Its Occupation in Setting Forth the Truth.
Chap. III.—Of What Subjects Philosophy Consists, and Who Was the Chief Founder of the Academic Sect.
Chap. IV.—That Knowledge is Taken Away by Socrates, and Conjecture by Zeno.
Chap. V.—That the Knowledge of Many Things is Necessary.
Chap. VI.—Of Wisdom, and the Academics, and Natural Philosophy.
Chap. VII.—Of Moral Philosophy, and the Chief Good.
Chap. VIII.—Of the Chief Good, and the Pleasures of the Soul and Body, and of Virtue.
Chap. IX.—Of the Chief Good, and the Worship of the True God, and a Refutation of Anaxagoras.
Chap. X.—It is the Peculiar Property of Man to Know and Worship God.
Chap. XI.—Of Religion, Wisdom, and the Chief Good.
Chap. XIII.—Of the Immortality of the Soul, and of Wisdom, Philosophy, and Eloquence.
Chap. XIV.—That Lucretius and Others Have Erred, and Cicero Himself, in Fixing the Origin of Wisdom.
Chap. XXI.—Of the System of Plato, Which Would Lead to the Overthrow of States.
Chap. XXII.—Of the Precepts of Plato, and Censures of the Same.
Chap. XXIII.—Of the Errors of Certain Philosophers, and of the Sun and Moon.
Chap. XXIV.—Of the Antipodes, the Heaven, and the Stars.
Chap. XXV.—Of Learning Philosophy, and What Great Qualifications are Necessary for Its Pursuit.
Chap. XXVIII.—Of True Religion and of Nature. Whether Fortune is a Goddess, and of Philosophy.
Chap. XXIX.—Of Fortune Again, and Virtue.
Chap. II.—Where Wisdom is to Be Found Why Pythagoras and Plato Did Not Approach the Jews.
Chapter IV.—Of Wisdom Likewise, and Religion, and of the Right of Father and Lord.
Chap. VII.—Of the Name of Son, and Whence He is Called Jesus and Christ.
Chap. XI.—Of the Cause of the Incarnation of Christ.
Chap. XIII.—Of Jesus, God and Man And the Testimonies of the Prophets Concerning Him.
Chap. XIV.—Of the Priesthood of Jesus Foretold by the Prophets.
Chap. XV.—Of the Life and Miracles of Jesus, and Testimonies Concerning Them.
Chap. XVI.—Of the Passion of Jesus Christ That It Was Foretold.
Chap. XVII.—Of the Superstitions of the Jews, and Their Hatred Against Jesus.
Chap. XVIII.—Of the Lord’s Passion, and that It Was Foretold.
Chap. XIX.—Of the Death, Burial, and Resurrection of Jesus And the Predictions of These Events.
Chap. XXII.—Arguments of Unbelievers Against the Incarnation of Jesus.
Chap. XXIII.—Of Giving Precepts, and Acting.
Chap. XXIV.—The Overthrowing of the Arguments Above Urged by Way of Objection.
Chap. XXVI.—Of the Cross, and Other Tortures of Jesus, and of the Figure of the Lamb Under the Law.
Chap. XXVII.—Of the Wonders Effected by the Power of the Cross, and of Demons.
Chap. XXVIII.—Of Hope and True Religion, and of Superstition.
Chap. XXIX.—Of the Christian Religion, and of the Union of Jesus with the Father.
Chap. XXX.—Of Avoiding Heresies and Superstitions, and What is the Only True Catholic Church.
Chap. II.—To What an Extent the Christian Truth Has Been Assailed by Rash Men.
Chap. IV.—Why This Work Was Published, and Again of Tertullian and Cyprian.
Chap. V.—There Was True Justice Under Saturnus, But It Was Banished by Jupiter.
Chap. VII.—Of the Coming of Jesus, and Its Fruit And of the Virtues and Vices of that Age.
Chap. IX.—Of the Crimes of the Wicked, and the Torture Inflicted on the Christians.
Chap. X.—Of False Piety, and of False and True Religion.
Chap XI.—Of the Cruelty of the Heathens Against the Christians.
Chap. XII.—Of True Virtue And of the Estimation of a Good or Bad Citizen.
Chapter XIII.—Of the Increase and the Punishment of the Christians.
Chap. XIV.—Of the Fortitude of the Christians.
Chap. XV.—Of Folly, Wisdom, Piety, Equity, and Justice.
Chap. XVI.—Of the Duties of the Just Man, and the Equity of Christians.
Chap. XVII.—Of the Equity, Wisdom, and Foolishness of Christians.
Chap. XVIII.—Of Justice, Wisdom, and Folly.
Chap. XIX.—Of Virtue and the Tortures of Christians, and of the Right of a Father and Master.
Chap. XX.—Of the Vanity and Crimes, Impious Superstitions, and of the Tortures of the Christians.
Chap. XXII.—Of the Rage of the Demons Against Christians, and the Error of Unbelievers.
Chap. XXIII.—Of the Justice and Patience of the Christians.
Chap. XXIV.—Of the Divine Vengeance Inflicted on the Torturers of the Christians.
Chap. I.—Of the Worship of the True God, and of Innocency, and of the Worship of False Gods.
Chap. II.—Of the Worship of False Gods and the True God.
Chap. IV.—Of the Ways of Life, of Pleasures, Also of the Hardships of Christians.
Chap. V.—Of False and True Virtue And of Knowledge.
Chap. VI.—Of the Chief Good and Virtue, and or Knowledge and Righteousness.
Chap. VIII.—Of the Errors of Philosophers, and the Variableness of Law.
Chap. IX.—Of the Law and Precept of God Of Mercy, and the Error of the Philosophers.
Chap. X.—Of Religion Towards God, and Mercy Towards Men And of the Beginning of the World.
Chap. XI.—Of the Persons Upon Whom a Benefit is to Be Conferred.
Chap. XII.—Of the Kinds of Beneficence, and Works of Mercy.
Chap. XIII.—Of Repentance, of Mercy, and the Forgiveness of Sins.
Chap. XV.—Of the Affections, and the Opinion of the Peripatetics Respecting Them.
Chap. XVII.—Of the Affections and Their Use Of Patience, and the Chief Good of Christians.
Chap. XVIII.—Of Some Commands of God, and of Patience.
Chap. XIX.—Of the Affections and Their Use And of the Three Furies.
Chap. XXI.—Of the Pleasures of the Ears, and of Sacred Literature.
Chap. XXII.—Of the Pleasures of Taste and Smell.
Chap. XXIII. —De Tactus Voluptate Et Libidine, Atque de Matrimonio Et Continentiâ.
Chap. XXIV.—Of Repentance, of Pardon, and the Commands of God.
Chap. XXV.—Of Sacrifice, and of an Offering Worthy of God, and of the Form of Praising God.
Chap. II.—Of the Error of the Philosophers, and of the Divine Wisdom, and of the Golden Age.
Chap. III.—Of Nature, and of the World And a Censure of the Stoics and Epicureans.
Chap. V.—Of the Creation of Man, and of the Arrangement of the World, and of the Chief Good.
Chap. VI.—Why the World and Man Were Created. How Unprofitable is the Worship of False Gods.
Chap. VII.—Of the Variety of Philosophers, and Their Truth.
Chap. VIII.—Of the Immortality of the Soul.
Chap. IX.—Of the Immortality of the Soul, and of Virtue.
Chap. X.—Of Vices and Virtues, and of Life and Death.
Chap. XI.—Of the Last Times, and of the Soul and Body.
Chap. XII.—Of the Soul and the Body, and of Their Union and Separation and Return.
Chap. XIII.—Of the Soul, and the Testimonies Concerning Its Eternity.
Chap. XIV.—Of the First and Last Times of the World.
Chap. XV.—Of the Devastation of the World and Change of the Empires.
CHAP. XVI.—OF THE DEVASTATION of the World, and Its Prophetic Omens.
Chap. XVII.—Of the False Prophet, and the Hardships of the Righteous, and His Destruction.
Chap. XIX.—Of the Advent of Christ to Judgment, and of the Overcoming of the False Prophet.
Chap. XX.—Of the Judgment of Christ, of Christians, and of the Soul.
Chap. XXI.—Of the Torments and Punishments of Souls.
Chap. XXII.—Of the Error of the Poets, and the Return of the Soul from the Lower Regions.
Chap. XXIII.—Of the Resurrection of the Soul, and the Proofs of This Fact.
Chap. XXIV.—Of the Renewed World.
Chap. XXV.—Of the Last Times, and of the City of Rome.
Chap. XXVI.—Of the Loosing of the Devil, and of the Second and Greatest Judgment.
Chap. XXVII.—An Encouragement and Confirmation of the Pious.
The Epitome of the Divine Institutes.
The Preface.—The Plan and Purport of the Whole Epitome, And of the Institutions.
Chap. I.—Of the Divine Providence.
Chap. II.—That There is But One God, and that There Cannot Be More.
Chap. III.—The Testimonies of the Poets Concerning the One God.
Chap. IV.—The Testimonies of the Philosophers to the Unity of God.
Chap. V.—That the Prophetic Women—That Is, the Sibyls—Declare that There is But One God.
Chap. VI.—Since God is Eternal and Immortal, He Does Not Stand in Need of Sex and Succession.
Chap. VII.—Of the Wicked Life and Death of Hercules.
Chap. VIII.—Of Æsculapius, Apollo, Mars, Castor and Pollux, and of Mercurius and Bacchus.
Chap. IX.—Of the Disgraceful Deeds of the Gods.
Chap. X.—Of Jupiter, and His Licentious Life.
Chap. XI.—The Various Emblems Under Which the Poets Veiled the Turpitude of Jupiter.
Chap. XII.—The Poets Do Not Invent All Those Things Which Relate to the Gods.
Chap. XIII.—The Actions of Jupiter are Related from the Historian Euhemerus.
Chap. XIV.—The Actions of Saturnus and Uranus Taken from the Historians.
Chap. XX.—Of the Gods Peculiar to the Romans.
Chap. XXI.—Of the Sacred Rites of the Roman Gods.
Chap. XXII.—Of the Sacred Rites Introduced by Faunus and Numa.
Chap. XXIII.—Of the Gods and Sacred Rites of the Barbarians.
Chap. XXIV.—Of the Origin of Sacred Rites and Superstitions.
Chap. XXV.—Of the Golden Age, of Images, and Prometheus, Who First Fashioned Man.
Chap. XXVI.—Of the Worship of the Elements and Stars.
Chap. XXVII.—Of the Creation, Sin, and Punishment of Man And of Angels, Both Good and Bad.
Chap. XXVIII.—Of the Demons, and Their Evil Practices.
Chap. XXIX.—Of the Patience and Providence of God.
Chap. XXXI.—Of Knowledge and Supposition.
Chap. XXXII.—Of the Sects of Philosophers, and Their Disagreement.
Chap. XXXIII.—What is the Chief Good to Be Sought in Life.
Chap. XXXIV.—That Men are Born to Justice.
Chap. XXXV.—That Immortality is the Chief Good.
Chap. XXXVI.—Of the Philosophers,—Namely, Epicurus and Pythagoras.
Chap. XXXVII.—Of Socrates and His Contradiction.
Chap. XXXVIII.—Of Plato, Whose Doctrine Approaches More Nearly to the Truth.
Chap. XXXIX.—Of Various Philosophers, and of the Antipodes.
Chap. XL.—Of the Foolishness of the Philosophers.
Chap. XLI.—Of True Religion and Wisdom.
Chap. XLII.—Of Religious Wisdom: the Name of Christ Known to None, Except Himself and His Father.
Chap. XLIII.—Of the Name of Jesus Christ, and His Twofold Nativity.
Chap. XLIV.—The Twofold Nativity of Christ is Proved from the Prophets.
Chap. XLV.—The Power and Works of Christ are Proved from the Scriptures.
Chap. XLVI.—It is Proved from the Prophets that the Passion and Death of Christ Had Been Foretold.
Chap. XLVIII.—Of the Disinheriting of the Jews, and the Adoption of the Gentiles.
Chap. XLIX.—That God is One Only.
Chap. L.—Why God Assumed a Mortal Body, and Suffered Death.
Chap. LI.—Of the Death of Christ on the Cross.
Chap. LIII.—The Reasons of the Hatred Against the Christians are Examined and Refuted.
Chap. LIV.—Of the Freedom of Religion in the Worship of God.
Chap. LV.—The Heathens Charge Justice with Impiety in Following God.
Chap. LVI.—Of Justice, Which is the Worship of the True God.
Chap. LVII.—Of Wisdom and Foolishness.
Chap. LVIII.—Of the True Worship of God, and Sacrifice.
Chap. LIX.—Of the Ways of Life, and the First Times of the World.
Chap. LX.—Of the Duties of Justice.
Chap. LXII.—Of Restraining the Pleasures of the Senses.
Chap. LXIII.—That Shows are Most Powerful to Corrupt the Minds.
Chap. LXIV.—The Passions are to Be Subdued, and We Must Abstain from Forbidden Things.
Chap. LXV.—Precepts About Those Things Which are Commanded, and of Pity.
Chap. LXVI.—Of Faith in Religion, and of Fortitude.
Chap. LXVII.—Of Repentance, the Immortality of the Soul, and of Providence.
Chap. LXVIII.—Of the World, Man, and the Providence of God.
Chap. LXIX.—That the World Was Made on Account of Man, and Man on Account of God.
Chap. LXX.—The Immortality of the Soul is Confirmed.
Chap. LXXI.—Of the Last Times.
Chap. LXXII.—Of Christ Descending from Heaven to the General Judgment, and of the Millenarian Reign.
Chap. LXXIII.—The Hope of Safety is in the Religion and Worship of God.
What is the chief good must be an object of inquiry, that our whole life and actions may be directed to it. When inquiry is made respecting the chief good of man, it ought to be settled to be of such a kind, first, that it have reference to man alone; in the next place, that it belong peculiarly to the mind; lastly, that it be sought by virtue. Let us see, therefore, whether the chief good which the philosophers mark out be such that it has reference neither to a dumb animal nor to the body, and cannot be attained without virtue.
Aristippus, the founder of the Cyrenaic sect, who thought that bodily pleasure was the chief good, ought to be removed from the number of philosophers, and from the society of men, because he compared himself to a beast. The chief good of Hieronymus is to be without pain, that of Diodorus to cease to be in pain. But the other animals avoid pain; and when they are without pain, or cease to be in pain, are glad. What distinction, then, will be given to man, if his chief good is judged to be common with the beasts? Zeno thought that the chief good was to live agreeably to nature. But this definition is a general one. For all animals live agreeably to nature, and each has its own nature.
Epicurus maintained that it was pleasure of the soul. What is pleasure of the soul but joy, in which the soul for the most part luxuriates, and unbends itself either to sport or to laughter? But this good befalls even dumb animals, which, when they are satisfied with pasture, relax themselves to joy and wantonness. Dinomachus and Callipho approved of honourable pleasure; but they either said the same that Epicurus did, that bodily pleasure is dishonourable; or if they considered bodily pleasures to be partly base and partly honourable, then that is not the chief good which is ascribed to the body. The Peripatetics make up the chief good of goods of the soul, and body, and fortune. The goods of the soul may be approved of; but if they require assistance for the completion of happiness, they are plainly weak. But the goods of the body and of fortune are not in the power of man; nor is that now the chief good which is assigned to the body, or to things placed without us, because this double good extends even to the cattle, which have need of being well, and of a due supply of food. The Stoics are believed to have entertained much better views, who said that virtue was the chief good. But virtue cannot be the chief good, since, if it is the endurance of evils and of labours, it is not happy of itself; but it ought to effect and produce the chief good, because it cannot be attained without the greatest difficulty and labour. But, in truth, Aristotle wandered far from reason, who connected honour with virtue, as though it were possible for virtue at any time to be separated from honour, or to be united with baseness.
Herillus the Pyrrhonist made knowledge the chief good. This indeed belongs to man, and to the soul only, but it may happen to him without virtue. For he is not to be considered happy who has either learnt anything by hearing, or has gained the knowledge of it by a little reading; nor is it a definition of the chief good, because there may be a knowledge either of bad things, or at any rate of things that are useless. And if it is the knowledge of good and useful things which you have acquired by labour, nevertheless it is not the chief good, because knowledge is not sought on its own account, but on account of something else. For the arts are learnt on this account, that they may be to us the means of gaining support, or a source of glory, or even of pleasure; and it is plain that these things cannot be the chief goods. Therefore the philosophers do not observe the rule even in moral philosophy, inasmuch as they are at variance with one another on the main point1475 In ipso cardine. [Horace, Sat., book ii. 6, 71–76.] itself, that is, in that discussion by which the life is moulded. For the precepts cannot be equal, or resembling one another, when some train men to pleasure, others to honour, others indeed to nature, others to knowledge; some to the pursuit, others to the avoiding of riches; some to entire insensibility to pain, others to the endurance of evils: in all which, as I have shown before, they turn aside from reason, because they are ignorant of God.
CAPUT XXXIII. (Div. Inst. lib. III, c. 7 et 8.) Quod summum bonum sit in vita quaerendum.
Quod sit in vita, summum bonum quaeri necesse est, ut ad illud vita omnis et actiones nostrae dirigantur. Cum de hominis summo bono quaeritur, tale constitui debet, primum, ut id ad hominem solum pertineat, deinde, ut animi sit proprium, postremo, 1040C ut virtute quaeratur. Videamus ergo, an summum bonum, quod philosophi determinant, tale sit, ut nec mutum animal, nec corpus attingat, nec possit sine virtute conquiri.
Aristippus, Cyrenaicae sectae conditor, qui summum bonum esse censuit corporis voluptatem, de numero philosophorum, deque coetu hominum propellendus est, quia se pecudi comparavit. Hieronymi summum bonum est nihil dolere; Diodori, dolere desinere. Sed caeterae animantes dolorem fugiunt, et cum non dolent, aut dolere desinunt, gaudent. Quid igitur homini dabitur eximium, si bonum ejus summum commune cum belluis judicatur? Zeno summum bonum putavit, cum natura congruenter vivere. At haec definitio generalis est. Omnes enim animantes cum natura 1040D congruenter vivunt, et est sua cuique natura.
1041A Epicurus animi asseruit voluptatem. Quid est voluptas animi? nisi 1041A gaudium, quo plerumque luxuriat animus, ac relaxatur, vel ad lusum, vel ad risum. Sed hoc bonum etiam muta contingit, quae cum pabulis saturata sunt, in gaudium et lasciviam resolvuntur. Dinomachus et Callipho honestam voluptatem probaverunt: sed aut idem dixerunt, quod Epicurus, ut corporis sit voluptas inhonesta; aut si corporis voluptates, alias turpes, alias honestas putaverunt, jam non est summum bonum, quod corpori adscribitur. Peripatetici ex bonis animi et corporis et fortunae summum bonum conflant. Animi bona probari possunt. Sed si auxilio indigent ad complendam beatitudinem, utique imbecilla sunt: corporis vero atque fortunae, non sunt in hominis potestate; nec jam summum 1041B bonum est, quod aut corpori, aut extra positis assignatur, quia et pecudes attingit hoc duplex bonum, quibus opus est, ut et bene valeant, et victu non indigeant. Stoici aliquanto melius sensisse creduntur, qui summum bonum virtutem esse dixerunt. Sed virtus non potest esse summum bonum: quoniam, si malorum laborumque tolerantia est, beata per se non est; sed efficere aut procreare summum bonum debet, quia perveniri ad illud, sine difficultate ac labore maximo, non potest. At vero Aristoteles longe a ratione aberravit, qui honestatem virtuti copulavit; quasi aliquando virtus aut ab honesta secerni, aut turpitudini posset adjungi.
Eryllus Pyrrhonius scientiam fecit summum bonum. Haec quidem, et hominis, et animi solius est: 1041C sed potest sine virtute contingere. Nec enim beatus putandus est, qui vel auditu aliquid didicerit, vel parva lectione cognoverit; nec est summi boni definitio, quia potest esse aut rerum malarum, aut certe inutilium scientia. Etsi sit bonarum et utilium, quam labore sis assecutus, summum tamen bonum non est, quia non propter se expetitur scientia, sed propter aliud. Nam idcirco artes discuntur, ut sint nobis aut victui, aut gloriae, aut etiam voluptati: quae utique summa bona esse non possunt. Ergo ne in Ethica quidem philosophi regulam tenent, quandoquidem in ipso cardine, id est, in ea disputatione, qua vita formatur, inter se pugnant. Nec enim possunt 1041D paria esse aut similia praecepta, cum alii forment 1042A ad voluptatem, alii ad honestatem, alii vero ad naturam, alii ad scientiam, alii ad quaerendas, alii ad fugiendas opes, alii ad nihil dolendum, alii ad patientiam malorum; in quibus omnibus, sicut superius ostendi, a ratione declinant, quia Deum nesciunt.