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Hippolytus
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Introductory Notice to Hippolytus.
[1034] [This word is an index of authenticity. See on the “Little Labyrinth,” Bunsen, i. p. 243, and Wordsworth, pp. 100, 161, and his references to Routh, Lardner, etc.]
Chapter II.—Summary of the Opinions of Philosophers.
[1035] Hippolytus in what follows is indebted to Sextus Empiricus.—Adv. Phys., x.
[1036] See Karst., Fragm., viii. 45.
Chapter III.—Summary of the Opinions of Philosophers Continued.
[1037] Iliad, xiv. 201.
[1038] Ibid., vii. 99.
[1039] See Karst., Fragm., ix. p. 46.
[1040] Fabricius, in his Commentary on Sextus Empiricus, considers that this is a quotation from the Hymns of Euripides.
[1041] V. 55–57, ed. Karst.
[1042] V. 106, 107, ed. Karst.
[1043] [See De Legibus, lib. x., and note xii. p. 119, Tayler Lewis’ Plato against the Atheists.]
[1044] Cruice supplies from Theodoret: “and the second which is good is self-begotten, and the third is generated.”
[1046] ἀφίεται εἰκῇ: Bernays proposes ὀφιοειδῆ, i.e., being of the form of the serpent.
[1047] The commentators refer us to Ps. xxix. 3.
[1049] This section differs considerably from what Hippolytus has already stated concerning Valentinus. [“Sige,” vol. i. p. 62, note 5.]
[1050] The allusion here is to the shamelessness of the Cynics in regard to sexual intercourse.
Chapter XV.—Marcion and Cerdo.
[1051] The account here given of Cerdon and Marcion does not accurately correspond with that already furnished by Hippolytus of these heretics.
[1053] Or, “the Son;” or, “the Son of Mary” (Cruice).
[1054] [Vol. iii. p. 654, this series, where it should have been noted that the Appendix to Tertullian is supposed by Waterland to be “little else but an extract from Hippolytus.” He pronounces it “ancient and of good value.” See Wordsworth’s remarks on the biblidarion, p. 59.]
Chapter XXI.—The Phrygians or Montanists.
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