<< | Contents | >> |
Hippolytus
Show All Footnotes & Jump to 854
Introductory Notice to Hippolytus.
[846] Miller’s text has “judgment,” which yields no meaning. Roeper suggests “Ogdoad.”
[848] Or, “their own peculiar locality” (Bunsen).
[849] This word is added by Bunsen.
[852] See Clemens Alexandrinus, Strom., ii. p. 375, ed. Sylburg. [Comp. cap. viii. vol. ii. p. 355, this series.]
[853] Bernays and Bunsen read τὸν Περίπατον, which Abbe Cruice and Duncker consider erroneous, referring us to Eusebius, Hist. Ecclesiast., iv. 7.
Chapter XVI.—The System of Saturnilus.
[854] See [vol. i. p. 348, this series, where it is Saturninus]; Irenæus, i. 24; [vol. iii., this series, p. 649]; Tertullian, Præscript. xlvi.; Epiphanius, Hær., xxiii.; Theodoret, Hær. Fab., i. 3; St. Augustine, Hær., iii. Eusebius styles this heretic Saturninus.
[855] Epiphanius makes Basilides and Saturnilus belong to the same school.
[856] φαεινῆς: Miller reads φωνῆς.
[858] Miller reads “the Father.”
[859] Or, “world-making.”
[860] See [vol. i. p. 352, this series]; Irenæus i. 27; [vol. iii., this series especially p. 257], Tertullian, Adv. Marc., and Præscript., xxx.; Epiphanius, Hær., xlii.; Theodoret, Hær. Fab., i. 24; Eusebius., Hist. Ecclesiast., v. 13, 16; and St. Augustine, Hær., xxii.
[861] Or, “quarrelsome,” or, “frantic.”
[862] Hippolytus’ discussion respecting the heresy of Marcion is chiefly interesting from the light which it throws on the philosophy of Empedocles.
[863] These are lines 55–57 in Karsten’s edition of a collection of the Empedoclean verses.
[864] These are lines 110, 111, in Stein’s edition of Empedocles.
Search Comments 
This page has been visited 0196 times.
<< | Contents | >> |
10 per page