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Book I
The Stromata, or Miscellanies · Clement of Alexandria
- Chapter I.—Preface—The Author’s Object—The Utility of Written Compositions.
- Chapter II.—Objection to the Number of Extracts from Philosophical Writings in These Books Anticipated and Answered.
- Chapter III.—Against the Sophists.
- Chapter IV.—Human Arts as Well as Divine Knowledge Proceed from God.
- Chapter V.—Philosophy the Handmaid of Theology.
- Chapter VI.—The Benefit of Culture.
- Chapter VII.—The Eclectic Philosophy Paves the Way for Divine Virtue.
- Chapter VIII.—The Sophistical Arts Useless.
- Chapter IX.—Human Knowledge Necessary for the Understanding of the Scriptures.
- Chapter X.—To Act Well of Greater Consequence Than to Speak Well.
- Chapter XI.—What is the Philosophy Which the Apostle Bids Us Shun?
- Chapter XII.—The Mysteries of the Faith Not to Be Divulged to All.
- Chapter XIII.—All Sects of Philosophy Contain a Germ of Truth.
- Chapter XIV.—Succession of Philosophers in Greece.
- Chapter XV.—The Greek Philosophy in Great Part Derived from the Barbarians.
- Chapter XVI.—That the Inventors of Other Arts Were Mostly Barbarians.
- Chapter XVII.—On the Saying of the Saviour, “All that Came Before Me Were Thieves and Robbers.”
- Chapter XVIII.—He Illustrates the Apostle’s Saying, “I Will Destroy the Wisdom of the Wise.”
- Chapter XIX.—That the Philosophers Have Attained to Some Portion of Truth.
- Chapter XX.—In What Respect Philosophy Contributes to the Comprehension of Divine Truth.
- Chapter XXI.—The Jewish Institutions and Laws of Far Higher Antiquity Than the Philosophy of the Greeks.
- Chapter XXII.—On the Greek Translation of the Old Testament.
- Chapter XXIII.—The Age, Birth, and Life of Moses.
- Chapter XXIV.—How Moses Discharged the Part of a Military Leader.
- Chapter XXV.—Plato an Imitator of Moses in Framing Laws.
- Chapter XXVI.—Moses Rightly Called a Divine Legislator, And, Though Inferior to Christ, Far Superior to the Great Legislators of the Greeks, Minos and Lycurgus.
- Chapter XXVII.—The Law, Even in Correcting and Punishing, Aims at the Good of Men.
- Chapter XXVIII.—The Fourfold Division of the Mosaic Law.
- Chapter XXIX.—The Greeks But Children Compared with the Hebrews.
- Elucidations