Page:The religion of Plutarch, a pagan creed of apostolic times; an essay (IA religionofplutar00oakeiala).pdf/29

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CONTENTS
xxvii
PAGE
polytheistic tradition with the Dæmons—Emphasis thus given to the philosophic conception of the Deity—Dæmons responsible for all the crude and cruel superstitions attaching to the popular gods—Function of the Dæmons as mediators between God and man 120
CHAPTER VII.
Necessity for a Mediator between God and Man partly met by Oracular Inspiration—General failure of Oracles in the age of Plutarch—Plutarch's "Delphian Essays"—The De Pythiæ Oraculis: nature of Inspiration: oracles not verbally inspired—The De Defectu OraculorumVarious explanations of Inspiration—Plutarch inclines to accept that which assumes an original Divine afflatus placed under the superintendence of Dæmons, whose activities are subject to the operation of natural causes 138
CHAPTER VIII.
Sincerity of Plutarch's belief in Dæmons—Function of the Dæmons as Mediators not confined to oracular inspiration—Dæmons in their personal relationship with the human soul—The De Dæmonio Socratis This tract not a formal treatise on Dæmonology—Various explanations of the Socratic "Dæmon"—Ethical value of the conception of Dæmons as spiritual guardians of individual men—"Men may rise on stepping-stones of their dead selves to higher things"—Dangers of the conception—Superstition: Plutarch's general attitude towards that Vice 163
CHAPTER IX.
Relation between Superstition and Atheism: Atheism an intellectual error: Superstition an error involving the passions: the De Superstitione Moral fervour of Plutarch's attack on Superstition—His comparative tolerance of Atheism—The greatest safeguard against both alike consists in an intellectual appreciation of the Truth—The De Iside et OsirideThe Unity underlying national differences of religious belief 179