[89]. Mishneh Torah, Foundations of the Law, chaps. i.-iv.
[90]. Ibid., chap. iv. 1.
[91]. Guide, Part I., chap. i. [In rendering quotations from the Moreh Nebuchim (Guide for the Perplexed) the translator has used Dr. Friedländer’s English version so far as possible.]
[92]. Foundations of the Law, ibid., 7.
[93]. In the upper world Aristotle’s philosophy postulates the existence of forms divorced from matter: they are the “separate Intelligences,” which emanate one from another and are eternal (see Foundations of the Law, ibid., and Guide, Part II., chap. iv.).
[94]. Guide, Part III., chap. viii.
[95]. Foundations of the Law, ibid., 8 and 9.
[96]. Eight Chapters, chap. i.
[97]. See Munk, Le Guide des Egarés, I., pp. 304-8 (note).
[98]. Guide, Part I., chaps. lxx. and lxxii. and passim. For details see Munk (ibid.), and Dr. Scheyer’s monograph, Das Psychologische System des Maimonides, Frankfort a/M, 1845.