STOREHOUSE.—The conjugial principle of one man with one wife is the storehouse of human life, [457].

STORGE.—The love called storge is the love of infants, [392]. This love prevails equally with the evil and the good, and, in like manner, with tame and wild beasts; it is even in some cases stronger and more ardent with evil men, and also with wild beasts, [392]. The innocence of infancy is the cause of the love called storge, [395]. Spiritual storge, [211].

STUDY, what was the, of the men who lived in the silver age, [76]. Study of sciences in the spiritual world, [207].

STUPIDITY of the age, [481].

SUBLIMATION.—The purification of conjugial love may be compared to the purification of natural spirits, as effected by chemists, and called sublimation, [145].

SUBJECT, every, receives influx according to its form, [86]. All a man's affections and thoughts are in forms, and thence from forms, for forms are their subjects, [186]. A subject without predicates is an entity which has no existence in reason, [66]. See [Substance].

SUBSISTENCE is perpetual existence, [86].

SUBSTANCE.—There is no substance without a form, an unformed substance not being any thing, [66]. There is not any good or truth which is not in a substance as in its subject, [66]. Every idea of man's, however sublimated, is substantial, that is, affixed to substance, [66]. Material things derive their origin from things substantial, [207]. In man, all the affections of love, and all the perceptions of wisdom, are rendered substantial, for substances are their subjects, [361]. See [Form].