CONTENTS
| [BOOK IV] THE IDEAL AND THE ACTUAL: SOCIETY (continued) | ||
| PAGE | ||
| [CHAPTER XXV] | ||
| The Heart of Heloïse | [3] | |
| [CHAPTER XXVI] | ||
| German Considerations: Walther von der Vogelweide | [28] | |
| [BOOK V] SYMBOLISM | ||
| [CHAPTER XXVII] | ||
| Scriptural Allegories in the Early Middle Ages; Honorius of Autun | [41] | |
| [CHAPTER XXVIII] | ||
| The Rationale of the Visible World: Hugo of St. Victor | [60] | |
| [CHAPTER XXIX] | ||
| Cathedral and Mass; Hymn and Imaginative Poem | [76] | |
| I. | Guilelmus Durandus and Vincent of Beauvais. | |
| II. | The Hymns of Adam of St. Victor and the Anticlaudianus of Alanus of Lille. | |
| [BOOK VI] LATINITY AND LAW | ||
| [CHAPTER XXX] | ||
| The Spell of the Classics | [107] | |
| I. | Classical Reading. | |
| II. | Grammar. | |
| III. | The Effect upon the Mediaeval Man; Hildebert of Lavardin. | |
| [CHAPTER XXXI] | ||
| Evolution of Mediaeval Latin Prose | [148] | |
| [CHAPTER XXXII] | ||
| Evolution of Mediaeval Latin Verse | [186] | |
| I. | Metrical Verse. | |
| II. | Substitution of Accent for Quantity. | |
| III. | Sequence-Hymn and Student-Song. | |
| IV. | Passage of Themes into the Vernacular. | |
| [CHAPTER XXXIII] | ||
| Mediaeval Appropriation of the Roman Law | [231] | |
| I. | The Fontes Juris Civilis. | |
| II. | Roman and Barbarian Codification. | |
| III. | The Mediaeval Appropriation. | |
| IV. | Church Law. | |
| V. | Political Theorizing. | |
| [BOOK VII] ULTIMATE INTELLECTUAL INTERESTS OF THE TWELFTH AND THIRTEENTH CENTURIES | ||
| [CHAPTER XXXIV] | ||
| Scholasticism: Spirit, Scope, and Method | [283] | |
| [CHAPTER XXXV] | ||
| Classification of Topics; Stages of Evolution | [311] | |
| I. | Philosophic Classification of the Sciences; the Arrangement of Vincent’s Encyclopaedia, of the Lombard’s Sentences, of Aquinas’s Summa theologiae. | |
| II. | The Stages of Development: Grammar, Logic, Metalogics. | |
| [CHAPTER XXXVI] | ||
| Twelfth-Century Scholasticism | [338] | |
| I. | The Problem of Universals: Abaelard. | |
| II. | The Mystic Strain: Hugo and Bernard. | |
| III. | The Later Decades: Bernard Silvestris; Gilbert de la Porrée; William of Conches; John of Salisbury, and Alanus of Lille. | |
| [CHAPTER XXXVII] | ||
| The Universities, Aristotle, and the Mendicants | [378] | |
| [CHAPTER XXXVIII] | ||
| Bonaventura | [402] | |
| [CHAPTER XXXIX] | ||
| Albertus Magnus | [420] | |
| [CHAPTER XL] | ||
| Thomas Aquinas | [433] | |
| I. | Thomas’s Conception of Human Beatitude. | |
| II. | Man’s Capacity to know God. | |
| III. | How God knows. | |
| IV. | How the Angels know. | |
| V. | How Men know. | |
| VI. | Knowledge through Faith perfected in Love. | |
| [CHAPTER XLI] | ||
| Roger Bacon | [484] | |
| [CHAPTER XLII] | ||
| Duns Scotus and Occam | [509] | |
| [CHAPTER XLIII] | ||
| The Mediaeval Synthesis: Dante | [525] | |
| INDEX | [561] | |
BOOK IV
THE IDEAL AND THE ACTUAL: SOCIETY
(Continued)