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)