[91] Gregory of Nyssa, Catech. Oratio, 7; Dionysius Areopagite, Divine Names, 4.
[92] See ii. 3.7.
[93] See iii. 2.6.
[94] Plato, Timaeus, p. 31c, Cary, 11.
[95] See Numenius. 14.
[96] Clem. Al. Strom. v. 689.
[97] In this book we no longer find detailed study of Plato, Aristotle and the Epicureans, as we did in the works of the Porphyrian period. Well indeed did Plotinos say that without Porphyry's objections he might have had little to say.
[98] Porphyry, Principles of the theory of the Intelligibles, 31.
[99] Olympiodorus, in Phaedonem, Cousin, Fragments, p. 404.
[100] Ib., p. 432.