[191] Procli Diadochi in Platonis Timæum Commentaria.
[192] September, 1898, p. 3.
[193] The life of the animal to which it is bound.
[194] The instrument must be suited to the development of the artist; too highly developed a body would be bad for a man very low down in the scale of humanity. This will, in some measure, explain the paradoxical word here used; the advantage there may sometimes be in putting on a rudimentary body.
[195] G. R. S. Mead tells us that Justin believed in Reincarnation only whilst he was a Platonist; he opposed this teaching after his conversion to Christianity (See Theosophical Review, April, 1906).
[196] Does this obscure passage refer to the resurrection of the body?
[197] Adversus Gentes. "We die many times, and as often do we rise again from the dead."
[198] Hyeronim., Epistola ad Demetr....
[199] Book 2, quest. 6, No. 17.
[200] Ephesians, ch. 1, v. 4 ... he hath chosen us in him before the foundation of the world.