His stoicism tempered by a milder and more religious spirit, 245, 246.
His remarks on national religious beliefs, 405
Epicureans, their faith preserved unchanged at Athens, i. 128, and note.
Their scepticism, 162.
Roman Epicureans, 162, 163.
Epicureanism the expression of a type of character different from Stoicism, 171, 172.
But never became a school of virtue in Rome, 175.
Destructive nature of its functions, 176.
Esteemed pleasure as the ultimate end of our actions, 186.
Encouraged physical science, 193.