Volume II Part 23 (1/2)

Molinos, his opinion on the love we should bear to G.o.d, condemned, i. 18, _note_

Monastic system, results of the Catholic monastic system, i. 107.

Suicide of monks, ii. 52.

Exertions of the monks in the cause of charity, 84.

Causes of the monastic movement, 102.

History of the rapid propagation of it in the West, 183.

New value placed by it on obedience and humility, 185, 269.

Relation of it to the intellectual virtues, 188.

The monasteries regarded as the receptacles of learning, 199.

Fallacy of attributing to the monasteries the genius that was displayed in theology, 208.

Other fallacies concerning the services of the monks, 208-212.

Value attached by monks to pecuniary compensations for crime, 213.

Causes of their corruption, 217.

Benefits conferred by the monasteries, 243

Monica, St., i. 94, _note_

Monogamy, establishment of, ii. 372

Monophysites, the cause, to some extent, of the Mohammedan conquest of Egypt, ii. 143

Montanists, their tenets, ii. 102

Moral distinctions, rival claims of intuition and utility to be regarded as the supreme regulators of, i. 1

Moral judgments, alleged diversities of, i. 91.

Are frequently due to intellectual causes, 92.

Instances of this in usury and abortion, 92.

Distinction between natural duties and others resting on positive law, 93.

Ancient customs canonised by time, 93.

Anomalies explained by a confused a.s.sociation of ideas, 94, 95.

Moral perceptions overridden by positive religions, 95.

Instances of this in transubstantiation and the Augustinian and Calvinistic doctrines of d.a.m.nation, 96, 97.

General moral principles alone revealed by intuition, 99.

The moral unity of different ages a unity not of standard but of tendency, 100.

Application of this theory to the history of benevolence, 100.

Reasons why acts regarded in one age as criminal are innocent in another, 101.

Views of Mill and Buckle on the comparative influence of intellectual and moral agencies in civilisation, 102, 103, _note_.

Intuitive morals not unprogressive, 102, 103.

Answers to miscellaneous objections against the theory of natural moral perceptions, 109.

Effect of the condition of society on the standard, but not the essence, of virtue, 110.

Occasional duty of sacrificing higher duties to lower ones, 110, _et seq._ Summary of the relations of virtue and public and private interest, 117.

Two senses of the word natural, 119

Moral law, foundation of the, according to Ockham and his adherents, i.

17, _note_.