Project Gutenberg 2022-01-07 Public domain in the USA. 486 Hippolytus, Antipope 235 Hippolytus, Saint Hippolytus, Concordia, Antipope Hippolytus, of Porto, Antipope Hippolytus, of Rome, Antipope Hippolytos, Antipope Ippolito, di Roma, Antipope Origen 184 253 Adamantius Oregenes Adamantius Origenes Adamantius Origenis Orygenes Legge, Francis 1853 1922 Legge, F. (Francis) Legge, George Francis Philosophumena; or, The refutation of all heresies, Volume II $aUnited Kingdom :$bThe Macmillan Co.,$c1921. Translations of Christian literature. Series I. Greek texts "Formerly attributed to Origen, but now to Hippolytus[...]" Wikipedia page about this book: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Refutation_of_All_Heresies Book VI. Simon Magus, Valentinus, and their followers -- Book VII. Basilides, Saturnilus, and others -- Book VIII. The docetae, Monoimus, and others -- Book IX. Noetus, Callistus, and others -- Book X. Summaries, and the word of truth. Wouter Franssen and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries) "Philosophumena; or, The Refutation of All Heresies, Volume II" by Hippolytus is a theological and philosophical work written in the early 3rd century. This text seeks to counter various heretical beliefs within early Christianity, particularly those attributed to figures like Simon Magus and Valentinus. It outlines the doctrines and teachings of these heresies, dissecting their implications and how they diverge from orthodox Christian beliefs. The opening of the work introduces the focus on Simon Magus and his followers, highlighting his magical practices and claims of divinity. It contrasts Simon's doctrines with those of other heretics, revealing their reliance on Platonic and Pythagorean philosophies rather than scripture. The text describes Simon’s attempts to establish himself as a deity and includes anecdotes illustrating the deceptions he employed. Hippolytus also introduces Valentinus as a key figure with heretical beliefs, noting how his teachings draw on earlier Greek philosophical concepts to shape his ideas about the divine. The beginning effectively sets the tone for a rigorous critique of divergent theological views, presenting a foundational understanding of early Christian orthodoxy versus heretical thought. (This is an automatically generated summary.) https://archive.org/details/philosophumenaor02hipp 20200521072736hippolytus 1921 GB Reading ease score: 70.9 (7th grade). Fairly easy to read. en Occultism Philosophy, Ancient Christian heresies -- History -- Early church, ca. 30-600 BR Text Category: History - Religious Category: Philosophy & Ethics Category: Religion/Spirituality 822853 2025-07-26T12:23:58.677431 text/html 750067 2024-10-18T18:03:03 text/html 501666 2025-07-26T12:24:13.481315 application/epub+zip 512539 2025-07-26T12:24:01.856379 application/epub+zip 488453 2025-07-26T12:23:59.969380 application/epub+zip 1350642 2025-07-26T12:24:20.581286 application/x-mobipocket-ebook 1325221 2025-07-26T12:24:12.016330 application/x-mobipocket-ebook 1483612 2022-09-30T07:23:49.944553 application/x-mobipocket-ebook 527954 2025-07-26T12:23:56.441394 text/plain; charset=us-ascii 508351 2024-10-18T18:03:03 text/plain; charset=us-ascii 19716 2025-07-26T12:24:20.815291 application/rdf+xml 21456 2025-07-26T12:24:00.588384 image/jpeg 2797 2025-07-26T12:24:00.275390 image/jpeg 489136 2025-07-26T12:23:58.737454 application/octet-stream application/zip Archives containing the RDF files for *all* our books can be downloaded at https://book.klll.cc/wiki/Gutenberg:Feeds#The_Complete_Project_Gutenberg_Catalog en.wikipedia en.wikipedia