general acceptance, and in the             literature of the period an eclectic spirit nearly akin to             Scepticism predominated. Of the strife and fusion of systems at this             time the works of Cicero are the best example. On the question of             the soul he is by turns Platonic and Pythagorean, while he confesses             that the Stoic and Epicurean systems have each an attraction for             him. Such was the state of the question in the West at the dawn of             Christianity. In Jewish circles a like uncertainty prevailed. The             Sadducees were Materialists, denying immortality and all spiritual             existence. The Pharisees maintained these doctrines, adding belief             in pre-existence and transmigration. The psychology of the Rabbins             is founded on the Sacred Books, particularly the account of the             creation of man in Genesis. Three terms are used for the soul:             nephesh, nuah, and neshamah; the first was taken to refer to the             animal and vegetative nature, the second to the ethical principle,             the third to the purely spiritual intelligence. At all events, it is             evident that the Old Testament throughout either asserts or implies             the distinct reality of the soul. An important contribution to later             Jewish thought was the infusion of Platonism into it by Philo of             Alexandria. He taught the immediately Divine origin of the soul, its             pre-existence and transmigration; he contrasts the pneuma, or             spiritual essence, with the soul proper, the source of vital             phenomena, whose seat is the blood; finally he revived the old             Platonic Dualism, attributing the origin of sin and evil to the             union of spirit with matter.             It was Christianity that, after many centuries of struggle, applied             the final criticis...