Bahrdt, his deceit and blasphemy, 139.
His works, 140.
His condition when at Giessen, 140.
His rapid decline, 141.
He engaged in numerous enterprises, 141.
Became an inn-keeper at Halle, 142.
His wretched death, 142.
He was the climax of French skepticism in Germany, 142.
Basedow. An innovation in German education, 184.
His publications in favor of a new system, 184.
His visionary plans, 185.
Popular indorsement of his impracticable plans, 185.
His final fall, 186, 187.
Baumgarten, the connecting link between Pietism and Rationalism, 111.
He succeeded Wolf at Halle, 111.
His extensive acquirements, 111, 112.
He favored the introduction of English Deism, 117.
Baur F. C., his works divided into two classes, 278.
His views of the early church, 278-280.
Becker, the extreme Rationalism contained in his juvenile publications,
190-192.
Bekker, Balthazer, a disciple of Des Cartes, 347.
His _World Bewitched_, 347.
His excommunication, and personal appearance, 347, 348.
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