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1 I, 4 | name of its founder, since philosophers are called Pythagoreans
2 I, 4 | yet you openly allow your philosophers the right of attaching themselves
3 I, 4 | to the world, that these philosophers affect, but which Christians
4 I, 5 | many indeed are said to be philosophers, who for all that do not
5 I, 10| I say nothing of your philosophers, whom a certain inspiration
6 I, 19| of this strain; but your philosophers also speak with all confidence
7 II, 1 | he points to either the philosophers, the peoples, or the poets.
8 II, 1 | physical class, of which the philosophers treat; another the mythic
9 II, 1 | itself. When, therefore, the philosophers have ingeniously composed
10 II, 1 | Now all things with the philosophers are uncertain, because of
11 II, 2 | II. PHILOSOPHERS HAD NOT SUCCEEDED! IN DISCOVERING
12 II, 2 | authority of the physical philosophers is maintained among you
13 II, 2 | and simple wisdom of the philosophers which attests its own weakness
14 II, 2 | all kinds of learning, the philosophers may seem to have investigated
15 II, 2 | not wanting that among the philosophers there was not only an ignorance,
16 II, 3 | III. THE PHYSICAL PHILOSOPHERS MAINTAINED THE DIVINITY
17 II, 3 | that your physical class of philosophers are driven to the necessity
18 II, 3 | the world of which your philosophers treat (for I apply this
19 II, 4 | figurative picture of the philosophers; of those, I mean, who persist
20 II, 6 | speculatively, like your physical philosophers. But, at the same time,
21 II, 9 | it is no longer to the philosophers, nor the poets, nor the
22 II, 14| pleasant leisure, or by philosophers in their slave-like poverty?
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