Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
pestilence 1
pestilential 1
philosopher 4
philosophers 37
philosophy 25
phrygia 1
phrygian 1
Frequency    [«  »]
38 either
37 alone
37 now
37 philosophers
37 power
35 having
35 nothing
Lucius Caecilius Firmianus Lactantius
The epitome of the divine institutes

IntraText - Concordances

philosophers

                                       bold = Main text
   Chapter                             grey = Comment text
1 1 | since of almost all the philosophers, except the school of Epicurus, 2 3 | one God, poets also, and philosophers, and inspired women, utter 3 4 | THE TESTIMONIES OF THE PHILOSOPHERS TO THE UNITY OF GOD.~But 4 4 | But let us come to the philosophers, whose authority is regarded 5 4 | Trismegistus, who preceded the philosophers in the antiquity of his 6 26| ignorant only, but also to philosophers; since the Stoics are of 7 30| false wisdom, which the philosophers profess,--men endued with 8 31| ground. But the chief of the philosophers themselves have taken away 9 32| XXXII. OF THE SECTS OF PHILOSOPHERS, AND THEIR DISAGREEMENT.~ 10 32| altogether overthrown by philosophers mutually opposing each other, 11 32| themselves retain the name of philosophers, since they admitted their 12 32| even of a man. Thus the philosophers, because they have no defence, 13 32| foundation? Let us see whether philosophers are agreed in this part 14 33| the chief good which the philosophers mark out be such that it 15 33| removed from the number of philosophers, and from the society of 16 33| chief goods. Therefore the philosophers do not observe the rule 17 34| acknowledged even by these same philosophers. Thus Cicero says: "But 18 35| to the lot of man, as the philosophers will have it, and in this 19 35| and this of logic, and the philosophers have erred in moral philosophy, 20 36| XXXVI. OF THE PHILOSOPHERS,-NAMELY, EPICURUS AND PYTHAGORAS.~ 21 36| speak a few things about the philosophers. This is especially the 22 36| refuted not only by all philosophers and general persuasion, 23 37| was right that the natural philosophers should restrain themselves, 24 38| speaks of as the god of philosophers, alone of all so studied 25 39| XXXIX. OF VARIOUS PHILOSOPHERS, AND OF THE ANTIPODES.~These 26 40| OF THE FOOLISHNESS OF THE PHILOSOPHERS.~There are innumerable sayings 27 40| sayings and doings of the philosophers, by which their foolishness 28 40| it is understood that the philosophers were neither teachers of 29 41| wisdom, which is in the philosophers, let us come to true religion 30 49| God. Nor let the Jews, or philosophers, flatter themselves respecting 31 55| them most wittily? Why are philosophers attended to, who either 32 55| evil. Many indeed of the philosophers, and especially Plato and 33 56| precepts?), it follows that the philosophers were ignorant of justice, 34 59| life was unknown neither to philosophers nor to poets, but both introduced 35 59| a different manner. The philosophers wished the one to be the 36 69| for the use of man. The philosophers saw this, but they did not 37 70| let him perceive that the philosophers have erred, who thought


Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (V89) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2007. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License