bold = Main text
Book, Paragraph grey = Comment text
1 1, 47 | because the doctrines, which philosophy alone can apprehend, are
2 1, 47 | virtue and vice; and, as to philosophy, that it ever even entered
3 1, 58 | to the fame attendant on philosophy ; and (thus) he hastens
4 2, 13 | the requirements of (true) philosophy, or discover the practices
5 2, 19 | among the Greeks of (their) philosophy, and made the profession,
6 2, 20 | be, neither Virtue, nor Philosophy, unless indeed, it happened
7 2, 20 | good, either the life of Philosophy, or the superiority of rule:
8 2, 20(43)| invaluable writer on the philosophy of the ancients,—thus speaks
9 2, 20 | despised by every sort of sound Philosophy. ~
10 2, 22(55)| emanation system. He got his philosophy in Egypt, according to Plutarch;
11 2, 24 | eminently to (the true) Philosophy ; and held correctly, respecting
12 2, 24(61)| author's fondness of this philosophy, of First and Second Cause,
13 2, 25(62)| accurate account of Plato, his Philosophy, Writings, &c., the reader
14 2, 30 | that, the Father of his philosophy commanded them to propitiate
15 2, 30 | truth under the show of Philosophy, and attached himself to ./.
16 2, 41 | directly opposed to his own Philosophy ? For this is he who in
17 2, 42 | of the Originator of this Philosophy, that they supposed the
18 2, 51 | the science of that true Philosophy, which is free from falsehood ?
19 2, 93 | the name of virtue and of philosophy became known among men. (
20 3, 13(16)| which had, under the garb of philosophy, been deified by the Poets.
21 4, 4 | which are for the life of philosophy and of purity, and how numerous
22 4, 7 | the ordinances of (true) philosophy, -- ~In that He foretold
23 5, 2 | who delivered the chief philosophy by teaching His disciples,
24 5, 2 | the teacher of the divine philosophy and righteousness; and not
25 5, 2 | and not of this common philosophy of the world ; -- ~
26 5, 8 | over to the precepts of the philosophy which is Divine. How then,
27 5, 14 | his place for the sake of philosophy, and him they hawk about
28 5, 21 | appointments of this His philosophy. They29 were too, the first
29 5, 21 | pertaining to the life of this philosophy, which He laid down for
30 5, 24 | the teaching of the (true) Philosophy ? Whence also, the mind (
31 5, 34 | the life, which belongs to philosophy. And thus, we affirm, might
32 5, 35 | the worship of God, and of philosophy. They also desired the life,
33 5, 47 | doctrines of the (true) Philosophy; still, the matter will
|