Part, Dialogue
1 1, 1| sign of the same, being understood as a necessary consequence
2 1, 1| highest things may be heard, understood, and accomplished; or it
3 1, 3| as such, I wish it to be understood; although he says that through
4 1, 3| TANS. Certainly it was not understood according to any of these
5 1, 4| The great hunter saw," he understood as much as was possible,
6 1, 4| to the mind, and becomes understood by it, from that which is
7 1, 4| from the beautiful that is understood, and consequently limited,
8 1, 4| being as the Pythagoreans understood it; or according to the
9 1, 5| further talk, all may be understood by that which is written
10 1, 5| certain I should never have understood if I had not heard it from~
11 1, 5| movement and rest.~CIC. This I understood in the dialogues on the
12 1, 5| Epicureans which, being well understood, would not be considered
13 1, 5| that perfection as it is understood by the vulgar, for Epicurus
14 1, 5| sensuality. From this may be understood what is according to us
15 2, 1| about its own centre is understood rest and stability according
16 2, 1| which move in a circle is understood two different kinds of motion,
17 2, 1| figure, m may be easily understood, if one considers it a little.
18 2, 1| like the rest, and may be understood in the same sense as that.
19 2, 2| never studied. nor well understood. Thus in our day, that little
20 2, 2| they had never studied nor understood: as also these by the approbation
21 2, 2| cracks, cause to be seen and understood in confusion.~He sees Amphitrite,
22 2, 2| after it.~CES. I have well understood all that you have said,
23 2, 3| for, meditated upon and understood, by whosoever will and can.
24 2, 4| immediate vision, so called and understood by us, does not do away
|