Book, Chapter
1 5, IX | which my misdeeds deserved, measured by the truth of thy rule?
2 10, XVI | what does not exist can be measured? Therefore, while time is
3 10, XVI | it can be perceived and measured; but when it is past, it
4 10, XXI | has no extension? It is measured while it passes, but when
5 10, XXI | it has passed it is not measured; for then there is nothing
6 10, XXI | is nothing that could be measured. But whence, and how, and
7 10, XXI | it pass while it is being measured? Whence, but from the future?
8 10, XXI | not yet exist cannot be measured. Or, is it in the present,
9 10, XXV | is not long except when measured by the duration of time.
10 10, XXVI | length of a long syllable is measured by the length of a short
11 10, XXVII| sounded, and could not be measured because it was not yet;
12 10, XXVII| yet; and now it cannot be measured because it is no longer.
13 10, XXVII| sounding, it might have been measured because then there was something
14 10, XXVII| something that could be measured. But even then it did not
15 10, XXVII| account, be any more readily measured? For while it was passing
16 10, XXVII| time in which it might be measured, since the present has no
17 10, XXVII| that it might have been measured - then also suppose that
18 10, XXVII| anything there that can be measured. Let us measure it exactly;
19 10, XXVII| is sounding, it cannot be measured except from the instant
20 10, XXVII| not yet ended cannot be measured, so that one could say how
21 10, XXVII| How, therefore, may it be measured? And yet we measure times;
22 11, VIII | The periods of time are measured by the changes of things,
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