Book,  Par.

1    VI,      7|     the greatest teacher of philosophy that, could the minds of
2  XIII,     53| kind of wisdom or maxims of philosophy had Seneca within four years
3   XIV,     23| banquets on the teachers of philosophy, for he enjoyed the wrangles
4   XIV,     73|     the Stoics along with a philosophy, which makes men restless,
5   XIV,     77|    and that two teachers of philosophy, Coeranus from Greece and
6    XV,     79|  again, "are your maxims of philosophy, or the preparation of so
7    XV,     93|   Rufus by the teachings of philosophy. Cluvidienus Quietus, Julius
8   XVI,     39|    a professor of the Cynic philosophy. With him, as might be inferred
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