Book
1 1 | venture to think himself a better man. He had also the art
2 2 | things~which make us neither better nor worse. Therefore they
3 3 | findest in human life anything better than justice, truth,~temperance,
4 3 | and, in a word, anything better than thy own~mind's self-satisfaction
5 3 | say, thou seest anything better~than this, turn to it with
6 3 | if nothing appears to be better than~the deity which is
7 3 | adapt~themselves to the better things in a small degree,
8 3 | simply~and freely choose the better, and hold to it.- But that
9 3 | that which is~useful is the better.- Well then, if it is useful
10 4 | Neither~worse then nor better is a thing made by being
11 4 | consider if it would not be better to say,~Do what is necessary,
12 5 | the same degree he is a better man.~ Such as are thy habitual
13 6 | man showed him~anything better; and how religious he was
14 7 | him who is able to do it better, unless there~be some reason
15 7 | social, nor more modest, nor better disciplined to meet all~
16 9 | at last more simple and better. It is the same whether
17 9 | power. Well, then, is it not better to use what is in thy power~
18 10| them kill him. For~that is better than to live thus as men
19 10| case, a man~becomes both better, if one may say so, and
20 12| thou hast in thee something better and more~divine than the
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