Part
1 Intro| author himself knew. For in philosophy as in prophecy glimpses
2 Intro| old quarrel of poetry and philosophy’ has at least a superficial
3 Intro| the practice of virtue and philosophy—meet in one, then the lovers
4 Intro| it, and vestiges of old philosophy so curiously blend with
5 Intro| a mythic personage whom philosophy, borrowing from poetry,
6 Intro| penetrating the inmost secret of philosophy. The highest love is the
7 Intro| philosopher, who says that ‘philosophy is home sickness.’ When
8 Intro| serious problem of Greek philosophy (compare Arist. Nic. Ethics).
9 Intro| and Socrates poetry and philosophy blend together. The speech
10 Intro| as motives to virtue and philosophy is at variance with modern
11 Intro| coloured with a tinge of philosophy. They furnish the material
12 Intro| love is another aspect of philosophy. The same want in the human
13 Intro| length. In both of them philosophy is regarded as a sort of
14 Intro| revelry, which, like his philosophy, he characteristically pretends
15 Intro| Symposium. For there, too, philosophy might be described as ‘dying
16 Text | to hear others speak of philosophy always gives me the greatest
17 Text | the evil repute in which philosophy and gymnastics are held,
18 Text | many strange things, which philosophy would bitterly censure if
19 Text | the other the practice of philosophy and virtue in general, ought
20 Text | money-making or gymnastics or philosophy, are not called lovers—the
21 Text | serpent’s tooth, the pang of philosophy, which will make a man say
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