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  1     Pre              |        untrustworthiness of Goerenz's learning Madvig's pages
  2     Pre              |           Goerenz's learning Madvig's pages bear strong evidence;
  3     Pre              |      lectures given by me at Christ's College several years ago.
  4     Pre              |       information concerning Cicero's philosophical views and
  5     Pre              |            in the edition of Cicero's philosophical works published
  6     Pre              |            a continuation of Orelli's second edition of Cicero'
  7     Pre              |            second edition of Cicero's works, which was interrupted
  8     Pre              |         however allowed one of Halm's readings to pass without
  9     Pre              |             the chief are to Madvig's little book entitled Emendationes
 10     Pre              |            reprinted, and to Baiter's text in the edition of Cicero'
 11     Pre              |            in the edition of Cicero's works by himself and Kayser.
 12     Pre              |             bad texts to the author's meaning and to a mastery
 13     Pre              |              Yet, even after Madvig's labours, a great deal remains
 14     Pre              |       English translation of Zeller's Stoics, Epicureans and Sceptics (
 15     Pre              |            These books, with Madvig's De Finibus, all teachers
 16     Pre              |       treated any portion of Cicero's philosophical works with
 17     Pre              |           edited portions of Cicero's writings.~In dealing with
 18     Pre              |    interested in the subject.~JAMES S. REID.~CHRIST'S COLLEGE,
 19     Pre              |      subject.~JAMES S. REID.~CHRIST'S COLLEGE, CAMBRIDGE, December,
 20    Abbr              |             Madvig; M.D.F. = Madvig's edition of the De Finibus;
 21    Abbr              |             P. = Ritter and Preller's Historia Philosophiae ex
 22     Int,       I     |           It would seem that Cicero's love for literature was
 23     Int,       I     |     discipline of the time.2~Cicero's first systematic lessons
 24     Int,       I     |            in praise of his teacher's amiable disposition and
 25     Int,       I     |          became an inmate of Cicero's house, where he died in
 26     Int,       I     |             of his time, and Cicero's feelings towards him were
 27     Int,       I     |            at this period. On Sulla's return to the city after
 28     Int,       I     |         Epicurean school. In Cicero's later works there are several
 29     Int,       I     |             lived some time in Piso's house, was not then at Athens22;
 30     Int,       I     |          Rome, and stayed in Cicero's house. Hecato the Rhodian,
 31     Int,       I     |          were years in which Cicero's private cares overwhelmed
 32     Int,       I     |             enough to employ Cicero's thoughts till the end of
 33     Int,       I     |             of Atticus58.~On Cicero's return to Italy public affairs
 34     Int,       I     |             thinks of Caesar, Plato's description of the tyrant
 35     Int,       I     |     opportunity of defending Cicero's substantial accuracy; of
 36     Int,       I     |            a low estimate of Cicero's philosophical attainments,
 37     Int,      II     |           as they existed in Cicero's age; Stoicism not as Zeno
 38     Int,      II     |           great desideratum. Cicero's statements concerning any
 39     Int,      II     |             in the Academica Cicero's view of the first problem:
 40     Int,      II     |            prudent course74. Cicero's temperament also, apart
 41     Int,      II     |         Stoic dares not stir a foot's breadth away from Chrysippus86.
 42     Int,      II     |         many difficulties in Cicero's philosophical writings.
 43     Int,      II     |        discredited school96.~Cicero's ethics, then, stand quite
 44     Int,      II     |             Academy. This is Cicero's general feeling with regard
 45     Int,      II     |            lies. To the former Zeno's dialectic was true and Socratic,
 46     Int,      II     |            importance was in Cicero's time attached to this branch
 47     Int,      II     |         religious element in Cicero's nature inclined him very
 48     Int,      II     |        denied109. It went to Cicero's heart that Carneades should
 49     Int,      II     |        order to characterize Cicero's estimate of the Peripatetic
 50     Int,      II(111)|                               Grote's Aristotle, vol. I. ch. 11.~
 51     Int,     III     | misconception, not merely of Cicero's purpose in writing, but
 52     Int,     III     |             is of any value, Cicero's works are of equal value,
 53     Int,     III     |          reception, that, in Cicero's strong language, they took
 54     Int,     III     |    Consolatione, founded on Crantor's book, περι πενθους, and
 55     Int,      IV     |        immediately following Tullia's death entertained an aversion
 56     Int,      IV(149)|                         Über Cicero's Akademika, p. 4.~
 57     Int,      IV     |        stands in the way of Krische's conjecture, except the doubt
 58     Int,      IV     |             dissatisfied with Varro's failure to fulfil his promise.
 59     Int,      IV     |            first few days of Cicero's stay at Arpinum, so he employed
 60     Int,      IV     |          Cicero, then, feared Varro's temper, and perhaps his
 61     Int,      IV     |           the dedication187.~Cicero's own judgment about the completed
 62     Int,      IV     |          had already got into Varro's hands, as we learn from
 63     Int,      IV     |             as gathered from Cicero's letters to Atticus. That
 64     Int,      IV     |          brilliant period of Cicero's life, Catulus was one of
 65     Int,      IV     |         death221.~Apart from Cicero's general agreement with Catulus
 66     Int,      IV     |           wrote in honour of Cicero's consulship, lived in the
 67     Int,      IV     |             our knowledge of Cicero's habit in such matters, we
 68     Int,      IV     |       lustre on the younger. Cicero's glorious consulship was
 69     Int,      IV     |            he had written in Cicero's honour. Then the occasion
 70     Int,      IV     |          and 63, the year of Cicero's consulship, which is alluded
 71     Int,      IV     |          which would fall to Cicero's share, a proposal was made
 72     Int,      IV     |          offered to give his father's views, at the same time
 73     Int,      IV     |          time commending his father's knowledge of philosophy.
 74     Int,      IV     |    introduced by a mention of Philo's books249. Some considerable
 75     Int,      IV     |          educated man to be. Cicero's materials for the speech
 76     Int,      IV     |            Lucullus266. That Cicero's criticism of the dogmatic
 77     Int,      IV     |             by him in the first day's discourse were really out
 78     Int,      IV     |        considerable space in Cicero's speech, although foreign
 79     Int,      IV     |           of the day before. Cicero's argument in the Catulus
 80     Int,      IV     |            as the defender of Philo's reactionary doctrines273.
 81     Int,      IV     |            he merely attaches Philo's name to those general New
 82     Int,      IV     |            chief sources for Cicero's speech in the Catulus were,
 83     Int,      IV     |       actively employing the author's mind at Astura. His intention
 84     Int,      IV     |          Lucullus is told in Cicero's dialogue, and the passages
 85     Int,      IV     |          same may be said of Cicero's answer.~In the intermediate
 86     Int,      IV     |            villa at Bauli291. Varro's villa, at which the scene
 87     Int,      IV     |          Between the date of Tullia's death and the writing of
 88     Int,      IV     |             the main facts of Varro's life the student must be
 89     Int,      IV     |           of Varro in any of Cicero's writings is in itself sufficient
 90     Int,      IV     |         refused to believe in Varro's zeal, as reported by Atticus299.
 91     Int,      IV     |            by Atticus299. On Cicero's return from exile, he and
 92     Int,      IV     |            of having mistaken Varro's philosophical views. This
 93     Int,      IV     |             ed. 1. Book IV.: Cicero's answer, substantially the
 94     Not,       1     |              Varrone: from M. Varro's house news came. Audissemus:
 95     Not,       1     |            for eum (Baiter and Halm's ed. of 1861, p. 854). The
 96     Not,       1     |         word eum is quite in Cicero's style (see my note on 25
 97     Not,       1     |             eum for enim (exc. Halm's G). Such a combination of
 98     Not,       1     |          again all MSS. except Halm's G. have eum for enim. Christ
 99     Not,       1     |             in 4. Tecum simul: Halm's G om. tecum; but cf. De
100     Not,       1     |    literature." Ea res: one of Halm's MSS. followed by Baiter
101     Not,       1     |    miserable gloss; Schutz, Goerenz's echo expels the words. Yet
102     Not,       1     |       believe, be far nearer Cicero's real writing. Though I do
103     Not,       1     |        dicendi nec disserendi: Cic.'s constant mode of denoting
104     Not,       1     |            is not thus used in Cic.'s phil. works. Utramque vim
105     Not,       1     |             Baiter (esp. after Halm's note) should take Manutius'
106     Not,       1     |              Quam quibusnam: Durand's em. for quoniam quibusnam
107     Not,       1     |            of interrogation is Halm's; thus the whole sentence,
108     Not,       1     |            T.D. III. 41, where Cic.'s Latin agrees very closely
109     Not,       1     |            is a departure from Cic.'s rule which is to write sive—
110     Not,       1     |     Considerable fragments of Varro's Menippean Satires remain,
111     Not,       1     |           Att. XIII. 48 where Varro's are mentioned. †Philosophe
112     Not,       1     |             can scarcely think Halm's philosophe to be right,
113     Not,       1     |         quotes with approval Durand's remark, "deducimus honoris
114     Not,       1     |         have reducere, where Durand's rule requires deducere,
115     Not,       1     |          Dei VI. 3) describes Varro's "Libri Antiquitatum" (referred
116     Not,       1     |            De Off. I. 74. Augustine's reading publicam shows him
117     Not,       1     |          reads rebus from 26. Varro's researches into the Latin
118     Not,       1     |       Multis locis incohasti: Varro's book "De Philosophia" had
119     Not,       1     |       Graecia desideret so all Halm's MSS., except G, which has
120     Not,       1     |             of Halm, in Schneidewin's Philologus XXIV. 483, approves
121     Not,       1     |          note on II. 77, for Cicero's supposed conversion see
122     Not,       1     |        together and illustrate Cic.'s love for small diversities
123     Not,       1     |          Philonis merely, exc. Halm's V., which gives Philonem,
124     Not,       1     |           of bona in 19, 22. Madvig's Philonia is improbable from
125     Not,       1     |      probably only exist in Goerenz's note, is wild, and cannot
126     Not,       1     |        Orelliwho speaks of Goerenz's "praestantissima recensio,"
127     Not,       1     |           it two years after Madvig's crushing exposure in his
128     Not,       1     |           in similar places in Cic.'s dialogues cf. De Div. II.
129     Not,       1     |     Philosophy. First part of Varro's Exposition, 1518. Summary.
130     Not,       1     |           the popular one in Cicero's time, cf. II. 123, T.D.
131     Not,       1     |          should read Schleiermacher's Essay on the Worth of Socrates
132     Not,       1     |           by Thirlwall), and Zeller's Socrates and the Socratic
133     Not,       1     |          from his view of Aristotle's evidence], also Schwegler'
134     Not,       1     |           evidence], also Schwegler's Handbook, so far as it relates
135     Not,       1     |        reprinted in Baiter and Halm's edition, of Cic.'s philosophical
136     Not,       1     |             Halm's edition, of Cic.'s philosophical works (1861),
137     Not,       1     |     Aristotle often speaks of Plato's dialogues as though they
138     Not,       1     |       distinctly untrue; see Zeller's Socrates 88, with footnote.~§
139     Not,       1     |         been first broken by Polemo's pupils; so Varro says (from
140     Not,       1     |         ceased. Krische Uber Cicero's Akademika p. 51, has some
141     Not,       1     |              does not observe Varro's distinction (De L. L. IX.
142     Not,       1     |            him (cf. Baiter and Halm's ed., Ac. II. 11, 13 with
143     Not,       1     |            ubertate: cf. Quintilian's "illa Livii lactea ubertas."
144     Not,       1     |         before these words all Halm's MSS., exc G, insert disserendi,
145     Not,       1     |           were one of them; in Cic.'s letters to him the words "
146     Not,       1     |            1923. Part II. of Varro's Exposition: Antiochus' Ethics.
147     Not,       1     |         attributed to him in Cicero's time, so by Varro himself (
148     Not,       1     |           XIX. 3. The root of Plato's system is the ιδεα of the
149     Not,       1     |           which will disprove Klotz's remark "imprimit lingua
150     Not,       1     |            is practically Aristotle's, who severs αρεται into
151     Not,       1     |           IV. 35, V. 38, and Madvig's note on D.F. II. 88. Faber
152     Not,       1     |          cernitur and in, exc. Halm's G which has in before animi
153     Not,       1     |            so by the writer of Halm's G, which has appellantur.
154     Not,       1     |           φυσιν in Latin see Madvig's Fourth Excursus to the D.F.,
155     Not,       1     |           which the student of Cic.'s philosophy ought to know
156     Not,       1     |             φυσει is one of Goerenz's numerous forgeries. The
157     Not,       1     |     Antiochus. At all events, Varro's report (Aug. De Civ. Dei
158     Not,       1     |              3) coincides with Cic.'s in every particular. Even
159     Not,       1     |            2429. Part III of Varro's Exposition. Antiochus' Physics.
160     Not,       1     |          clearest view of Aristotle's doctrine is to be got from
161     Not,       1     |             5 is very similar. Cic.'s words make it clear that
162     Not,       1     |           student should read Grote's comments on the passages
163     Not,       1     |            difference between Plato'sυλη and that of Aristotle.
164     Not,       1     |         should at least learn Plato's opinions from Tim. 35 A
165     Not,       1     |    especially from M. Saint Hilaire's explanation of the Physica.~§
166     Not,       1     |           the end of Bait. and Halm's ed.) all come ultimately
167     Not,       1     |            advantage read Aristotle's Physica II. ch. 46, with
168     Not,       1     |            6, with M. Saint Hilaire's explanation, for the views
169     Not,       1     |           ch. 89 for αναγκη. Plato's doctrine of αναγκη, which
170     Not,       1     |            Timaeus p. 47, 48, Grote's Plato, III. 24959.~§§30—
171     Not,       1     |            3032. Part iv. of Varro's Exposition: Antiochus' Ethics.
172     Not,       1     |   disserendo: an instance of Cicero's fondness for tautology,
173     Not,       1     |          esset: probably from Plato's Tim. 35 A thus translated
174     Not,       1     |            difference between Plato's ιδεαι and Aristotle's τα
175     Not,       1     |         Plato's ιδεαι and Aristotle's τα καθαλου would naturally
176     Not,       1     |          must not be laid at Cicero's door, for Antiochus in reconciling
177     Not,       1     |           own dialectics with Plato's must have been driven to
178     Not,       1     |            desperate shifts. Cicero's very knowledge of Plato
179     Not,       1     |        would have glided over Plato's opinions with a much more
180     Not,       1     |    Antiochus' real view with Cicero's reminiscences of the Theaetetus
181     Not,       1     |             Lucullus passim. Christ's conj. percipi, quod perceptio
182     Not,       1     |          Simplicius quoted in Grote's Plato, I. p. 37, about Heraclitus,
183     Not,       1     |          rest have. Notio is Cicero's regular translation for
184     Not,       1     |           of the whole of Aristotle's philosophy. Verborum explicatio:
185     Not,       1     |            however is not Aristotle's). The word ετυμολογια is
186     Not,       1     |             as rerum notae. Berkley's nodis for notis has no support, (
187     Not,       1     |             Halm improves on Madvig's ita for in qua of the MSS.,
188     Not,       1     |          cannot be defended. Orelli's reference to 30 pars for
189     Not,       1     |           is violent, while Goerenz's resort to partem rerum opinabilem
190     Not,       1     |        parte: a trans. of Aristotle's αντιστροφος in the beginning
191     Not,       1     |          simply a variation of Cic.'s favourite double genitive (
192     Not,       1     |             3342. Part v. of Varro's exposition: the departures
193     Not,       1     |             and De Leg. I. 38. Halm's odd em. dissupationes, so
194     Not,       1     |             reviewer in Schneidewin's Philologus, needs support,
195     Not,       1     |         Aristoteles, supposes Varro's speech to begin here. To
196     Not,       1     |            this the copyist of Halm's G. alone, and evidently
197     Not,       1     |              which H. adopts. Varro's resumption of his exposition
198     Not,       1     |             relation in which Plato's ιδεαι stand to his notion
199     Not,       1     |       Polemo was merely one of Zeno's many teachers (Diog. VII.
200     Not,       1     |           intellectual side of Zeno's nature. The very expression
201     Not,       1     |             quaecunque. Cf. Goerenz's statement "negari omnino
202     Not,       1     |         illud reperiri" with Madvig's utter refutation in the
203     Not,       1     |        anything be said for Goerenz's plan, who distorts the Stoic
204     Not,       1     |             in order to save Cicero's consistency. On the other
205     Not,       1     |          ληπτα. This view of Madvig's is strongly opposed to the
206     Not,       1     |           said coerceri, the writer's thoughts having drifted
207     Not,       1     |           Now I contend that Cicero's words minoris aestimanda
208     Not,       1     |             perfectae are Aristotle's ηθικαι αρεται. Trans. "but
209     Not,       1     |            description of Aristotle's finis in D.F. II. 19. Ipsum
210     Not,       1     |           same volume in which Halm's text of the Acad. appears,
211     Not,       1     |            this out to be Aristotle's opinion. The error once
212     Not,       1     |            the absence of Aristotle's works, to conclude that
213     Not,       1     |           the recovery of Aristotle's lost works, which did not
214     Not,       1     |              Heraclitus," and Grote's Plato I. 34 sq. Expers corporis:
215     Not,       1     |            comprehensibile. Goerenz's note on these words is worth
216     Not,       1     |            of all proof. (See Grote's Essay on the Origin of Knowledge,
217     Not,       1     |    Knowledge, first printed in Bain's Mental and Moral Science,
218     Not,       1     |           now re-published in Grote's Aristotle.) Zeno's εννοιαι
219     Not,       1     |            Grote's Aristotle.) Zeno's εννοιαι were all this and
220     Not,       1     |            taken place during Varro's exposition, and for which
221     Not,       1     |           II. 134.~§§43end. Cicero's historical justification
222     Not,       1     |           see R. and P. 50. Goerenz's note here is an extraordinary
223     Not,       1     |       πολυδοξος. Exposuisti: Durand's necessary em., approved
224     Not,       2     |        imitated that part of Cicero's exposition to which this
225     Not,       2     |           plumb line, norma a mason's square, the word being probably
226     Not,       2     |            the bent oar, the pigeon's neck, the twins, the impressions
227     Not,       2     |            This forms part of Varro's answer to Cicero, which
228     Not,       2     |          was not visible from Varro's villa on the Lucrine.~14.
229     Not,       2     |         parallels to this in Cicero's speech than in that of Lucullus
230     Not,       2     |             Luc. 105, 120, and Cic.'s words in 8 of the same).
231     Not,       2     |           have formed part of Varro's explanation of the καταληψις,
232     Not,       2     |             has corporibus. Krische's opinion that this latter
233     Not,       2     |            incorporated with Cicero's speech in the second book
234     Not,       2     |            this to the end of Varro's speech in the third Book.
235     Not,       2     |             it as belonging to Cic.'s exposition of the positive
236     Not,       2     |            gathered from the bishop's works. In Aug. Contr. Ac.
237     Not,       2     |             These I refer to Cicero's development of the probabile
238     Not,       2     |             D. IV. 23, where Baiter's two texts (1861 and 1863)
239     Not,       2     |      arguing that as Luc. was Sulla's quaestor and Sulla sent
240     Not,       2     |            MS. has qua. Read Madvig's lucid note there. De quibus
241     Not,       2     |           C.F. Hermann (Schneidewin's Philologus VII. 466) introduces
242     Not,       2     |            good critic since Madvig's remarks in Em. 125 has impugned
243     Not,       2     |             Iuv. IV. 130 with Mayor's copious note. Si non fuerint:
244     Not,       2     |            non fuerint: so all Halm's best MSS. Two, however,
245     Not,       2     |       others have labefacta. Orelli's statement (note to his separate
246     Not,       2     |    revocatur: sc. a Cicerone. Philo's only notable pupils had
247     Not,       2     |         change of prep. "from Philo's lips," "from his copy."
248     Not,       2     |        avoid, his rejection of Zeno's definition of the καταληπτικη
249     Not,       2     |           must either maintain Zeno's definition or give in to
250     Not,       2     |       venire is very common in Cic.'s letters. C. Flaminium: the
251     Not,       2     |              16. Veteribus: Bentley's em. of MSS. vetera: C.F.
252     Not,       2     |       information about his teacher's doctrines. Tenuit: cf. the
253     Not,       2     |            the force of an opponent's reasoning. For the application
254     Not,       2     |      Valentia did, p. 290 of Orelli's reprint of his Academica)
255     Not,       2     |          Acad. II. 11 quotes Cicero's definition and condenses
256     Not,       2     |      difficult to see wherein Philo's "lie" consisted. He denied
257     Not,       2     |           from the mention of Philo's ethical works at the outset
258     Not,       2     |            quin cernat: read Madvig's strong remarks on Goerenz'
259     Not,       2     |           strong remarks on Goerenz's note here (D.F. II. 27).
260     Not,       2     |            R. and P. 165 and Zeller's Socrates and the Socratic
261     Not,       2     |            D.F. I. 62 and Wesenberg's fine note on T.D. V. 102.~§
262     Not,       2     |   description of the σοφος in Plato's Gorgias. Potius quam aut:
263     Not,       2     |          262 with I. 270, and Munro's n., also M.D.F. II. 52,
264     Not,       2     |           disposition of the person's mind, and the soundness
265     Not,       2     |     declarantibus. Subtiliter: Cic.'s constant trans. of ακριβως
266     Not,       2     |          Quae est in nostra: Walker's insertion of non before
267     Not,       2     |           obscurare is against Cic.'s usage, that of Christ quam
268     Not,       2     |         οριστοις, and the schoolmen's maxim definitio non debet
269     Not,       2     |              Iuv. III. 78 and Mayor's n. The use of the Greek
270     Not,       2     |            p. 854 of Bait. and Halm's ed of the philosophical
271     Not,       2     |           visi into sibi (cf. Faber's em. novas for bonas in 72).
272     Not,       2     |          requires nos, but all Halm's MSS. except one read vos.
273     Not,       2     |             Petrus Valentia (Orelli's reprint, p. 279), and all
274     Not,       2     |            Or. X. 1, 31, with Mayor's n.) Iuratusque: Bait. possibly
275     Not,       2     |            in reference to Catiline's conspiracy, had become a
276     Not,       2     |        these lines are part of Cic.'s Aratea, and are quoted in
277     Not,       2     |          Valentia (p. 278 of Orelli's reprint) si neque sciri
278     Not,       2     |         Epicureos. Sub Novis: Faber's brilliant em. for the MSS.
279     Not,       2     |             The excellence of Faber's em. may be felt by comparing
280     Not,       2     |            of the school see Zeller's Socrates, for the illustration
281     Not,       2     |             stopping expresses Cic.'s needless approval of Arcesilas'
282     Not,       2     |             a very strange em. Halm's conj. certum esse is weak
283     Not,       2     |             the sense given by Halm's reading. Quererer cum deo:
284     Not,       2     |            In parvo lis sit: Durand's em. for the in parvulis
285     Not,       2     |             a Ciceronian word. Halm's aeque introduces a construction
286     Not,       2     |          repeats it thrice, on Halm's suggestion I have written
287     Not,       2     |             ipsa, according to Cic.'s usage, is nom. and not abl.
288     Not,       2     |    presented to it. He quotes Plato's remarks (in Rep. II.) that
289     Not,       2     |             the ancients; see Grote's essay on the Origin of Knowledge,
290     Not,       2     |         books on logic, cf. Thomson's Laws of Thought, pp 201—
291     Not,       2     |             Minutatim: cf. Heindorf's note on κατα σμικρον in
292     Not,       2     |        spelling was antique in Cic.'s time and only used in connection
293     Not,       2     |        utterly tautological as Cic.'s translation, which merges
294     Not,       2     |              854 of Bait., and Hahn's ed. of the philosophical
295     Not,       2     |           basis for action. Hermann's neu cui labours under the
296     Not,       2     |           being surprised at Cicero's acceptance. I have already
297     Not,       2     |          have here a trace of Philo's teaching, as distinct from
298     Not,       2     |        carentem, though I feel Halm's remark that a verb is wanted
299     Not,       2     |            lectio" of three of Halm's MSS. Before Halm sapientemne
300     Not,       2     |            P., Schwegler, and Grote's Plato Vol. I. A more complete
301     Not,       2     |             of Cic. about Aristotle's style. Grote, Aristot. Vol
302     Not,       2     |            recently to Prof. Huxley's speculations on protoplasm;
303     Not,       2     |            go in estimating the sun's size, i.e. twice the apparent
304     Not,       2     |           21. Tres partis: in Plato's Republic. Ignis: Zeno's
305     Not,       2     |             s Republic. Ignis: Zeno's opinion, T.D. I. 19. Animam:
306     Not,       2     |              but one good one (Halm's E) has assentientes. I venture
307     Not,       2     |         under the attraction of the s following, passed into adsentiens,
308     Not,       2     |          follow dicantur, on Orelli's suggestion. When several
309     Not,       2     |         more than man (of Aristotle's η θεος η θηριον), if he
310     Not,       2     |        possess: see Bait., and Halm's ed. of the Phil. works (
311     Not,       2     |             and Bait. follow Christ's conj. verenti, removing
312     Not,       2     |            on the subject in Madvig's fourth Excursus to the D.F.
313     Not,       2     |       writers. Labor eo: cf. Horace's nunc in Aristippi furtim
314     Not,       2     |        criticism is applied to Zeno's finis in D.F. IV. 17, 25.
315     Not,       2     |           would most repel. Hermann's spinosissimi is ingenious,
316     Not,       2     |             given because of Cicero's fondness for making the
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