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  1     Pre         |           have never however allowed one of Halm's readings to pass
  2     Int,       I|                He seems to have been one of the most accomplished [
  3     Int,       I|       Academic school, came to Rome, one of a number of eminent Greeks
  4     Int,       I|           pleader in the courts, the one philosophic orator of Rome,
  5     Int,       I|           professed Peripatetic, was one of his companions in this
  6     Int,       I|               formed while at Rhodes one friendship which largely
  7     Int,       I|           single exception of Varro. One of his letters to Atticus38
  8     Int,       I|              especially mentioned as one of the authors [xi] read
  9     Int,       I|             speaks with loathing. In one letter of this date he carefully
 10     Int,       I|            attainments, but there is one piece of unfairness which
 11     Int,      II|      knowledge is impossible was the one Academic tenet against which
 12     Int,      II|              and irrefragable truth. One requisite of a philosophy
 13     Int,      II|           ought to lead men to teach one another with all gentleness
 14     Int,      II|           will or no, merely because one of their predecessors has
 15     Int,      II|             writings. I may instance one passage in the beginning
 16     Int,      II|          even his teacher Antiochus. One great question which divided
 17     Int,      II|              doctrine that virtue is one and indivisible104. These
 18     Int,      II|              Stoic ethics was merely one of terms; in the Tusculan
 19     Int,      II|         sceptic by the plea that his one aim was to arouse men to
 20     Int,     III|             or clear view of it. Any one who attempts to reconcile
 21     Int,     III|            claims. There is scarcely one of his works (if we except
 22     Int,     III|             if we omit Carneades, no one had propounded anything
 23     Int,     III|    philosophy: there had been simply one eclectic combination after
 24     Int,     III|          last cause, as indeed he in one passage seems to allow,
 25     Int,     III|           the law-courts, it was the one service he could render123.
 26     Int,      IV|    circumstances there should be but one direct reference to the
 27     Int,      IV|     prooemium of the Lucullus is the one which was then affixed.
 28     Int,      IV|            by Cicero at Tusculum was one from Varro166.~On the 23rd
 29     Int,      IV|            quite an [xxxix] inferior one, but he was so pleased with
 30     Int,      IV|            in some later letters. In one Cicero said: "I am in favour
 31     Int,      IV|    circulation until they could meet one another in Rome193. This
 32     Int,      IV|           his authorised edition the one in four books. He did so
 33     Int,      IV|            the second edition is the one which is most frequently
 34     Int,      IV|           Cicero's life, Catulus was one of the foremost Optimates
 35     Int,      IV|              by the orator214. He is one of the pillars of the state215,
 36     Int,      IV|               the people answer with one [xlvi] voice "On you217."
 37     Int,      IV|           rebuke the follies, on the one hand, of the mob, on the
 38     Int,      IV|              enthusiasm. Catulus was one of the viri consulares who
 39     Int,      IV|           have taken place, although one passage in the Lucullus
 40     Int,      IV|             years of Catulus, and no one at all conversant with Greek
 41     Int,      IV|          Catulus, and the succeeding one of Hortensius. In the prooemium
 42     Int,      IV|              the Carneadean πιθανον. One important opinion maintained
 43     Int,      IV|            the Academica Posteriora. One main reason in favour of
 44     Int,      IV|     appropriate only in the mouth of one [liii] who was answering
 45     Int,      IV|         examination in the Lucullus.~One question remains: how far
 46     Int,      IV|          book, while in the last but one the De Finibus, the De Natura
 47     Int,      IV|           constitution of the first. One other thing is worth remark.
 48     Not,       1|         Varro putting the request on one side charges Cic. with deserting
 49     Not,       1|              of literature." Ea res: one of Halm's MSS. followed
 50     Not,       1|           But the genitive is merely one of definition, the causae
 51     Not,       1|              a rapid transition from one subject to another (here
 52     Not,       1|              like the Gk. επει, only one parallel instance, however,
 53     Not,       1|           musicam etc. scribere. The one passage formerly quoted
 54     Not,       1|              divided into two parts, one treating of res humanae,
 55     Not,       1|              Nesciunt: Halm with his one MS. G, which is the work
 56     Not,       1|             had no fixed tenets, his one doctrine being that wisdom
 57     Not,       1|             essential agreement with one anotherthe Peripatetic
 58     Not,       1|            Socrates, was the popular one in Cicero's time, cf. II.
 59     Not,       1|              Dubitationem: Halm with one MS., G, gives dubitantem,
 60     Not,       1|             speaks as though he were one of them; in Cic.'s letters
 61     Not,       1|              me before this from his one MS. G, evidently emended
 62     Not,       1|              two last divisions into one in Aug. De Civ. Dei XIX
 63     Not,       1|             See also De Off. I. 133. One old ed. has pressionem,
 64     Not,       1|             for τα πρωτα τη φυσει is one of Goerenz's numerous forgeries.
 65     Not,       1|        αυταρκες προς ευδαιμονιαν was one of the most important to
 66     Not,       1|      Descriptione naturae: Halm with one MS. (G) gives praescriptione,
 67     Not,       1|            ποιον, hence Arist. calls one of his categories το ποιον
 68     Not,       1|            necessitas is assigned as one cause of it (159) just as
 69     Not,       1|     syntactically connected, by just one small word, e.g. Lael. 53
 70     Not,       1|             two of these properties, one active and one passive,
 71     Not,       1|           properties, one active and one passive, to each of the
 72     Not,       1|               The Stoics assign only one property to each element;
 73     Not,       1|      Dissimile ... quoddam: so MSS.; one would expect quiddam, which
 74     Not,       1|              thoroughly the orthodox one that the Atom was scouted
 75     Not,       1|             the old αντιφασις of the One and the Many, denied παν
 76     Not,       1|        section is undilutedly Stoic, one can only marvel how Antiochus
 77     Not,       1|             etc.: there is more than one difficulty here. The words
 78     Not,       1|                this strongly reminds one of the Theaetetus, esp.
 79     Not,       1|             IV. 810. Notionibus: so one MS. for motionibus which
 80     Not,       1|            with Plato and Aristotle (one might almost add, with moderns
 81     Not,       1|             as it can be made to any one who has not a knowledge
 82     Not,       1|              62 is quite different). One more remark, and I conclude
 83     Not,       1|           which διαλεκτικη is really one subdivision with the Stoics
 84     Not,       1|              ancient authorities the one aim ofρητορικη.~§§3342.
 85     Not,       1|            does not receive from the one passage Halm quotes, De
 86     Not,       1|              et merito, which begins one of Propertius' elegies.
 87     Not,       1|          true, for Polemo was merely one of Zeno's many teachers (
 88     Not,       1|          mala, and this question was one of the great battle grounds
 89     Not,       1|             so utterly misunderstand one of the cardinal and best
 90     Not,       1|              the nature of man to be one and indivisible and to consist
 91     Not,       1|           Virtue also became for him one and indivisible (Zeller
 92     Not,       1|              civil war carried on in one and the same country. Virtutis
 93     Not,       1|              The error once made, no one could correct it, for there
 94     Not,       1|         taken great hold on his mind One from the Phaedrus 245 C
 95     Not,       1|          placed his πεμπτον σωμα Any one who will compare T.D. I.
 96     Not,       1|           made no difference, except one of degree, between αιθηρ
 97     Not,       1|            anything be a compound of one thing? The notion that iunctos
 98     Not,       1|              can know thoroughly any one thing. This will appear
 99     Not,       1|                He even abandoned the one tenet held by Socrates to
100     Not,       2|          pass different judgments on one and the same odour. The
101     Not,       2| impossibility of distinguishing eggs one from another, which had
102     Not,       2|              whole four books formed one discussion, finished within
103     Not,       2|      aequitate, quam ostendis, where one MS. has qua. Read Madvig'
104     Not,       2|                Panactius'. Auctorem: one would think this simple
105     Not,       2|             between dicere and quae, one of the best however has
106     Not,       2|      emendata maxime I. 13. Diffisi: one of the best MSS. has diffissi,
107     Not,       2|              diffissi, which reminds one of the spelling divisssiones,
108     Not,       2|          xystus was a colonnade with one side open to the sea, called
109     Not,       2|         Tertinius is found on Inscr. One good MS. has Tretilius,
110     Not,       2|          with these two words. In 11 one of the earliest editions
111     Not,       2|            Trasimene. Aliquot annis: one good MS. has annos, cf.
112     Not,       2|              not delitesceret, which one good MS. has here, see Corssen
113     Not,       2|             omitted by the MSS., but one has agnosceret on the margin;
114     Not,       2|           The difference here is not one between order and no order,
115     Not,       2|            supposed philosopher with one Agnon just mentioned in
116     Not,       2|             even confidence in their one dogma (29).~§19. Sensibus:
117     Not,       2|       αισθησις means two things, (1) one of the five senses, (2)
118     Not,       2|           rise to a definition. This one often appears in Sextus:
119     Not,       2|              passes rapidly from the one use to the other; cf. I.
120     Not,       2|         former (32). Now they on the one hand profess to distinguish
121     Not,       2|       περισπαν, περιελκειν) from the one which is the immediate object
122     Not,       2|        sensations with the principal one. Circumstances quite external
123     Not,       2|              that the person who has one of the sensations cannot
124     Not,       2|     definition is applicable only to one thing, that thing must be
125     Not,       2|           things may be mistaken the one for the other? (47). Further,
126     Not,       2|            the same effect as a real one. The dogmatists say they
127     Not,       2|          false, (1) it may come from one really existent thing, but
128     Not,       2|           sensations are merged into one, but merely that when one
129     Not,       2|            one, but merely that when one of them is present, it cannot
130     Not,       2|              were distinguished from one another by their friends,
131     Not,       2|             to distinguish eggs from one another or not. Another
132     Not,       2|             took two twins, and made one deposit money with Aristo,
133     Not,       2|          guard against mistaking the one for the other, the sceptics
134     Not,       2|        φαντασιων supplies Sext. with one of the sceptic τροποι, see
135     Not,       2|           but all Halm's MSS. except one read vos. Non internoscere:
136     Not,       2|             Orelli have potest, with one MS. Quasi: the em. of Madv.
137     Not,       2|               In animos: Orelli with one MS. reads animis; if the
138     Not,       2|              nihil.~§69. Non acrius: one of the early editions omits
139     Not,       2|         above mentioned is an absurd one to foist upon Plato. The
140     Not,       2|            which prove my point only one is disputed viz. that every
141     Not,       2|              by side with it a false one indistinguishable from it (
142     Not,       2|            exist and that is enough. One mistaken sensation will
143     Not,       2|    improbable. Importune: this is in one good MS. but the rest have
144     Not,       2|             the view was a favourite one with Cic., see Ad Att. I.
145     Not,       2|               to omit the verb, with one MS., cf. 15 and I. 13. The
146     Not,       2|      difficulties supply Sextus with one of his τροποι, i.e. ‛ο περι
147     Not,       2|     described thus: A asks B whether one grain makes a heap, B answers "
148     Not,       2|              will be a difference of one grain between heap and no
149     Not,       2|            between heap and no heap. One grain therefore does make
150     Not,       2|    indifferently. Imperceptus, which one would expect, is found in
151     Not,       2|           merges φως andημερα into one word, or that of Zeller (
152     Not,       2|         μονολημματοι (involving only one premise) in Sext. P.H. I.
153     Not,       2|              and present time in the one infinitive mentiri. Eiusdem
154     Not,       2|              ηγουμενον and ληγον; if one is admitted the other follows
155     Not,       2|            Cic. Ludere: this reminds one of the famous controversy
156     Not,       2|          down two divisions of visa, one into those capable of being
157     Not,       2|              Is it possible that any one should read the Academica
158     Not,       2|              two words falling under one accent like sed enim, et
159     Not,       2|              are two kinds of εποχη, one which prevents a man from
160     Not,       2|                 alterum tenere: "the one is his formal dogma, the
161     Not,       2|       sufficient basis for the arts. One strong point of yours is
162     Not,       2|          D.F. I. 20, Diog. X. 18, as one of the chief friends of
163     Not,       2|             the doctrine as a living one, not throwing it back to
164     Not,       2|      expression idem etiam is Latin. One good MS. here has atque
165     Not,       2|                116) Let us see which one of actual physical systems
166     Not,       2|         select (117). He must choose one teacher from among the conflicting
167     Not,       2|           the absurdity of attaching one and the same degree of certainty
168     Not,       2|           homogeneous throughout, no one thing could be more or less
169     Not,       2|             deity" who was of course one in the Stoic system. Ether
170     Not,       2|            fire, and πυρ τεχνικον is one of the definitions of the
171     Not,       2|             I gravitate then towards one of them, that of pleasure.
172     Not,       2|          either Erillum or et illum, one would expect ut Herilli.
173     Not,       2|         different way. Pyrrho autem: one would expect Pyrrhoni as
174     Not,       2|       generally have assentiens, but one good one (Halm's E) has
175     Not,       2|             assentiens, but one good one (Halm's E) has assentientes.
176     Not,       2|         together the MSS. often omit one. Dicebas: in 27. Incognito:
177     Not,       2|            Madv. in his Em., not the one he gives (after Davies)
178     Not,       2|       schools here given compare the one Sextus gives in A.M. VII.
179     Not,       2|          takes, and after him Bait.; one good MS. has adverterat.
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