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Alphabetical [« »] which 607 while 73 white 1 who 156 whole 54 wholly 2 whom 25 | Frequency [« »] 171 quid 165 autem 161 would 156 who 153 id 152 etiam 150 t | Marcus Tullius Cicero Academica Concordances who |
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1 Ded | TO~THOSE OF HIS PUPILS~WHO HAVE READ WITH HIM~THE ACADEMICA,~ 2 Pre | be complete for a reader who is studying that subject 3 Pre | place in the hands of pupils who are studying a philosophical 4 Pre | errors and omissions from any who are interested in the subject.~ 5 Int, I| inherited from his father, who, being of infirm health, 6 Int, I| life a friend of Cicero, who speaks warmly in praise 7 Int, I| became acquainted with Patro, who succeeded Zeno of Sidon 8 Int, I| till the death of Diodotus, who, according to a fashion 9 Int, I| number of eminent Greeks who fled from Athens on the 10 Int, I| philosophers of the age, who represented the three most 11 Int, I| the freedman Chrysogonus, who was implicated in the case 12 Int, I| and along with Atticus who loved him beyond all other 13 Int, I| these Staseas of Naples, who lived some time in Piso' 14 Int, I| with his many Roman friends who had a bent towards philosophy, 15 Int, I| well as with the Greeks who from time to time came to 16 Int, I| Epicurean friend of Atticus, who was then with Patro at Athens. 17 Int, I| acquaintance of Cratippus, who afterwards taught at Athens 18 Int, I| boys Marcus and Quintus, who accompanied him, and they 19 Int, I| the example of Socrates, who refused to leave Athens 20 Int, I| the politician. Scholars who have learned to despise 21 Int, I| the illustrious Mommsen, who speaks of the De Legibus 22 Int, II| recognised as genuine by those who were at the head of the 23 Int, II| Academy and Aristotle80. Those who demand a dogmatic statement 24 Int, II| plebeian93. The philosopher who best preserved the Socratic 25 Int, II| and Peripatetic writers, who, in the rough popular view 26 Int, II| General readers, therefore, who considered ethical resemblance 27 Int, II| silent97. Again, Antiochus, who in the dialectical dialogue 28 Int, II| authority for them105. Zeno, who is merely an ignoble craftsman 29 Int, II| caught it from Antiochus who, in stealing the doctrines 30 Int, II| emotion was sinful; Cicero, who was very human in his joys 31 Int, III| clear view of it. Any one who attempts to reconcile the 32 Int, III| a sealed study to those who did not know Greek. It was 33 Int, III| large number of imitators, who obtained such a favourable 34 Int, III| Italian peoples117. To those who objected that philosophy 35 Int, III| There were plenty of Romans who were ready to condemn such 36 Int, III| judged a failure. Those who contrive to pronounce this 37 Int, IV| which Carneades accompanied; who was at that time the leader 38 Int, IV| of the Epicurean school; who were then the most noted 39 Int, IV| was then affixed. Atticus, who visited Cicero at Tusculum, 40 Int, IV| maintained through Atticus, who was at all times anxious 41 Int, IV| Academica would just suit Varro, who was a follower of Antiochus, 42 Int, IV| let us desert to Brutus, who is also a follower of Antiochus. 43 Int, IV| one of the viri consulares who had given their unreserved 44 Int, IV| colleague Antonius224. Archias, who wrote in honour of Cicero' 45 Int, IV| distinctly aimed at Cicero, who must have represented it 46 Int, IV| followed by Hortensius, who in some way spoke in favour 47 Int, IV| the mouth of one [liii] who was answering a speech already 48 Int, IV| those ancient philosophers who preceded Plato. Lucullus, 49 Int, IV| as a rebel in philosophy, who appeals to great and ancient 50 Int, IV| order to disarm Lucullus, who was to speak next268. Yet 51 Int, IV| cultivated man might sustain who had not definitely committed 52 Int, IV| surprise of Hortensius, who is but a learner in philosophy, 53 Int, IV| accuracy from Augustine, who quotes considerably from, 54 Int, IV| its currency to Müller, who, from Stoic phrases in the 55 Not, 1| speaker use iste of a person who is present. Goer. qu. Brut. 56 Not, 1| vulgate reading down to Halm, who reads idque, after Christ. 57 Not, 1| ipsa ... cogitavi: Goer., who half a page back had made 58 Not, 1| ειτινες merely means "all who," for a strong instance 59 Not, 1| Appellat: i.e. Amafinius, who first so translated ατομος. 60 Not, 1| the lacuna left by Halm, who supposes much more to have 61 Not, 1| taken by Baiter and by Halm; who quotes with approval Durand' 62 Not, 1| some unknown commentators who probably only exist in Goerenz' 63 Not, 1| he gave renovari. Orelli—who speaks of Goerenz's "praestantissima 64 Not, 1| Varro (in Aug. as above) who often spoke as though ethics 65 Not, 1| practically Aristotle's, who severs αρεται into διανοητικαι 66 Not, 1| ευμαθεια, μνημη of Arist. (who adds αγχινοια σοφια φρονησις), 67 Not, 1| traceable to Antiochus, who, as will be seen from Augustine 68 Not, 1| is aimed at the Atomists, who maintained that infinite 69 Not, 1| the Universal World God, who will recreate the world 70 Not, 1| there was in Antiochus, who would have glided over Plato' 71 Not, 1| it can be made to any one who has not a knowledge of the 72 Not, 1| frequent in the older Stoics, who use rather ονοματων ορθοτης ( 73 Not, 1| approved by Madv. Em. 119 who remarks that the phrase 74 Not, 1| the objection that Varro (who in 8 says nihil enim meorum 75 Not, 1| remedy of Dav., therefore, who reads media in the place 76 Not, 1| said for Goerenz's plan, who distorts the Stoic philosophy 77 Not, 1| assertion of Antiochus, who, having stolen the clothes 78 Not, 1| πεμπτον σωμα of Aristotle, who proves its existence in 79 Not, 1| his πεμπτον σωμα Any one who will compare T.D. I. 43 80 Not, 1| notions came from Heraclitus who was a great hero of the 81 Not, 1| not often made by Cic., who usually contends, with Antiochus, 82 Not, 1| than Socrates (468—399) who died nearly sixty years 83 Not, 2| it is used of the Stoics, who are said re concinere, verbis 84 Not, 2| Probably Zeno is the person who serius adamavit honores.~ 85 Not, 2| enemies of Greek culture who think a Roman noble ought 86 Not, 2| philosophical knowledge (6). Those who hold that the interlocutors 87 Not, 2| the hands of Antiochus, who was so angry that he wrote 88 Not, 2| verb see Madv. Gram. 213 A, who confines the usage to nouns 89 Not, 2| drop. Quaestor: to Sulla, who employed him chiefly in 90 Not, 2| passed of course by Sulla, who had restored the old lex 91 Not, 2| was begun by Simonides (who is the person denoted here 92 Not, 2| was the infamous Memmius who prosecuted him. In urbem: 93 Not, 2| Academicos: i.e. novos, who are here treated as the 94 Not, 2| Alexandria, a Peripatetic, who may be the same. Dio seems 95 Not, 2| Ravilla, a man of good family, who carried a ballot bill (De 96 Not, 2| Pompeium: apparently the man who made the disgraceful treaty 97 Not, 2| Africanum: i.e. the younger, who supported the ballot bill 98 Not, 2| enemy of Metellus Numidicus, who was the uncle of Lucullus 99 Not, 2| definition and instances Orestes who looking at Electra, mistook 100 Not, 2| Sextus Pyrr. Hyp. I. 235, who tells us that while the 101 Not, 2| Praep. Ev. XIV. 8, p. 739, who treats him throughout his 102 Not, 2| seen from moral action. Who would act, if the things 103 Not, 2| Sext. Adv. Math. XI. 197 who adds a third class of τεχναι 104 Not, 2| 86, Aug. Cont. Ac. II. 12 who says the sapiens of the 105 Not, 2| of the reason. Those then who deny that any certainty 106 Not, 2| sensation with the Stoics, who are perhaps imitated here, 107 Not, 2| phenomena, he therefore who does away with assent does 108 Not, 2| Virtus: even the Stoics, who were fatalists as a rule, 109 Not, 2| similar that the person who has one of the sensations 110 Not, 2| be supposed by the person who feels it to be caused by 111 Not, 2| real view of the Academic, who would allow that things 112 Not, 2| see Madv. D.F. II. 33, who, however, unduly restricts 113 Not, 2| more cultivated physicists, who maintain that each thing 114 Not, 2| alike. Aristo the Chian, who maintained the Stoic view, 115 Not, 2| his fellow pupil Persaeus, who took two twins, and made 116 Not, 2| story is told of Caesar, who, while speaking sub Veteribus, 117 Not, 2| 123—4 qu. R. and P. 107, who say "patet errare eos qui 118 Not, 2| these are the last men who ought to be charged with 119 Not, 2| definisse cf. M.D.F. II. 13 (who quotes exx.); also the construction 120 Not, 2| Arcesilas was added by Manutius, who is followed by all edd. 121 Not, 2| acting like the Epicureans, who say that the inference only 122 Not, 2| answer, you are like the mole who desires not the light because 123 Not, 2| indistinguishable from it (83). A man who has mistaken P. for Q. Geminus 124 Not, 2| quotes Diog. Laert. X. 91, who preserves the very words 125 Not, 2| occurs, also Lucr. V. 590, who copies Epicurus, and Seneca 126 Not, 2| Halm notes, to a scribe who understood caelum to be 127 Not, 2| that the Expert is the man who knows exactly what his art 128 Not, 2| language"; cf. Zeller 107, who gives the Stoic refinements 129 Not, 2| 102). He condemns those who say that sensation is swept 130 Not, 2| Pref. to D.F. p. lxiii.) who holds him convicted of ignorance, 131 Not, 2| instances by Bait. Kayser, who is perhaps the most extensive 132 Not, 2| cf. Madv. on D.F. I. 14, who doubts whether Cic. ever 133 Not, 2| see Madv. on D.F. III. 48, who quotes an exact parallel 134 Not, 2| my dear friend Diodotus, who thinks so poorly of Antiochus? 135 Not, 2| sentence incomplete, like Halm, who wishes to add eum esse, 136 Not, 2| eum esse, or like Bait., who with Kayser prints esse 137 Not, 2| with Socrates and Aristo, who hold that nothing can be 138 Not, 2| known about them! (123) Who knows the nature of mind? 139 Not, 2| III. 11 qu. R. and P. 75), who give the name of αντιχθων 140 Not, 2| and P. 75. Theophrastus: who wrote much on the history 141 Not, 2| and is approved by Madv., who thus explains it (Em. 185) " 142 Not, 2| by Sext. A.M. VII. 113, who also speaks in P.H. II. 143 Not, 2| 61, Plin. Epist. I. 20, who both mention this trick 144 Not, 2| highest form of the deity" who was of course one in the 145 Not, 2| Wesenberg on T.D. V. 9, who qu. similar combinations 146 Not, 2| Chios, not Aristo of Ceos, who was a Peripatetic; for the 147 Not, 2| occurs if at all in Sext. who generally uses αταραξια, 148 Not, 2| see Madv. on D.F. II. 19, who also gives the chief authorities 149 Not, 2| and Madv. on D.F. I. 43, who how ever unduly limits the 150 Not, 2| probanda sap. after Lamb., who also conj. non posse illa 151 Not, 2| Madv. D.F. p. 806, ed. 2, who is severe upon the reading 152 Not, 2| Fm. to T.D. III. p. 17, who says, multo tamen saepius " 153 Not, 2| Antipater: the Stoic of Tarsus, who succeeded Diogenes Babylonius 154 Not, 2| these two philosophers, who are playfully described 155 Not, 2| cf. Sext. A.M. VII. 153, who says that even καταληψις 156 Not, 2| 84. Contraxerat: so Halm who qu. Plin. Nat. Hist. XI.