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  1     Pre         |          Cambridge. My notes have been written throughout with
  2     Pre         |        note of mine which has not been suggested by some difficulty
  3     Pre         |       want of theirs. My plan has been, first, to embody in an
  4     Pre         |          quotation would not have been given but for its appearance
  5     Pre         |      Empiricus, all of which have been published in cheap and convenient
  6     Int,       I|           The pupil seems to have been converted at once to the
  7     Int,       I|        but he seems never to have been much attracted by the general
  8     Int,       I|       property.7 He seems to have been one of the most accomplished [
  9     Int,       I|       twenty years of age, he had been brought into intimate connection
 10     Int,       I|   necessitated by his egotism has been made, leave no doubt about
 11     Int,       I|     doctrines.~There seem to have been no eminent representatives
 12     Int,       I|        Cicero while at Athens had been to learn philosophy; in
 13     Int,       I|      pupil of Panaetius, may have been at Rhodes at this time.
 14     Int,       I|           studies had by no means been allowed to drop45. Aristotle
 15     Int,       I|              Cicero seems to have been somewhat disappointed with
 16     Int,       I|         Finibus had probably both been planned and commenced. [
 17     Int,       I|      boast that at no time had he been divorced from philosophy68.
 18     Int,      II|         opinions which would have been recognised as genuine by
 19     Int,      II|          Carneades, and Philo had been too busy with their polemic
 20     Int,      II|        touched philosophy, it had been on its ethical side. The
 21     Int,     III|            originality would have been looked upon as a fault rather
 22     Int,     III|          in philosophy: there had been simply one eclectic combination
 23     Int,     III|      language may be said to have been destitute of a philosophical
 24     Int,     III|        taste. There seems to have been a very large Epicurean literature
 25     Int,     III|         seems to allow, must have been of little real importance.
 26     Int,     III|           neglected though it has been, I can treat no farther.~
 27     Int,     III|          energy of the nation has been diverted into other channels
 28     Int,     III|       that so little progress has been made. The history of Roman
 29     Int,     III|       design, which seems to have been at first indefinite, so
 30     Int,     III|        till the whole subject had been mastered132. This design
 31     Int,      IV|   difficult works on which he has been engaged within the same
 32     Int,      IV|      edition of the Academica had been placed in the hands of Atticus.
 33     Int,      IV|        Cicero describes as having been finished simultaneously
 34     Int,      IV|           that the Hortensius had been published a sufficiently
 35     Int,      IV|           the Academica must have been more closely connected,
 36     Int,      IV|     mention that new prooemia had been added to the Catulus and
 37     Int,      IV|           Astura, however, it had been his intention to go on to
 38     Int,      IV|      Arpinum168. He seems to have been still unsatisfied with his
 39     Int,      IV|      Finibus170. Cicero had never been very intimate with Varro:
 40     Int,      IV|        acquaintance seems to have been chiefly maintained through
 41     Int,      IV|          complaint that Varro had been writing for two years without
 42     Int,      IV|       shows that there could have been little of anything like
 43     Int,      IV|         of the doctrines they had been made in the first edition
 44     Int,      IV|     decided181. As no reasons had been given for these solicitations,
 45     Int,      IV|        the first, though much had been omitted; [xli] he adds, "
 46     Int,      IV|       deceives me, the books have been so finished that the Greeks
 47     Int,      IV|          Yet after everything had been done and the book had been
 48     Int,      IV|        been done and the book had been sent to Atticus at Rome,
 49     Int,      IV|           little later: "You have been bold enough, then, to give
 50     Int,      IV|    Oratore, the author would have been [xlv] compelled to exclude
 51     Int,      IV|       Cicero, that Rome had never been so unfortunate as to have
 52     Int,      IV|         held the office, may have been intended to point a contrast
 53     Int,      IV|       which the same speakers had been engaged; and after more
 54     Int,      IV|        after more compliments had been bandied about, most of [
 55     Int,      IV|               Still it might have been concluded that he was an
 56     Int,      IV|       Clitomachus. If he had ever been in actual communication
 57     Int,      IV|           of the speech must have been directed against the innovations
 58     Int,      IV|           which the probabile had been handled appertains to Catulus.
 59     Int,      IV|          of the speech could have been assigned in the first edition.
 60     Int,      IV|    mention here. He seems to have been as nearly innocent of any
 61     Int,      IV|        tribune263. Unfair use had been made, according to Lucullus,
 62     Int,      IV|           though really Stoic had been adopted by Antiochus), since
 63     Int,      IV|         in the dogmatic sense had been attempted in his statement
 64     Int,      IV|          part of his teaching had been dismissed by all the disputants274.
 65     Int,      IV|      Academic doctrines which had been so brilliantly supported
 66     Int,      IV|  Antiochean as Brutus cannot have been reduced to the comparatively
 67     Int,      IV|         during which Lucullus had been merely a looker-on, the
 68     Int,      IV|         words were written he had been dead for many years282.
 69     Int,      IV|         and Varro do seem to have been drawn a little closer together.
 70     Int,      IV|          ed. 1. Atticus must have been almost a κωφον προσωπον.~
 71     Not,       1|           jubeo: these words have been naturally supposed a gloss.
 72     Not,       1|    Satires remain, and have often been editedmost recently by
 73     Not,       1|        publicam shows him to have been quoting from memory. Sedem:
 74     Not,       1|            had apparently not yet been written.~§10. Causa: = προφασις.
 75     Not,       1|      harmony was supposed to have been first broken by Polemo's
 76     Not,       1|        Cic., he can scarcely have been so inconsistent as the MSS.
 77     Not,       1|        wrath) seems to have first been brought prominently forward
 78     Not,       1| dialectics with Plato's must have been driven to desperate shifts.
 79     Not,       1|         This statement might have been made both by Aristotle and
 80     Not,       1|    Dialecticae: as λογικη had not been Latinised, Cic. is obliged
 81     Not,       2|           from another, which had been brought forward in the Catulus,
 82     Not,       2|           on the senses must have been summed up in the phrase
 83     Not,       2|      Stoic εναργεια had evidently been translated earlier in the
 84     Not,       2|           this passage could have been included if not in that
 85     Not,       2|       deal of learning would have been considered unworthy of a
 86     Not,       2|    operation. Prooemio, which has been proposed, would not be Latin,
 87     Not,       2|      Consulatum: he seems to have been absent during the years
 88     Not,       2|        New Academic dialectic had been without a representative
 89     Not,       2|       suppose that no advance has been made during so many centuries
 90     Not,       2|           15). Has nothing really been learned since the time of
 91     Not,       2|            15, Liv. XXXV. 16) had been settled. Holding that illa
 92     Not,       2|      doctrine. Modern inquiry has been able to add little or nothing
 93     Not,       2|          Hence the Academics have been urged to allow their dogma
 94     Not,       2|       verb συμπεραινειν which has been supposed to correspond to
 95     Not,       2|          passage, which must have been preserved in the second
 96     Not,       2|     sensations such as might have been produced in the same form
 97     Not,       2|          satisfactory em. has yet been proposed, cf. 125. Nihil
 98     Not,       2|      would be given. It has often been inserted by copyists when
 99     Not,       2|         whose authority must have been Cicero), be attributed to
100     Not,       2|     secundum illud, which, it has been supposed, must refer back
101     Not,       2|           this invidious word had been used by Lucullus in 16;
102     Not,       2|      agreed that the addition had been rightly made." For the omission
103     Not,       2|           same terms seem to have been used by the Cynics, see
104     Not,       2|         the phrase te mentiri had been substituted for nunc lucere.
105     Not,       2|         marked by μεν and δε, has been a great crux of edd.; Dav.
106     Not,       2|         otherwise fine would have been written. Cf. I. 4 si qui
107     Not,       2|          Venio iam: Dialectic had been already dealt with in 91
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