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 1     Ded         |         PUPILS~WHO HAVE READ WITH HIM~THE ACADEMICA,~THIS EDITION~
 2     Pre         |          usage, if it were new to him, and might solve any linguistic
 3     Int,       I|          his time in study.1 From him was probably derived that
 4     Int,       I|          in philosophy were given him by the Epicurean Phaedrus,
 5     Int,       I|         Cicero's feelings towards him were those of gratitude,
 6     Int,       I|         Cicero had scarcely heard him before all inclination for
 7     Int,       I|         mentioned were written by him at this period. On Sulla'
 8     Int,       I|         writer, as Diogenes calls him16, Zeno of Sidon, now the
 9     Int,       I|      along with Atticus who loved him beyond all other philosophers19,
10     Int,       I|            from a mention of [vi] him in the De Oratore, that
11     Int,       I|           at this time unknown to him.~The philosopher from whose
12     Int,       I|      principles. Cicero speaks of him as eminent among the philosophers
13     Int,       I|       famous Stoic of the age. To him Cicero makes reference in
14     Int,       I|          instructor. He speaks of him as the greatest of the Stoics30;
15     Int,       I|         part of this time we find him entreating Atticus to let
16     Int,       I|         entreating Atticus to let him have a library which was
17     Int,       I|       heart.~The year 62 released him from the consulship and
18     Int,       I|        the consulship and enabled him to indulge his literary
19     Int,       I|         year or two later we find him reading with enthusiasm
20     Int,       I|           politics must cease for him, and that he therefore returns
21     Int,       I|          Quintus, who accompanied him, and they probably touched
22     Int,       I|    friends, my books." These gave him real comfort, and his studies
23     Int,      II|           of a case. It seemed to him arrogant to make any proposition
24     Int,      II|    requisite of a philosophy with him was that it should avoid
25     Int,      II| experience as an orator, inclined him to charity and toleration,
26     Int,      II|          toleration, and repelled him from the fury of dogmatism.
27     Int,      II|        doctrines Philo had taught him? Simply thus. Arcesilas,
28     Int,      II|       they would naturally regard him as a deserter from the Old
29     Int,      II|          Stoic dialectic repelled him101. On moral questions,
30     Int,      II|          therefore, we often find him going farther in the direction
31     Int,      II|          Cicero's nature inclined him very strongly to sympathize
32     Int,     III|           which nothing compelled him to break, since Lucretius
33     Int,      IV|    solitude could scarcely enable him to endure, would crush him,
34     Int,      IV|        him to endure, would crush him, he felt, in the busy city137.~
35     Int,      IV|   detractors at Rome may reproach him with inaction, they could
36     Int,      IV|         determined to confer upon him often in the future such
37     Int,      IV|      Cicero was obliged to assure him that there were reasons,
38     Int,      IV|        This notion Cicero assured him to be wrong; the only cause
39     Int,      IV|       apparently did not speak to him about the De Finibus, but
40     Int,      IV|          his hands, Cicero begged him to take all precautions
41     Int,      IV|        the books would be sent to him. "By this time, then," says
42     Int,      IV|       other, of the senate218. In him no storm of danger, no favouring
43     Int,      IV|           friend tried to console him for the death of Tullia,
44     Int,      IV|       death of Tullia, by bidding him remember "Catulus and the
45     Int,      IV|   passages where Cicero speaks of him, he seldom omits to mention
46     Int,      IV|     company230. Appeal is made to him when any question is started
47     Int,      IV|            An account is given by him of the history of Greek
48     Int,      IV|           of his Latin style made him seem to many the only speaker
49     Int,      IV|     Lucullus, therefore, reproves him as a rebel in philosophy,
50     Int,      IV|     paradoxes as were advanced by him in the first day's discourse
51     Int,      IV|          it necessary to treat of him farther.~b. The "Lucullus."~
52     Int,      IV|      remark. Halm (as many before him had done) places the Academica
53     Not,       1|          s reading publicam shows him to have been quoting from
54     Not,       1|           Graeca. Halm (and after him Baiter) adopts the conj.
55     Not,       1|      teaching of his master, from him sprang two schools which
56     Not,       1|         as the MSS. and edd. make him (cf. Baiter and Halm's ed.,
57     Not,       1|        them; in Cic.'s letters to him the words "tui cives," meaning
58     Not,       1|           generally attributed to him in Cicero's time, so by
59     Not,       1|           naturae wereαιρετα to him, cf. Aug. XIX. 3, prima
60     Not,       1|   sermonis egestas, which compels him to render simple Greek terms
61     Not,       1|    elements; each therefore is to him both active and passive.
62     Not,       1|        has, however, probably led him to intensify what inconsistency
63     Not,       1|         have here a Stoic view of him transmitted through Antiochus.
64     Not,       1|        speaks very differently of him. Between the particular
65     Not,       1|            Virtue also became for him one and indivisible (Zeller
66     Not,       1|     Stoics probably misunderstood him; cf. R. and P. "Heraclitus,"
67     Not,       1|         nearly sixty years before him. Omnis paene veteres: the
68     Not,       2|        consulship. What I owed to him in those troublous times
69     Not,       2|            to Sulla, who employed him chiefly in the civil administration
70     Not,       2|   infamous Memmius who prosecuted him. In urbem: until his triumph
71     Not,       2|           quaestor and Sulla sent him to Egypt, he could not be
72     Not,       2|   καταληπτικη φαντασια really led him back to that utter scepticism
73     Not,       2|       that they were consulted by him as lawyers, about the legal
74     Not,       2|      demagogues lie about all but him. Those words need not imply
75     Not,       2|    ancient authorities concerning him are quoted by Zeller 506.
76     Not,       2|        XIV. 8, p. 739, who treats him throughout his notice as
77     Not,       2|          there was nothing new to him about such a doctrine. The
78     Not,       2|           Philonian dialectic. By him the dialectic of Carneades
79     Not,       2|           Or. III. 101, and after him Quintilian, e.g. II. 17,
80     Not,       2| sensations which are able to turn him aside (περισπαν, περιελκειν)
81     Not,       2|           Orelli actually follows him. For the phrase cf. 122
82     Not,       2|     Antiochus: Sext. often quotes him in the discussion of this
83     Not,       2|        Contra Acad. III. 41 calls him foeneus ille Platonicus
84     Not,       2|        awhile in order to torture him. Hercules: cf. Eur. Herc.
85     Not,       2|        stone; many things seem to him true; yet he always feels
86     Not,       2|         D.F. p. lxiii.) who holds him convicted of ignorance,
87     Not,       2|    another which does not prevent him from giving an answer to
88     Not,       2|          I should not much oppose him even if he maintained that
89     Not,       2|          Aristotle will pronounce him mad; you, however, Lucullus,
90     Not,       2|           cedat, Baiter following him. The text is sound. Trans. "
91     Not,       2|           last place Cic. says of him quem iam cur Peripateticum
92     Not,       2|       Antiochus adopted, and from him it is attributed to the
93     Not,       2|        brackets Stoico, and after him Bait. Sequi volebat: "professed
94     Not,       2|       which Halm takes, and after him Bait.; one good MS. has
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