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 1     Pre         |            the De Finibus contains more valuable material for illustrating,
 2     Pre         |         either from my own or some more competent hand. It must
 3     Pre         |        this University, and causes more than anything else the unproductiveness
 4     Int,       I|        Pomponius Atticus, received more lasting impressions from
 5     Int,       I|       Italy, judicial affairs once more took their regular course,
 6     Int,       I|        Varro, Lucullus and Brutus, more or less adhered to the views
 7     Int,       I|          us that he read his works more than those of any other
 8     Int,       I|           tyranny63. Nothing could more clearly show that he was
 9     Int,       I|           the contrary nothing had more occupied his thoughts throughout
10     Int,      II|    criterion was impossible. To go more into detail here would be
11     Int,      II|        attract Cicero. Nothing was more repulsive to his mind than
12     Int,      II|            utterances on morality, more suited to a superhuman than
13     Int,      II|        world, which allured Cicero more than the barrenness of the
14     Int,      II|            On the whole Cicero was more in accord with Stoic ethics
15     Int,     III|         Cicero never claimed to be more than an interpreter of Greek
16     Int,      IV|           Academica must have been more closely connected, in style
17     Int,      IV|         times anxious to draw them more closely together. Nine years
18     Int,      IV|         whole time in editing once more his Academica, which he
19     Int,      IV|           favour of Varro, and the more so because he wishes it,
20     Int,      IV|            part in the treatise is more liberally sustained than
21     Int,      IV|           to whom Cicero had shown more favour186. We find Cicero
22     Int,      IV|          Cicero eagerly asking for more information, on this point:
23     Int,      IV|               This edition will be more brilliant, more terse, and
24     Int,      IV|            will be more brilliant, more terse, and altogether better
25     Int,      IV|     Lucullus208 that he did little more than put forward opinions
26     Int,      IV|       glorious consulship was once more lauded, and great stress
27     Int,      IV|            been engaged; and after more compliments had been bandied
28     Int,      IV|      appears as an interlocutor, a more detailed view of his accomplishments.
29     Int,      IV|        evidently concerned himself more with the system of the later
30     Int,      IV|      translate for himself267. The more the matter is examined the
31     Int,      IV|         the matter is examined the more clearly does it appear that
32     Int,      IV|           was plenty of room for a more minute examination in the
33     Int,      IV|       doubt that Brutus occupied a more prominent position than
34     Int,      IV|            it necessary to do much more than call attention to the
35     Int,      IV|       dedication to Varro, will be more conveniently deferred till
36       I,       X|        quasdam virtutes natura aut more perfectas, hic omnis in
37     Not,       1|      common friend. Varro was much more the friend of Atticus than
38     Not,       1|            and moreover nothing is more Ciceronian than the repetition
39     Not,       1|           Halm remarks, implies no more than the Germ. auch nicht,
40     Not,       1|            Halm, who supposes much more to have fallen out. [The
41     Not,       1|         essent before dicta. It is more probable therefore that
42     Not,       1|             its use in 21 makes it more probable than conferre,
43     Not,       1|           και φευκτων, about which more in n. on 36. The Platonic
44     Not,       1|            Stoics, whom it enabled more sharply and decisively to
45     Not,       1|           the Antiochean finis see more in note on 22. Corporis
46     Not,       1|            cf. esp. De Leg. I. 25. More Stoic still is the definition
47     Not,       1|          in space (alicubi), it is more difficult to see why it
48     Not,       1|      Stoics made the universe much more of a unity than any other
49     Not,       1|         Illi ιδεαν, etc.: there is more than one difficulty here.
50     Not,       1|       Plato's opinions with a much more cautious step.~§31. Sensus
51     Not,       1|           is quite different). One more remark, and I conclude this
52     Not,       1|         reason, while the virtutes more perfectae are Aristotle'
53     Not,       1|          εννοιαι were all this and more. Reperiuntur: two things
54     Not,       1|         the sapiens see Zeller 87. More information on the subject-matter
55     Not,       2|         apologises for making Cato more learned than he really was.
56     Not,       2|            5) Epict. says it is no more use arguing with a sceptic
57     Not,       2|            which he substituted is more difficult to comprehend.
58     Not,       2|    authorities does not allow of a more exact view of his doctrine.
59     Not,       2|    correspond to concludere. It is more likely to be a trans. of
60     Not,       2|       pravum: the sceptic would no more allow the absolute certainty
61     Not,       2|     thoroughly explored") requires more than a mere apparent agreement
62     Not,       2|         known, the thing, which is more important, must also be
63     Not,       2|  Ebriosorum: "habitual drunkards," more invidious than vinolenti
64     Not,       2|           to ours, but I appeal to more cultivated physicists, who
65     Not,       2|         philosophy, plunge us into more than Cimmerian darkness? (
66     Not,       2|       easily slip in. Eosdem: once more we have Lucullus' chronic
67     Not,       2|        Madv. says (on D.F. V. 87), more doubt than the use of ne
68     Not,       2|    Antibarbarus, ed. 4. Censuerim: more modest than censeo, see
69     Not,       2|      called by his own name. It is more probable that he could no
70     Not,       2|       nihil ... pertinebat nothing more is intended than that there
71     Not,       2|          whether I wanted anything more than sound senses. He would
72     Not,       2|          But say you, we desire no more. No I answer, you are like
73     Not,       2|          The sophism is given in a more formally complete shape
74     Not,       2|         bono: it would have seemed more natural to transpose these
75     Not,       2|           the real Old Academy are more reasonable than those of
76     Not,       2|         things can be perceived no more and no less clearly than
77     Not,       2|            Grote's Plato Vol. I. A more complete enumeration of
78     Not,       2|  throughout, no one thing could be more or less known than another.
79     Not,       2|            Polemo did (I. 22). See more on 139. Zeno: cf. D.F. IV.
80     Not,       2|             22, n. Deus ille: i.e. more than man (of Aristotle's
81     Not,       2| Peripatetics, for which see I. 19. More on the subject in Madvig'
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