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 1     Pre         |         I have striven to guide them to the best teaching of
 2     Pre         |         seems better to publish them than to withhold from students
 3     Int,       I|      the day, and of placing on them fulsome inscriptions. Of
 4     Int,       I|       other philosophers, among them Xeno the friend of Atticus58.~
 5     Int,       I|      works, and a comparison of them with ancient authorities,
 6     Int,      II|   generally tested by comparing them with the assertions made
 7     Int,      II|        religious ideas he calls them "great and famous philosophers99,"
 8     Int,      II|      passage Cicero agrees with them, explicitly rejecting the
 9     Int,      II|   Socrates as his authority for them105. Zeno, who is merely
10     Int,      II|       craftsman of words, stole them from the Old Academy. This
11     Int,      II| maintained that Zeno had stolen them before. Cicero, however,
12     Int,      II|    Cicero hesitatingly followed them, although he conceded that
13     Int,     III|      value, for it is only from them that we get any full or
14     Int,     III|  confesses that he had not read them, but his estimate of them
15     Int,     III|       them, but his estimate of them was probably correct. A
16     Int,     III|      with indignation, accusing them of being untrue to their
17     Int,     III|       careless reader might set them down to egotism. But it
18     Int,     III|     total devotion of a life to them seemed well enough for Greeks, [
19     Int,      IV|      that he has taken to write them143.~In the beginning of
20     Int,      IV|       all times anxious to draw them more closely together. Nine
21     Int,      IV|   Academica to maintain176. For them another place was to be
22     Int,      IV|       of literature to approach them.... This edition will be
23     Int,      IV|         await his judgment upon them, but when will he read them?"
24     Int,      IV|     them, but when will he read them?" Varro probably received
25     Int,      IV|  Academica. Augustine speaks of them only as Academici libri,
26     Int,      IV|     editions. A fair summary of them may be seen in the preface
27     Int,      IV|         only object aimed at by them, a satisfactory basis for
28     Int,      IV|   divorced wife of Cato. All of them were of the Senatorial party,
29     Not,       1|      any other word to separate them. For oratorum Pearce conj.
30     Not,       1|        as though he were one of them; in Cic.'s letters to him
31     Not,       1|       αρετη only, that alone to them wasαιρετον, their πρωτα
32     Not,       1|      Bentl., Dav., Halm suspect them. Tota is feminine sing.;
33     Not,       1|      positive value, and called them preferred to the second
34     Not,       1|       negative value and called them rejected, to the third no
35     Not,       1|   defects in the application to them of the reason he thought
36     Not,       1|       does not elsewhere employ them.~§34. Strato: see II. 121.
37     Not,       1|          6264) again speaks of them as τα μη ‛ικανην εχοντα
38     Not,       1|      attempt the elucidation of them. The student will find valuable
39     Not,       1|       the emotions was to bring them under the predominance of
40     Not,       1|   however, allowed that some of them were not impervious to logical
41     Not,       1| separate sensations and combine them before we can know thoroughly
42     Not,       2|    which lies immediately above them and so illustrate the narrow
43     Not,       2|       perverse sceptics and let them take their own way. See
44     Not,       2|     points of agreement between them and the Lucullus, which
45     Not,       2|        Math. VII. 249 considers them essential to the definition
46     Not,       2|       be ακαταληπτα, Philo held them to be καταληπτα, and Numenius
47     Not,       2|       to give information about them. Unless therefore Philo
48     Not,       2|         atoms, if I may so call them, on all hands it was allowed
49     Not,       2|    practice we always do remove them where we can (19). What
50     Not,       2|     Stoic ‛οροι, and this among them, are amusingly ridiculed,
51     Not,       2|          and elsewhere) accuses them of making it in reality
52     Not,       2|    sceptic, the former meant by them "the undestructibly true
53     Not,       2|    forbears however, to produce them. Recondit: so the εννοιαι
54     Not,       2|       us to distinguish between them. Then they proceed. Sensations
55     Not,       2|       correct information about them. Eiusdem modi: cf. 33 eodem
56     Not,       2|       nearly all editors attack them. Vel = "even" i.e. if even
57     Not,       2|       be indistinguishable from them? (48)~§46. Circumfusa sint:
58     Not,       2|         of the sentence, all of them alike depend on sic. Lamb.
59     Not,       2|         merely that when one of them is present, it cannot be
60     Not,       2|        are so much ridiculed by them (55). Democritus may say
61     Not,       2|   experience. You say he solved them, even if he did, which I
62     Not,       2|        escape being ensnared by them (75). The Cyrenaics too
63     Not,       2|      cannot distinguish between them. How about the impressions
64     Not,       2|       troubled edd. and induced them to alter the text, see n.
65     Not,       2|       made gross blunders about them, the supposition of Madv.
66     Not,       2|     bonos: Cic. often speaks of them and of Epicurus in this
67     Not,       2|      nothing can be known about them! (123) Who knows the nature
68     Not,       2|         allow me to differ from them? (126) Not that I deprecate
69     Not,       2|        that geometer rears upon them. Cicero is arguing as in
70     Not,       2|   gravitate then towards one of them, that of pleasure. Virtue
71     Not,       2|    seditious tribune by telling them I do away with the arts
72     Not,       2|   together, I will point out to them that according to Zeno all
73     Not,       2|        according to Zeno all of them are slaves, exiles, and
74     Not,       2|         had the right to summon them, the right of the tribune
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