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 1     Int,       I|             been made, leave no doubt about his diligence as a student.
 2     Int,       I|               During the period then, about which we have little or
 3     Int,       I|              little room for thoughts about literature. The letters
 4     Int,       I|                  when, he deliberates about the course he is himself
 5     Int,       I|            philosophical propositions about tyranny63. Nothing could
 6     Int,      II|           made by ancient authorities about the earlier representatives
 7     Int,      II|            was a kind of magnificence about the Stoic utterances on
 8     Int,      II|       sympathize with the Stoic views about the grand universal operation
 9     Int,      II|          understanding of his notions about physics, the Timaeus of
10     Int,      IV|               Rome by way of Lanuvium about the middle of June146. He
11     Int,      IV|            Cicero had constant doubts about the expediency of dedicating
12     Int,      IV|       apparently did not speak to him about the De Finibus, but employed
13     Int,      IV|              to ascertain his feeling about the dedication187.~Cicero'
14     Int,      IV|                 Cicero's own judgment about the completed second edition
15     Int,      IV|          compliments had been bandied about, most of [xlviii] which
16     Int,      IV|           Crassus, in his long speech about Greek philosophy, connect
17     Int,      IV|          fully that positive teaching about the πιθανον which was so
18     Int,      IV|              Cicero, with a few words about his philosophical [lxi]
19     Int,      IV|             same semi-friendly state. About the year 54 B.C., as we
20     Int,      IV|               and can tell us nothing about the constitution of the
21     Not,       1|              esp. a sarcastic passage about Epicurus in N.D. I. 120.
22     Not,       1|             aut ... aut: This casting about for an excuse shows how
23     Not,       1|               the two schools as that about ιδεαι, which had long ceased.
24     Not,       1| fugiendarumque: ‛αιρετων και φευκτων, about which more in n. on 36.
25     Not,       1|            τοπω. For ancient theories about space the student must be
26     Not,       1|            for the views of Aristotle about τυχη and το αυτοματον, also
27     Not,       1|               they defined everything about which they argued, and also
28     Not,       1|        contradiction to his own rules about admitting metre in prose,
29     Not,       1|              Grote's Plato, I. p. 37, about Heraclitus, εν μεταβολη
30     Not,       1|         Theaet. and the ancient texts about Heraclitus; also a very
31     Not,       1|              order to prove something about the thing denoted by the
32     Not,       1|            aetate: Arcesilas was born about 315, Zeno about 350, though
33     Not,       1|              was born about 315, Zeno about 350, though the dates are
34     Not,       1|             mediis, and not sumendis, about which he had intended to
35     Not,       1|         Stoics, from a false judgment about some external object; cf.
36     Not,       2|          There is nothing distinctive about this which might enable
37     Not,       2|               must be wrong. The talk about freedom suits a sceptic
38     Not,       2|               into two portions at or about 63.~UNCERTAIN BOOKS.~32.
39     Not,       2|               to be silent or to talk about trifles? I, in applying
40     Not,       2|            censorship was in 199 B.C. About the embassy see Dict. Biogr.
41     Not,       2|          Catulus died in 60, Lucullus about 57, Hortensius 50. Contra
42     Not,       2|          consulted by him as lawyers, about the legal effect the bills
43     Not,       2|             ground that the statement about Marius implies that the
44     Not,       2|               that the demagogues lie about all but him. Those words
45     Not,       2|             the source of information about his teacher's doctrines.
46     Not,       2|             avail to give information about them. Unless therefore Philo
47     Not,       2|          there was nothing new to him about such a doctrine. The Stoics
48     Not,       2|            perfectly true information about external things. Not that
49     Not,       2|               Sextus constantly talks about ‛η ονειροπολουμενη περι
50     Not,       2|            and appropriate. "You talk about a rule for distinguishing
51     Not,       2|           give us correct information about them. Eiusdem modi: cf.
52     Not,       2|              is nothing interrogatory about the argument at all. Dissolvere:
53     Not,       2|  circumstances in life. All this talk about dreamers, madmen and drunkards
54     Not,       2|          probability even. Their talk about twins and seals is childish (
55     Not,       2|               What nonsense they talk about inquiring after the truth,
56     Not,       2|        inquiring after the truth, and about the bad influence of authority! (
57     Not,       2|               oath that you "knew all about" Catiline. Thus ended Lucullus,
58     Not,       2|         making any positive assertion about the eggs." Adsentiri: for
59     Not,       2|           held that they knew nothing about things external to themselves.
60     Not,       2|              the belief of Empedocles about the possibility of επιστημη
61     Not,       2|         distinguish between them. How about the impressions of signet
62     Not,       2|      constructed the senses! (86) But about physics I will speak afterwards.
63     Not,       2|         agreed. It is no good to talk about the saner moments of such
64     Not,       2|          Carneades refused to discuss about things in themselves but
65     Not,       2|             Dialectic cf. the inquiry about Rhetoric in Plato Gorg.
66     Not,       2|         should not the Academic doubt about other things? (107) Your
67     Not,       2|               12) made gross blunders about them, the supposition of
68     Not,       2|             that nothing can be known about them! (123) Who knows the
69     Not,       2|               differ among themselves about physical subjects, why will
70     Not,       2|             constant judgment of Cic. about Aristotle's style. Grote,
71     Not,       2|       crotchets of other philosophers about φυσικη, proceeds to give
72     Not,       2|          omitted, says that he doubts about this passage because considero
73     Not,       2|              there among philosophers about the ethical standard! I
74     Not,       2|               themselves cannot agree about the very elements of their
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