bold = Main text
   Liber, Caput     grey = Comment text

 1     Pre         |           I trust that the work in its present shape will be of
 2     Pre         |        training of a great deal of its old educational value. The
 3     Pre         |            have been given but for its appearance in some other
 4     Int,       I|          Athens on the approach of its siege during the Mithridatic
 5     Int,       I|       anxious to show Rhodes, with its school of eloquence, to
 6     Int,      II|   proposition with a conviction of its absolute, indestructible
 7     Int,      II|        authority has loudly raised its voice, says Cicero, there
 8     Int,      II|            pedigree. Compared with its system, all other philosophies
 9     Int,      II|         philosophy, it had been on its ethical side. The works
10     Int,      II|         this branch of philosophy. Its chief importance lay in
11     Int,      II|           tenderly for the sake of its great past, deeming it a
12     Int,     III|           that philosophy had left its mark on the early Italian
13     Int,     III|  indefinite, so as to bring within its scope every topic which
14     Int,     III|        even original criticisms on its history. The only thing
15     Int,      IV|          suspects155, thus obtains its natural meaning. Cicero
16     Int,      IV|         elder man was made to cast its lustre on the younger. Cicero'
17     Int,      IV|          occasion of the dialogue, its supposed date, and the place
18     Int,      IV|        speech, although foreign to its main intention269. He probably
19     Int,      IV|          seated in the xystus with its polished floor and lines
20     Int,      IV|            visit Tusculum has left its mark on the last section
21     Int,      IV|          Any closer examination of its contents must be postponed
22     Int,      IV|            till I come to annotate its actual text. The same may
23     Int,      IV|       views. This supposition owes its currency to Müller, who,
24     Not,       1|          ea, quite needlessly, for its insertion is like Cic. Ecquid
25     Not,       1|        Philonia is improbable from its non-appearance elsewhere,
26     Not,       1|           which is often caused by its affinity for quoniam, quidem,
27     Not,       1|          given without the name of its author. Secondly, most MSS.
28     Not,       1|           and is inserted by Halm, its use in 21 makes it more
29     Not,       1|          evidently emended here by its copyist. For the omission
30     Not,       1| unfamiliarity of the Latin word in its philosophical use, in the
31     Not,       1|            which matter throughout its whole extent can suffer
32     Not,       1|           universe, Strato allowed its possibility within, while
33     Not,       1|  possibility within, while denying its existence without (Stob.
34     Not,       1|           exact opposite affirming its existence without, and denying
35     Not,       1|        common reading, but I doubt its correctness. MSS. have ultro
36     Not,       1|           is knowledge which takes its rise in the senses, not
37     Not,       1|            add, with moderns too). Its importance to Plato may
38     Not,       1|       Prose, as are ετυμος and all its derivatives. (Ετυμως means "
39     Not,       1|          Christ) or for suspecting its genuineness (with Halm).
40     Not,       1|       sentence. (The remainder has its own difficulties, which
41     Not,       1|           of Aristotle, who proves its existence in De Coelo I.
42     Not,       1|         naturally link the mind in its origin with the stars which
43     Not,       1|         behind. Ipsum per se: i.e. its whole truth lies in its
44     Not,       1|            its whole truth lies in its own εναργεια, which requires
45     Not,       1|        instead of carrying with it its own evidence, had to pass
46     Not,       2|       might enable us to determine its connection with the dialogue.
47     Not,       2|    whatever appears to account for its transference to Varro I
48     Not,       2|       edition, many indications of its contents are preserved in
49     Not,       2|         the old lex annalis in all its rigour, and yet excepted
50     Not,       2|     excepted his own officers from its operation. Prooemio, which
51     Not,       2|      always has a common verb with its principal clause; a rule
52     Not,       2|            sea, called ξυστος from its polished floor and pillars.
53     Not,       2|    external thing, which impresses its image on the soul as a seal
54     Not,       2|            the thing in itself, in its real being, if then Philo
55     Not,       2|          rests on sense; therefore its possibility depends on the
56     Not,       2|       certainty, and the denial of its absolute presence. Let us
57     Not,       2|           equivalent to ars in all its senses, cf. 114 and De Or.
58     Not,       2|           D.F. III. 33 it receives its proper meaning, for which
59     Not,       2|            sensation and arrive at its source, we should be able
60     Not,       2|     condition is expressed without its consequence. We have an
61     Not,       2|       maintain that each thing has its own peculiar marks (55,
62     Not,       2|     Ironiam: the word was given in its Greek form in 15. Nulla
63     Not,       2|          say everything belongs to its own genus this I will not
64     Not,       2|          lead to stable knowledge, its processes are not applicable
65     Not,       2|          nothing is swept away but its necessary certainty (103).
66     Not,       2|           which a fly covered with its wings, and a ship which
67     Not,       2|          of style, and laud it for its likeness to impromptu. Nobilitatis:
68     Not,       2|            Manut. then restored to its place permensi refertis,
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