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 1     Ded         |                                 TO~THOSE OF HIS PUPILS~WHO HAVE READ
 2     Pre         |         studied, but especially in those where an attempt is made
 3     Pre         |          My obligations other than those to Halm are sufficiently
 4     Int,       I|          feelings towards him were those of gratitude, esteem, and
 5     Int,       I|           numbered by Cicero among those pupils and admirers of Carneades
 6     Int,       I|           read his works more than those of any other author33. Posidonius
 7     Int,       I|     contained in the first book of those addressed to Atticus, which
 8     Int,       I|         again for the most part at those of his country villas where
 9     Int,      II|           recognised as genuine by those who were at the head of
10     Int,      II|       giving a qualified assent to those which seemed most probable,
11     Int,      II|           Academy and Aristotle80. Those who demand a dogmatic statement
12     Int,      II|           the Academic tenets were those with which the common sense
13     Int,     III|   Philosophy was a sealed study to those who did not know Greek.
14     Int,     III|       early Italian peoples117. To those who objected that philosophy
15     Int,     III|        idleness was misery, and in those evil times he was spurred
16     Int,     III|        cannot be judged a failure. Those who contrive to pronounce
17     Int,      IV|          these two works cannot be those which Cicero describes as
18     Int,      IV|         and the Lucullus are among those genuine Optimates and adherents
19     Int,      IV|      probably extolled, as well as those of his son. The philosophical
20     Int,      IV|      before252. On the other hand, those parts of Lucullus' speech
21     Int,      IV|        with the Old, and also with those ancient philosophers who
22     Int,      IV|           attaches Philo's name to those general New Academic doctrines
23     Not,       1|          Stoic hands and then into those of Antiochus. Adeptum esse
24     Not,       1| practically as dead in his time as those of Thales or Anaxagoras.
25     Not,       1|       quite a different thing from those definitiones nominum just
26     Not,       1|        there seems to be a ref. to those αρχαι της αποδειξεως of
27     Not,       1|        were really in harmony with those of Plato, and were carried
28     Not,       2|       fragm. clearly forms part of those anticipatory sceptical arguments
29     Not,       2|  difficulties of the kind, such as those connected with the bent
30     Not,       2|            striking resemblance to those in Luc. 125 (ut nos nunc
31     Not,       2|            first half of the Luc., those of Book IV. to the second
32     Not,       2|  consulship. What I owed to him in those troublous times I cannot
33     Not,       2|         read much for himself (4). Those enemies of Greek culture
34     Not,       2|       philosophical knowledge (6). Those who hold that the interlocutors
35     Not,       2|     supporters of scepticism (13), Those very philosophers, with
36     Not,       2|  demagogues lie about all but him. Those words need not imply so
37     Not,       2|            views of Philo, and not those of Clitomachus as he usually
38     Not,       2|          perfection of the reason. Those then who deny that any certainty
39     Not,       2|       which are the προληψεις, and those εννοιαι which are the conscious
40     Not,       2|           of Carneades rather than those of Arcesilas; cf. n. on
41     Not,       2|        passage at all analogous to those he quotes, and still prefer
42     Not,       2|            divide perceptions into those which are sensations, and
43     Not,       2|          which are sensations, and those which are deduced from sensations;
44     Not,       2|       absurd to divide things into those which can be perceived (
45     Not,       2|          known with certainty) and those which cannot. Nihil interesse
46     Not,       2|        incapable of distinguishing those visa which proceed from
47     Not,       2| representation of the things, from those which either are mere phantoms
48     Not,       2|         same effect on the mind as those which proceed from realities.
49     Not,       2|            58). Equally absurd are those "probable and undisturbed"
50     Not,       2|           madmen were feebler than those of the waking, the sober
51     Not,       2|           expressions as to define those of aliquis and aliqui, on
52     Not,       2|         visions of this hero, like those of Orestes, are often referred
53     Not,       2|        divisions of visa, one into those capable of being perceived
54     Not,       2|     capable of being perceived and those not so capable, the other
55     Not,       2|     Clitomachus (102). He condemns those who say that sensation is
56     Not,       2|    Carneades as dividing visa into those which can be perceived and
57     Not,       2|         which can be perceived and those which cannot. Is it possible
58     Not,       2|           are more reasonable than those of Antiochus. How, holding
59     Not,       2|   Numberless opinions clash, as do those of Dicaearchus, Plato and
60     Not,       2|    Discedent: a word often used of those vanquished in a fight, cf.
61     Not,       2|              134) Nor can I accept those points in which Antiochus
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