bold = Main text
   Liber, Caput     grey = Comment text

 1     Pre         | difficult and so rarely edited I cannot hope to have escaped errors,
 2     Int,     III|         question arises, which I cannot here discuss, as to the
 3     Int,     III|         the true light, his work cannot be judged a failure. Those
 4     Int,      IV|        hold that these two works cannot be those which Cicero describes
 5     Int,      IV|          truth on this point, it cannot be disputed that the Hortensius
 6     Int,      IV|         point. In this opinion I cannot concur. Cicero never appears
 7     Int,      IV|          an Antiochean as Brutus cannot have been reduced to the
 8     Not,       1|      strong for the passage, and cannot be supported by 12, Brut.
 9     Not,       1|     Goerenz's note, is wild, and cannot be justified by D.F. V.
10     Not,       1|        195). The division itself cannot be traced farther back than
11     Not,       1|       viz. that Force and Matter cannot actually exist apart, but
12     Not,       1|          passages referred to. I cannot here point out the difference
13     Not,       1|        in qua of the MSS., which cannot be defended. Orelli's reference
14     Not,       1|     reads elegere for elidere, I cannot believe that he is right).
15     Not,       1|     presence or absence of which cannot affect happiness. The Stoics
16     Not,       1|       into a strange oblivion. I cannot here give an exhaustive
17     Not,       2|         battle against criminals cannot be maintained, so after
18     Not,       2|   deceptiveness of the senses, I cannot accede to his arrangement;
19     Not,       2|          those troublous times I cannot now tell (3). He was not
20     Not,       2|       this see Introd. p. 50. It cannot mean what Goer. makes it
21     Not,       2|      illa in the former sentence cannot be the subj. of the verb,
22     Not,       2|      denotes the character which cannot recognise a defeat in argument
23     Not,       2|          useless, philosophy too cannot exist unless her dogmas
24     Not,       2|            Some sceptics say "we cannot help it." Others distinguish
25     Not,       2|          This is absurd, a thing cannot be known at all unless by
26     Not,       2|          of appearances, and you cannot be sure of uniting each
27     Not,       2|       same form by other things, cannot be partly capable of being
28     Not,       2|          partly false, the false cannot of course be real perceptions,
29     Not,       2|     indistinguishable from false cannot be partly perceptions, partly
30     Not,       2|       made, (1) false sensations cannot be perceptions, (2) sensations
31     Not,       2|    indistinguishable from false, cannot be partly perceptions, partly
32     Not,       2|      which they show that credit cannot be given to either class (
33     Not,       2|        has one of the sensations cannot tell from which of the two
34     Not,       2|       certainty) and those which cannot. Nihil interesse autem:
35     Not,       2|          sensation or not. As we cannot do this, it is wrong to
36     Not,       2|     define, for (1) a definition cannot be a definition of two things, (
37     Not,       2|       the question, "probably it cannot, but I will not affirm it."
38     Not,       2|       one of them is present, it cannot be distinguished from the
39     Not,       2|       attempts no elucidation, I cannot be certain.]~§§5463. Summary.
40     Not,       2|      enough that human faculties cannot distinguish between them.
41     Not,       2|       art aids the senses. So we cannot see or hear without art,
42     Not,       2|          of blinking facts which cannot be disproved, see 19. Quod
43     Not,       2|        9198. Summary: Dialectic cannot lead to stable knowledge,
44     Not,       2|          you refrain because you cannot answer, your knowledge fails
45     Not,       2|       his art can do and what it cannot. Very similar arguments
46     Not,       2|          truth of phenomena, and cannot prove it. This was clearly
47     Not,       2|       etc. grains make a heap. B cannot always reply "No." When
48     Not,       2|           which Bait. retains. I cannot believe the phrase primum
49     Not,       2|        perceived and those which cannot. Is it possible that any
50     Not,       2|        are common in Cic., and I cannot follow Halm in altering
51     Not,       2|         the Old Academy? (113) I cannot tolerate your assumption
52     Not,       2|          argued that that letter cannot be genuine, since in it
53     Not,       2|        of pleasure and virtue, I cannot avoid being moved by both,
54     Not,       2|     argues in T.D. V. that there cannot be degrees in happiness.
55     Not,       2|         Dialecticians themselves cannot agree about the very elements
56     Not,       2|      action Yet his whole school cannot point to any actual sapiens (
57     Not,       2|     Opiniosissimi: so the MSS. I cannot think that the word is wrong,
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