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 1     Pre         |        where the philosophical works of Cicero are studied, but
 2     Pre         |      of Cicero's philosophical works published in 1861 under
 3     Pre         |     second edition of Cicero's works, which was interrupted by
 4     Pre         |        the edition of Cicero's works by himself and Kayser. In
 5     Pre         |      of Cicero's philosophical works with quite the purpose which
 6     Int,       I|        a student. In his later works he often dwells on his youthful
 7     Int,       I|        lettres. Many ambitious works in the last two departments
 8     Int,       I|      school. In Cicero's later works there are several references
 9     Int,       I|     earlier teacher. His later works, however, make it evident
10     Int,       I|  Cicero makes reference in his works oftener than to any other
11     Int,       I|      tells us that he read his works more than those of any other
12     Int,       I|       well acquainted with the works of the former, he does not
13     Int,       I|    reading with enthusiasm the works of Dicaearchus, and keeping
14     Int,       I|       literature, and that his works were extempore paraphrases
15     Int,       I|       the actual philosophical works of Cicero, is sufficient
16     Int,       I|    from a minute survey of his works, and a comparison of them
17     Int,      II|      On the other hand, in the works which Cicero had written
18     Int,      II|       on its ethical side. The works themselves, moreover, were
19     Int,      II|       Stoic in tone of all his works are the Tusculan Disputations
20     Int,      II|       which the most important works of Aristotle had fallen111.
21     Int,     III|      writing his philosophical works.~It is usual to charge Cicero
22     Int,     III|        score to depreciate his works. The charge is true, but
23     Int,     III|      is of any value, Cicero's works are of equal value, for
24     Int,     III|   There is scarcely one of his works (if we except the third
25     Int,     III|        necessity there was for works on philosophy in Latin.~
26     Int,     III|        his first philosophical works to encourage Cicero to proceed.
27     Int,     III|     stated in the two earliest works which we possess, the Academica
28     Int,     III| encyclopaedia133. The only two works strictly philosophical,
29     Int,     III|      list of the philosophical works of Cicero, and the dates
30     Int,      IV|    read the numerous difficult works on which he has been engaged
31     Int,      IV|  grounds I hold that these two works cannot be those which Cicero
32     Int,      IV|   style and tone, than any two works of Cicero, excepting perhaps
33     Int,      IV|     Cicero to find room in his works for some mention of Varro171.
34     Int,      IV|    Varro171. The nature of the works on which our author was
35     Int,      IV|       drawn from the published works and oral teaching of Antiochus.~
36     Int,      IV|        Natura Deorum and other works are shadowed forth284. In
37     Int,      IV|    Cicero to be drawn from the works of Antiochus286. Nearly
38     Int,      IV|       for once admits into his works an impossibility in fact.
39     Not,       1|      thus used in Cic.'s phil. works. Utramque vim virtutem:
40     Not,       1|        of Cic.'s philosophical works (1861), on T.D. III. 6.
41     Not,       1|        to φυσις in his ethical works. The abstract conception
42     Not,       1|      of at least seven ethical works, while Stob. II. 6, 4 quotes
43     Not,       1|       to confirm it, while the works of Aristotle had fallen
44     Not,       1|     the absence of Aristotle's works, to conclude that the αεικινητος
45     Not,       1|   recovery of Aristotle's lost works, which did not happen till
46     Not,       1| momenta)~§46. Platonem: to his works both dogmatists and sceptics
47     Not,       2|     gathered from the bishop's works. In Aug. Contr. Ac. II.
48     Not,       2| forensem: the early oratorical works may fairly be said to have
49     Not,       2|     mention of Philo's ethical works at the outset of Stobaeus'
50     Not,       2|        ed of the philosophical works, proposed to read nulla
51     Not,       2|      the same theme in all his works (74). Now do you see that
52     Not,       2|    titles of numerous distinct works of his on the Sorites and
53     Not,       2|       ed. of the philosophical works, 1861) Madv. omits the word
54     Not,       2|     the kind in the Oratorical works. In our passage, the difficulty
55     Not,       2| applying this criticism to the works of Aristotle which we possess.
56     Not,       2|        Halm's ed. of the Phil. works (1861), p. 994. Quasi: =
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