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 1     Pre         |        history of the Academica as could not be readily got from
 2     Pre         |           upon the text to which I could obtain access. The result
 3     Int,       I|           about tyranny63. Nothing could more clearly show that he
 4     Int,      II|          common sense of the world could have most sympathy92. The
 5     Int,      II|           which this practical art could be reared. This is equally
 6     Int,      II|    advantages, might be happy, but could not be the happiest possible102.
 7     Int,      II|          by a sin which the orator could never pardon, for they were
 8     Int,     III|           allow that anything good could come from the school of
 9     Int,     III|   penetrated by the belief that he could thus do his country a real
10     Int,     III|          it was the one service he could render123. He is within
11     Int,     III|            questions in philosophy could not be thoroughly understood
12     Int,      IV|           which books and solitude could scarcely enable him to endure,
13     Int,      IV|            him with inaction, they could not read the numerous difficult
14     Int,      IV|      progress173, shows that there could have been little of anything
15     Int,      IV|         did they possess that they could never even have dreamed
16     Int,      IV|       there were reasons, which he could not disclose in a letter182.
17     Int,      IV|          with a care which nothing could surpass190." The binding
18     Int,      IV|        into circulation until they could meet one another in Rome193.
19     Int,      IV|         απαιδευσια, or else Cicero could not have made Catulus the
20     Int,      IV|       favouring breeze of fortune, could ever inspire either fear
21     Int,      IV|         Oratore shows that Catulus could have had no leaning towards
22     Int,      IV|        Greek literature or society could fail to be well acquainted
23     Int,      IV|        Catulus undoubtedly was247, could view with indifference the
24     Int,      IV|            substance of the speech could have been assigned in the
25     Int,      IV|          Varro, Cicero and Atticus could not have met together at
26     Not,       1|            petebant: how Antiochus could have found this in Plato
27     Not,       1|         phrase prima natura (abl.) could not stand alone, for τα
28     Not,       1|          show that in no other way could Antiochus have maintained
29     Not,       1| extraordinary how edd. (esp Goer.) could have so stumbled over quandam
30     Not,       1|            that nothing but virtue could influence happiness, and
31     Not,       1|            although the possession could not but lead to the practice (
32     Not,       1|           of the reason he thought could not coexist with virtue
33     Not,       1|           do not believe that Cic. could so utterly misunderstand
34     Not,       1|      διανοητικαι αρεται of Arist., could be said to belong to the
35     Not,       1|            error once made, no one could correct it, for there were
36     Not,       1|         responsible for the error, could have escaped it in any way
37     Not,       1|            The notion that iunctos could mean aptos (R. and P. 366)
38     Not,       1|      sceptical criticism before it could be believed. This was, as
39     Not,       1|        arguments of equal strength could be urged in favour of the
40     Not,       2|            teaching of the Academy could only have occurred either
41     Not,       2|          to see where this passage could have been included if not
42     Not,       2|        Sulla sent him to Egypt, he could not be pro quaestor. But
43     Not,       2|        declared that the Academics could not be held to be philosophers
44     Not,       2|         quite impossible that Cic. could have written it. The two
45     Not,       2|          or reality and unreality) could be affirmed of things, though
46     Not,       2|           not of sensations. If we could only pierce through a sensation
47     Not,       2|           Delian breeders of fowls could tell from the appearance
48     Not,       2|   similarity between two phenomena could never be great enough to
49     Not,       2|            sceptics argued that it could. Quod rerum natura non patitur:
50     Not,       2|           is more probable that he could no longer bear the opposition
51     Not,       2|          neuter pronouns like this could adsentiri be followed by
52     Not,       2|         mistaken P. for Q. Geminus could have no infallible mode
53     Not,       2|          that Cic. says is that he could accept the Peripatetic formula,
54     Not,       2|        have wondered how a sceptic could accept his formulae; but
55     Not,       2|           throughout, no one thing could be more or less known than
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