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Alphabetical [« »] doctore 1 doctorem 1 doctrina 2 doctrine 46 doctrines 26 doctrinis 1 doctum 1 | Frequency [« »] 47 view 47 work 46 did 46 doctrine 46 nobis 46 nulla 46 philo | Marcus Tullius Cicero Academica Concordances doctrine |
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1 Pre | As there is no important doctrine of Ancient Philosophy which 2 Int, II| earlier and later forms of doctrine held by these schools is 3 Int, II| As he himself says, the doctrine that absolute knowledge 4 Int, II| admits the purely Stoic doctrine that virtue is one and indivisible104. 5 Int, III| the [xxvi] variations in doctrine which the late Greek schools 6 Int, IV| development of Academic doctrine. The famous books of Philo 7 Int, IV| upon the genuine Carneadean doctrine. These the elder Catulus 8 Not, 1| no fixed tenets, his one doctrine being that wisdom consists 9 Not, 1| clearest view of Aristotle's doctrine is to be got from Schwegler, 10 Not, 1| the formed entity, which doctrine is quite Aristotelian. See 11 Not, 1| view of the history of the doctrine of the four elements may 12 Not, 1| water, dryness to earth. The doctrine of the text follows at once. 13 Not, 1| authority of Aristotle, the doctrine of the infinite subdivisibility 14 Not, 1| 8—9 for αναγκη. Plato's doctrine of αναγκη, which is diametrically 15 Not, 1| included Aristotle held the doctrine of ιδεαι, and next, in 33, 16 Not, 1| Aristotle crushed the same doctrine, appears very absurd. We 17 Not, 1| allowed, to express the Stoic doctrine that, of the αδιαφορα, some 18 Not, 1| Carneades put forward. For the doctrine cf. II. 124, for the expression 19 Not, 2| speech which unfolded the doctrine of the probabile was incorporated 20 Not, 2| positive side of Academic doctrine in the second book. Cic. 21 Not, 2| was to discuss that new doctrine of καταληψις advanced by 22 Not, 2| καταληψις advanced by Zeno. The doctrine of ακαταληψια though present 23 Not, 2| new to him about such a doctrine. The Stoics by their καταληπτικη 24 Not, 2| a more exact view of his doctrine. Modern inquiry has been 25 Not, 2| Nihil interesse: if the doctrine of the Academics were true, 26 Not, 2| impossible; the sceptic doctrine must be provable. Cf. 109 27 Not, 2| Ante videri aliquid for the doctrine cf. 25, for the passive 28 Not, 2| they profess to follow. The doctrine that true and false sensations 29 Not, 2| ιδιωματα of Sextus, the doctrine of course involves the whole 30 Not, 2| other passage where any such doctrine is assigned to a sceptic. 31 Not, 2| it stands in the text the doctrine is absurd, for surely it 32 Not, 2| had an esoteric dogmatic doctrine, must have originated in 33 Not, 2| what proof had he of the doctrine he had so long denied? ( 34 Not, 2| if you grant the Academic doctrine, nihil posse percipi. Secundum 35 Not, 2| sense is impossible, is a doctrine which Socrates would have 36 Not, 2| Sophists. De Platone: the doctrine above mentioned is an absurd 37 Not, 2| must in accordance with his doctrine παντων μετρον ανθρωπος hold 38 Not, 2| Halm, but Cic. states the doctrine as a living one, not throwing 39 Not, 2| ακαταληπτα, i.e. state the doctrine dogmatically, while the 40 Not, 2| sapientem: for this Stoic doctrine see N.D. I. 84, II. 32, 41 Not, 2| Ac. Post. Αντιποδας: this doctrine appears in Philolaus (see 42 Not, 2| course bound up with the doctrine that the universe or the 43 Not, 2| mathematician as holding the same doctrine. It seems also to be found 44 Not, 2| Aristo Chius: for this doctrine of his see R. and P. 358.~§ 45 Not, 2| explanation of this Pythagorean doctrine of Xenocrates is given in 46 Not, 2| ethical development of Eleatic doctrine. Zeller, Socrates 211. Unum