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 1     Int,       I|          as head of the Epicurean school.5~At this time (i.e. before
 2     Int,       I|         the monopoly of the Stoic school. For some time Cicero spent
 3     Int,       I|         then head of the Academic school, came to Rome, one of a
 4     Int,       I|         the head of the Epicurean school. In Cicero's later works
 5     Int,       I|      representatives of the Stoic school then at Athens. Nor is any
 6     Int,       I|           of a Stoicised Academic school. Of this teacher, however,
 7     Int,       I|         coryphaeus of the Rhodian school29. Cicero, however, formed
 8     Int,       I|           head of the Peripatetic school50. At this time he was resident
 9     Int,       I|          the most eminent of that school52.~The care of that disordered
10     Int,       I|          to show Rhodes, with its school of eloquence, to the two
11     Int,      II|         concerning any particular school are generally tested by
12     Int,      II|    earlier representatives of the school. Should any discrepancy
13     Int,      II|           were at the head of the school in his day. The criticism
14     Int,      II|   agreement with the New Academic school, and in opposition to all
15     Int,      II|   Academic sips the best of every school85. He roams in the wide
16     Int,      II|          The Academy also was the school which had the most respectable
17     Int,      II|          the ordinary life of the school was carried on. These were
18     Int,      II|          really composed a single school, denoted by the phrase "
19     Int,      II|          exploded and discredited school96.~Cicero's ethics, then,
20     Int,      II|        not much influenced by the school, Cicero generally [xxv]
21     Int,     III|          good could come from the school of Epicurus, preferred to
22     Int,      IV|           leader of the Epicurean school; who were then the most
23     Int,      IV|         old Academico-Peripatetic school was unjustifiable. There
24     Int,      IV|     Academy. How he selected this school from, among the 288 philosophies
25     Not,       1|  harmonious Academico-Peripatetic school, viz. Aristotle, Theophrastus,
26     Not,       1|         certa dogmata of this old school as opposed to the incertitude
27     Not,       1|         of a unity than any other school, the expressions here and
28     Not,       1|         old Academico-Peripatetic school. This may be an oversight,
29     Not,       1|         but to say first that the school (illi, cf. sic tractabatur
30     Not,       1|          distinctive of the Stoic school, though Zeno and Cleanthes
31     Not,       1|         old Academico-Peripatetic school. A closer examination of
32     Not,       1|         old Academico-Peripatetic school. Summary. Arist. crushed
33     Not,       1|         old Academico-Peripatetic school can only be explained by
34     Not,       1|         old Academico-Peripatetic school. Posse esse non corpus:
35     Not,       2|         insists that the Academic school must not be supposed to
36     Not,       2|           stop to inquiry (7). My school is free from the fetters
37     Not,       2|      charges were brought by each school against the other. In Plutarch
38     Not,       2|        think he wished to found a school called by his own name.
39     Not,       2|         as a term of the Cyrenaic school; their great word was παθος.
40     Not,       2|        For a clear account of the school see Zeller's Socrates, for
41     Not,       2|          You wish me to join your school. What am I to do then with
42     Not,       2|           25, 39, 81. Empirici: a school of physicians so called.
43     Not,       2|          and P. 182. The Erctrian school was closely connected with
44     Not,       2|           by action Yet his whole school cannot point to any actual
45     Not,       2| Babylonius in the headship of the school. Archidemus: several times
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