bold = Main text
   Liber, Caput     grey = Comment text

 1     Not,       1|      substance which can affect the senses. The same expression is
 2     Not,       1| Peripatetics based knowledge on the senses, they did not make the senses
 3     Not,       1|       senses, they did not make the senses the criterion of truth,
 4     Not,       1|             real and true (30). The senses they thought heavy and clogged
 5     Not,       1|         which takes its rise in the senses, not the criterion of truth,
 6     Not,       2|    invalidating the evidence of the senses.~7. This passage has the
 7     Not,       2|         shows how untrustworthy the senses are. A similar argument
 8     Not,       2|          deceptive character of the senses. To these should probably
 9     Not,       2|            of these assaults on the senses must have been summed up
10     Not,       2|            attempt to show that the senses were trustworthy, in the
11     Not,       2|             argument hostile to the senses from the consideration of
12     Not,       2|          preliminary assault on the senses made by Cic. in the second
13     Not,       2|            the deceptiveness of the senses, I cannot accede to his
14     Not,       2|           Aug. to the attack on the senses by Cic. in Book II. are
15     Not,       2|              1929. Summary. If the senses are healthy and unimpaired,
16     Not,       2|            impede the action of the senses must always be removed,
17     Not,       2|           What power the cultivated senses of painters and musicians
18     Not,       2|         things, (1) one of the five senses, (2) an individual act of
19     Not,       2|        words were used in different senses by the dogmatist and the
20     Not,       2|           purpose the mind uses the senses, and so gradually arrives
21     Not,       2|             be attained through the senses, throw the whole of life
22     Not,       2|        equivalent to ars in all its senses, cf. 114 and De Or. II.
23     Not,       2|     supposed to rob people of their senses. Cedere: cf. εικειν, ειξις
24     Not,       2|         difficulties concerning the senses and general experience.
25     Not,       2|     arguments yesterday against the senses. You are thus acting like
26     Not,       2|            anything more than sound senses. He would have a bad time
27     Not,       2|          But, you say, art aids the senses. So we cannot see or hear
28     Not,       2|          nature has constructed the senses! (86) But about physics
29     Not,       2|          now to advance against the senses arguments drawn from Chrysippus
30     Not,       2|         case is overthrown, yet his senses are true quotha!" (For this
31     Not,       2|    Antiocheans, we desire no better senses than we have." Well you
32     Not,       2|           of Chrysippus against the senses, quoted the address of Andromache
33     Not,       2|              Arguments aimed at the senses concern the first division
34     Not,       2|           themselves admit that the senses are often deceived. Put
35     Not,       2|  disagreement (in either of the two senses above noticed), another
36     Not,       2|           metaphorical or unnatural senses, see Quint. X. 1, 12. This
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA1) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2009. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License