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Alphabetical [« »] sensations 52 sense 66 sense-knowledge 1 senses 36 sensible 1 sensibus 51 sensisse 2 | Frequency [« »] 36 never 36 omnibus 36 sensation 36 senses 36 tibi 36 viii 35 29 | Marcus Tullius Cicero Academica Concordances senses |
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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| 19—29. 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