bold = Main text
   Liber, Caput     grey = Comment text

 1     Pre         |          some others of the less known and less edited portions
 2     Int,       I|         of Carneades whom he had known18. Phaedrus was now at Athens,
 3     Int,       I|         he does not seem to have known either personally. ~From
 4     Int,      IV|          Finibus, to have become known to a tolerably large circle
 5     Int,      IV|          incongruity between the known attainments of Catulus and
 6     Int,      IV|         Quintilian seems to have known the first edition very well206,
 7     Int,      IV|          Lucullus227. It is well known that in the arrangement
 8     Int,      IV|        imitated238, and was well known as a wit and writer of epigrams239.~
 9     Int,      IV|          Philo were probably not known to Catulus248.~I now proceed
10     Int,      IV|        attainments, are too well known to need mention here. He
11     Int,      IV| Antiochus286. Nearly all that is known of the learning of Lucullus
12     Not,       1|        to fit it all in with the known opinions of old Academics
13     Not,       1|     Crates and Crantor little is known. Polemonem ... Zeno et Arcesilas:
14     Not,       1|         of the cardinal and best known doctrines of Stoicism, as
15     Not,       1|         passages which were well known to Cic. and had taken great
16     Not,       2|      Heraclitus Tyrius: scarcely known except from this passage.
17     Not,       2|           Agnon and Hagnon being known, if known at all, from these
18     Not,       2|       and Hagnon being known, if known at all, from these two passages
19     Not,       2|      between the unknown and the known. Eo, quo minime volt: several
20     Not,       2|        28. Perceptum: thoroughly known and grasped. Similar arguments
21     Not,       2|        absurd, a thing cannot be known at all unless by such marks
22     Not,       2|          by which a thing may be known. Their "probability" then
23     Not,       2|        used to mean "a certainly known sensation."]~§40. Quasi
24     Not,       2|          which can be perceived (known with certainty) and those
25     Not,       2|      capable of being thoroughly known and distinguished from others (
26     Not,       2|         the definition is firmly known, the thing, which is more
27     Not,       2|          important, must also be known. In illa vera we have a
28     Not,       2|          based on the assumption known to be Stoic, omnia deum
29     Not,       2|          of things perceived and known." The dogmatist theory of
30     Not,       2|          at discord with what is known of the tenets of the later
31     Not,       2|         hold that nothing can be known about them! (123) Who knows
32     Not,       2|      thing could be more or less known than another. Nunc lucere:
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