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 1     Int,       I|     naturally recals the example of Socrates, who refused to leave Athens
 2     Int,      II|            his sole [xix] aim, with Socrates, to rid himself and others
 3     Int,      II| distinctively Stoic, but appeals to Socrates as his authority for them105.
 4     Int,      II|           un-Socratic, looking upon Socrates as the apostle of doubt106.
 5     Int,      IV|              Xenophanes, Plato, and Socrates264. But Cicero did not merely
 6       I,      IV|          Tum Varro ita exorsus est: Socrates mihi videtur, id quod constat
 7       I,      IV|          Ita facta est, quod minime Socrates probabat, ars quaedam philosophiae
 8       I,     XII|            illud quidem ipsum, quod Socrates sibi reliquisset: sic omnia
 9      II,       V|           tollendus est et Plato et Socrates: alter, quia reliquit perfectissimam
10      II,       V|            sententiis dissenserunt. Socrates autem de se ipse detrahens
11      II,   XXXIX|             igitur a tali irrisione Socrates, liber Aristo Chius, qui
12     Not,       1|         Exposition, 1518. Summary. Socrates rejected physics and made
13     Not,       1|            the negative position of Socrates and adopted definite tenets,
14     Not,       1|             the Xenophontic view of Socrates, was the popular one in
15     Not,       1|             s Essay on the Worth of Socrates as a Philosopher (trans.
16     Not,       1|            Thirlwall), and Zeller's Socrates and the Socratic Schools,
17     Not,       1|             so far as it relates to Socrates and Plato. Nihil tamen ad
18     Not,       1|     distinctly untrue; see Zeller's Socrates 88, with footnote.~§17.
19     Not,       1|     abandoned the one tenet held by Socrates to be certain; and maintained
20     Not,       1|  Confessionem ignorationis: see 16. Socrates was far from being a sceptic,
21     Not,       1|       really very little older than Socrates (468—399) who died nearly
22     Not,       2|             and P. 165 and Zeller's Socrates and the Socratic Schools,
23     Not,       2|           sciri quicquam potest, ut Socrates docuit, neque opinari, oportet,
24     Not,       2|            knowledge. You said that Socrates and Plato must not be classed
25     Not,       2|            classed with these. Why? Socrates said he knew nothing but
26     Not,       2|     impossible, is a doctrine which Socrates would have left to the Sophists.
27     Not,       2|             the school see Zeller's Socrates, for the illustration of
28     Not,       2|           A.M. VII. 191 (qu. Zeller Socrates 297, R. and P. 165). Adfici
29     Not,       2|            much better to side with Socrates and Aristo, who hold that
30     Not,       2|           Eleatic doctrine. Zeller, Socrates 211. Unum et simile: for
31     Not,       2|    adverterat. Ne ipsi quidem: even Socrates, Antisthenes and Diogenes
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