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 1     Int,       I|       three of the most eminent philosophers of the age, who represented
 2     Int,       I|         in the society of Greek philosophers and rhetoricians. The first
 3     Int,       I|      loved him beyond all other philosophers19, Cicero spent much time
 4     Int,       I|        him as eminent among the philosophers of the time, both for talent
 5     Int,       I|   cultivated and keenest of the philosophers of the age26. A considerable
 6     Int,       I|     writers, and especially the philosophers. During the period then,
 7     Int,       I|  acquaintance with living Greek philosophers36. His long lack of leisure
 8     Int,       I| modelled on Plato and the older philosophers of the Socratic schools.~
 9     Int,       I|       his friendship with other philosophers, among them Xeno the friend
10     Int,      II|         avoid this arrogance73. Philosophers of the highest respectability
11     Int,      II|         by nearly all the later philosophers as of overwhelming importance
12     Int,      II|    calls them "great and famous philosophers99," and he frequently speaks
13     Int,      II|         should be the only true philosophers [xxii] after all100. There
14     Int,      II|      question which divided the philosophers of the time was, whether
15     Int,     III|         every topic which Greek philosophers were accustomed to treat131.
16     Int,      IV|         also with those ancient philosophers who preceded Plato. Lucullus,
17     Not,       1|        may surely imitate Greek philosophers as well as Greek poets and
18     Not,       1|     would then be "to write for philosophers," which would agree with
19     Not,       1|       Or. III. 67. Five ancient philosophers are generally included in
20     Not,       2|         appealing to famous old philosophers as supporters of scepticism (
21     Not,       2|     scepticism (13), Those very philosophers, with the exception of Empedocles,
22     Not,       2|         could not be held to be philosophers if they had not even confidence
23     Not,       2|        service the old physical philosophers, though ordinarily none
24     Not,       2|      contradictions of physical philosophers were the constant sport
25     Not,       2|     Democritus, and Metrodorus, philosophers of the highest position,
26     Not,       2|       narrating the opinions of philosophers, but no ex. so strong as
27     Not,       2|    given the crotchets of other philosophers about φυσικη, proceeds to
28     Not,       2|       contention is there among philosophers about the ethical standard!
29     Not,       2|     order to ridicule these two philosophers, who are playfully described
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