bold = Main text
   Liber, Caput     grey = Comment text

 1     Int,       I| literature, politics and oratory held quite a secondary place
 2     Int,      II|          later forms of doctrine held by these schools is still
 3     Int,      II|       highest respectability had held the most opposite opinions
 4     Int,      II|          in time of peace ethics held the supremacy. In this fact
 5     Int,      II|         Tusculan Disputations he held it to be real. The most
 6     Int,      IV|          year, except when Cinna held the office, may have been
 7     Int,      IV|       and the place where it was held, were indicated. The place
 8     Not,       1|    moribus. All the late schools held that ethics formed the sole
 9     Not,       1|            Sempiterna: Aristotle held this: see II. 119 and N.
10     Not,       1|         which included Aristotle held the doctrine of ιδεαι, and
11     Not,       1|          abandoned the one tenet held by Socrates to be certain;
12     Not,       2|          no argument ought to be held with a sceptic, since argument
13     Not,       2|        forgotten that the Stoics held a sensation to be a real
14     Not,       2|          to be ακαταληπτα, Philo held them to be καταληπτα, and
15     Not,       2|          indeed tells us that he held things to be in their own
16     Not,       2|       the Academics could not be held to be philosophers if they
17     Not,       2|       viderit: see 79, 80. Epic. held all sensation, per se, to
18     Not,       2|      Agere: the dogmatist always held that the sceptic must, if
19     Not,       2|           75). The Cyrenaics too held that they knew nothing about
20     Not,       2|          be seen thus (76). Zeno held strongly that the wise man
21     Not,       2|     means a sceptic, for he also held a γνησιη γνωσις, dealing
22     Not,       2|     against sense-knowledge, but held that real knowledge was
23     Not,       2|       world is a globe (which is held by Plat. in the Tim. and
24     Not,       2|         molestia: which Epicurus held to be the highest pleasure.
25     Not,       2|          They were called by and held under the presidency of
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