bold = Main text
   Liber, Caput     grey = Comment text

 1     Not,       1|       an intelligent account of action and duty (23).~§19. Ratio
 2     Not,       1|        cut away the ground from action and duty, see II. 24. Recti
 3     Not,       1|          Though the terms right action and sin belong only to virtue
 4     Not,       1|        there was an appropriate action (officium) and an inappropriate,
 5     Not,       2|         of the soul through the action of some external thing,
 6     Not,       2|         Things which impede the action of the senses must always
 7     Not,       2|    possible, is seen from moral action. Who would act, if the things
 8     Not,       2|        things on which he takes action might prove to be false? (
 9     Not,       2|         he some ground on which action can proceed (24). Credence
10     Not,       2|        thing which impels us to action, otherwise action is impossible (
11     Not,       2|         us to action, otherwise action is impossible (25). The
12     Not,       2|       assent does away with all action in life (38, 39).~§37. Explicabamus:
13     Not,       2| fatalists as a rule, made moral action depend on the freedom of
14     Not,       2|   applied to the same course of action in D.F. III. 31. Cogitatione: "
15     Not,       2|     instantaneous nature of the action. Chrysippo: he spent so
16     Not,       2|         to serve as a basis for action. Hermann's neu cui labours
17     Not,       2|    point is that without assent action is impossible (108). But
18     Not,       2|      Zeno used to illustrate by action Yet his whole school cannot
19     Not,       2|        παθος. For this symbolic action of Zeno cf. D.F. II. 18,
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