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  1     Pre              |            may be said to be founded on that of Halm which appeared
  2     Pre              |           which is thus made to rest on memory alone. I have therefore
  3     Pre              |             best teaching of Madvig, on whose foundation every succeeding
  4     Int,       I     |          Greeks who fled from Athens on the approach of its siege
  5     Int,       I     |          later works he often dwells on his youthful devotion to
  6     Int,       I     |        unwise to lay too much stress on the intimate connection [
  7     Int,       I     |       written by him at this period. On Sulla's return to the city
  8     Int,       I     |             this theory, which rests on no better evidence than
  9     Int,       I     |          sufficient here to say that on the main point which was
 10     Int,       I     |             that he set a high value on the abilities and the learning
 11     Int,       I     |            Posidonius being modelled on Isocrates and Aristotle;
 12     Int,       I     |              Aristotle; and the poem on his consulship, of which
 13     Int,       I     |          dwell with greater emphasis on these facts, because of
 14     Int,       I     |          year, he was busily engaged on the De Oratore, a work which
 15     Int,       I     |            work professedly modelled on Plato and the older philosophers
 16     Int,       I     |             the year 51 Cicero, then on his way to Cilicia, revisited
 17     Int,       I     |         merit then resident there49. On the journey from Athens
 18     Int,       I     |              the day, and of placing on them fulsome inscriptions.
 19     Int,       I     |              hold upon his mind, and on his way home from Cilicia
 20     Int,       I     |       Cilicia he spoke of conferring on the city some signal favour55.
 21     Int,       I     |             the friend of Atticus58.~On Cicero's return to Italy
 22     Int,       I     |           charge made by some people on the publication of his first
 23     Int,       I     |    philosophy, by the assertion that on the contrary nothing had
 24     Int,       I     |   partizanship, and prejudices based on facts irrelevant to the
 25     Int,      II     |           will be seen from my notes on several passages of the
 26     Int,      II     |            with equal persuasiveness on both sides of a case. It
 27     Int,      II     |           the most opposite opinions on the same subjects. To withhold
 28     Int,      II     |            by his former statements, on the score that he is an
 29     Int,      II     |       estimable as supplying a basis on which this practical art
 30     Int,      II     |            of the school was carried on. These were useful chiefly
 31     Int,      II     |            his followers, maintained on logical grounds, to deal
 32     Int,      II     |            to deal much with ethics. On the other hand, in the works
 33     Int,      II     |              philosophy, it had been on its ethical side. The works
 34     Int,      II     |              when the dialogue turns on a moral question, he begs
 35     Int,      II     |           about the Stoic utterances on morality, more suited to
 36     Int,      II     |           dialectic repelled him101. On moral questions, therefore,
 37     Int,      II     |             the apostle of doubt106. On the whole Cicero was more
 38     Int,      II     |             It must be admitted that on some points Cicero was inconsistent.
 39     Int,     III     |    originality as a philosopher, and on that score to depreciate
 40     Int,     III     |           still absurd, for it rests on a misconception, not merely
 41     Int,     III     |             no unimportant influence on society and on the Christian
 42     Int,     III     |             influence on society and on the Christian religion itself.~
 43     Int,     III     |         philosophy had left its mark on the early Italian peoples117.
 44     Int,     III     |       pursuit of philosophy, already on the wane in Greece, Cicero
 45     Int,     III     |            evil times he was spurred on to exertion by the deepest
 46     Int,     III     |             that Cicero should write on other subjects129. To these
 47     Int,     III     |        necessity there was for works on philosophy in Latin.~Still,
 48     Int,     III     |             even original criticisms on its history. The only thing
 49     Int,     III     |             De Consolatione, founded on Crantor's book, περι πενθους,
 50     Int,      IV     |            History of the Academica.~On the death of Tullia, which
 51     Int,      IV     |              was pleasantly situated on the Latin coast between
 52     Int,      IV     |            It was his wont to depend on Atticus very much for historical
 53     Int,      IV     |         imply that he had determined on some new work to which our
 54     Int,      IV     |             numerous difficult works on which he has been engaged
 55     Int,      IV     |     published before the De Finibus. On all these grounds I hold
 56     Int,      IV     |                Whatever be the truth on this point, it cannot be
 57     Int,      IV     |          Academica Priora is carried on at Hortensius' villa near
 58     Int,      IV     |      Tusculum was one from Varro166.~On the 23rd July, Cicero left
 59     Int,      IV     |             been his intention to go on to Arpinum168. He seems
 60     Int,      IV     |           for the first thing he did on his arrival was to transfer
 61     Int,      IV     |              was speedily cast aside on the receipt of a letter
 62     Int,      IV     |              The nature of the works on which our author was then
 63     Int,      IV     |       request172. Varro had promised on his side, full two years
 64     Int,      IV     |     re-editing was vigorously pushed on, Cicero had constant doubts
 65     Int,      IV     |        effect the work might produce on the public. This notion
 66     Int,      IV     |         asking for more information, on this point: was it Brutus
 67     Int,      IV     |             the donor till they were on the point of being actually
 68     Int,      IV     |           tells us that it extended, on the whole, to greater length
 69     Int,      IV(187)|            12, §3. I may here remark on the absurdity of the dates
 70     Int,      IV     |             of Antiochus. 0 Academy, on the wing as thou wert ever
 71     Int,      IV     |        hither, now thither!" Atticus on his part "shuddered" at
 72     Int,      IV     |              Cicero was hard at work on the Tusculan Disputations198.
 73     Int,      IV     |              xliii] meliora." Still, on every occasion which offered,
 74     Int,      IV     |            style, it is very evident on a comparison of all the
 75     Int,      IV     |           very high value was placed on the learning of the son213.
 76     Int,      IV     |             law, and asks the people on whom they would rely if
 77     Int,      IV     |        answer with one [xlvi] voice "On you217." He alone was bold
 78     Int,      IV     |        enough to rebuke the follies, on the one hand, of the mob,
 79     Int,      IV     |            the one hand, of the mob, on the other, of the senate218.
 80     Int,      IV     |              was the first to confer on Cicero the greatest glory
 81     Int,      IV     |              made to cast its lustre on the younger. Cicero's glorious
 82     Int,      IV     |       language which Cicero lavishes on the same theme elsewhere.
 83     Int,      IV     |             is started which touches on Greek literature and philosophy.
 84     Int,      IV     |              xlix] high commendation on the early sophists234. The
 85     Int,      IV     |            touched only very lightly on the negative Academic arguments,
 86     Int,      IV     |      discourse of the day before252. On the other hand, those parts
 87     Int,      IV     |    commendation bestowed by Lucullus on the way in which the probabile
 88     Int,      IV     |          imply such a bare statement on the part of the latter of
 89     Int,      IV     |     answering a speech already made. On the view I have taken, there
 90     Int,      IV     |              probably also commented on the headlong rashness with
 91     Int,      IV(273)|            will appear from my notes on the Lucullus.~
 92     Int,      IV     |             Bauli was a little place on the gulf of Baiae, close
 93     Int,      IV     |           Tusculum has left its mark on the last section of the
 94     Int,      IV     |              reported by Atticus299. On Cicero's return from exile,
 95     Int,      IV     |       curious in Augustine. My notes on the Academica Posteriora
 96     Not,       1     |            again begs Varro to write on philosophy (912). Varro
 97     Not,       1     |            Varro putting the request on one side charges Cic. with
 98     Not,       1     |            Antiochus as an authority on the other side. This leads
 99     Not,       1     |             This leads to a proposal on the part of Cic. to discuss
100     Not,       1     |          Cicero's style (see my note on 25 quanta id magis). Some
101     Not,       1     |             14, III. 8, also my note on 14. Atque ea: Halm brackets
102     Not,       1     |           spelling percunctari rests on false derivation (Corss.
103     Not,       1     |          followed by Baiter has ars; on the other hand Bentley (
104     Not,       1     |         Definiunt ... partiuntur: n. on 32. Interrogatione: Faber
105     Not,       1     |        ρητορικη and διαλεκτικη; note on 32. Et oratorum etiam: Man.,
106     Not,       1     |            the kind after haec ipsa. On every ground the reading
107     Not,       1     |       ignorance of geometry see note on II. 123] Illi enim simpliciter: "
108     Not,       1     |             Pecudis et hominis: note on II. 139.~§7. Sive sequare ...
109     Not,       1     |              rule requires deducere, on the other hand cf. Ad Herennium
110     Not,       1     |         regionum, locorum, dependent on the accusatives, nomina,
111     Not,       1     |            is not necessary to force on Cic. this formally accurate
112     Not,       1     |            and procuratio see Jordan on Pro Caecina 55. Implacatum
113     Not,       1     |            483, approves the reading on the curious ground that
114     Not,       1     |          rarely omits esse, see note on II. 77, for Cicero's supposed
115     Not,       1     |           alienum putas, a variation on the common si placet, si
116     Not,       1     |             the passive verb depends on the degree to which natura
117     Not,       1     |              141. To form an opinion on this difficult question
118     Not,       1     |          read Schleiermacher's Essay on the Worth of Socrates as
119     Not,       1     |          philosophical works (1861), on T.D. III. 6. Varie et copiose
120     Not,       1     |      understanding of which see note on II. 74. Ab Apolline, Plato
121     Not,       1     |           his theory almost entirely on the ethical resemblances
122     Not,       1     |               Plenum ac refertam: n. on 11. Dubitationem: Halm with
123     Not,       1     |               about which more in n. on 36. The Platonic and Aristotelian
124     Not,       1     |             omission of me, cf. note on 7.~§§1923. Part II. of
125     Not,       1     |              to which add T.D. V. 21 On the other hand cf. II. 22,
126     Not,       1     |             from founding his system on the abstract φυσις, that
127     Not,       1     |               cf. also Aug. VIII. 8. On the Antiochean finis see
128     Not,       1     |    Antiochean finis see more in note on 22. Corporis alia: for ellipse
129     Not,       1     |              ellipse of bona, see n. on 13. Ponebant esse: n. on
130     Not,       1     |             on 13. Ponebant esse: n. on 36. In toto in partibus:
131     Not,       1     |              inscr. of the Republic. On the other hand only pulcrai,
132     Not,       1     |           frequent at an early time. On the tendency to aspirate
133     Not,       1     |             V. 38, and Madvig's note on D.F. II. 88. Faber quotes
134     Not,       1     |             Epicureans. Forma see n. on 33.~§§2429. Part III of
135     Not,       1     |            When force impresses form on the formless matter, it
136     Not,       1     |              27). Force or form acts on the formless matter and
137     Not,       1     |              αναγκαιον ειναι που τοον ‛απαν εν τινι τοπω. For
138     Not,       1     |         early as Isocrates. See Cic. on metaphor, De Or. III. 153
139     Not,       1     |              Quintum genus: the note on this, referred to in Introd.
140     Not,       1     |         should read Grote's comments on the passages referred to.
141     Not,       1     |           history of ancient opinion on this subject is important,
142     Not,       1     |              motion and is ever thus on the move." Ultro citroque
143     Not,       1     |         where there is a quaint jest on the subject), Zeller 167
144     Not,       1     |             15. Nihil aliter possit: on posse for posse fieri see
145     Not,       1     |         Peripatetics based knowledge on the senses, they did not
146     Not,       1     |           flux. Knowledge based only on sense was therefore mere
147     Not,       1     |         would put a separate meaning on the word notio. Επιστημη
148     Not,       1     |             the title of their books on the subject preserved by
149     Not,       1     |         tradebatur: so Halm improves on Madvig's ita for in qua
150     Not,       1     |              mere verbal alterations on the old scheme (36, 37).
151     Not,       1     |            Atticus of course. Goer., on account of the omission
152     Not,       1     |              G. alone, and evidently on his own conjecture, inserts
153     Not,       1     |          other close parallels in n. on II. 37. Nervos ... inciderit:
154     Not,       1     |           value). (Madv. in his note on that passage coins the word
155     Not,       1     |            the whole of the chapters on Stoic ethics in Zeller and
156     Not,       1     |           save Cicero's consistency. On the other hand, I do not
157     Not,       1     |            passages where he touches on the theory any trace of
158     Not,       1     |              thoughts having drifted on rapidly to the vices which
159     Not,       1     |            these virtues.~I now pass on to a second class of difficulties.
160     Not,       1     |      surprise us when we reflect (1) on the excessive difficulty
161     Not,       1     |              I have already observed on 36; (2) on the strong negative
162     Not,       1     |          already observed on 36; (2) on the strong negative meaning
163     Not,       1     |            aid in the notes of Madv. on the passages of the D.F.
164     Not,       1     |              but a civil war carried on in one and the same country.
165     Not,       1     |           note of Wesenberg, printed on p. 324 of the same volume
166     Not,       1     |             22, 41, 65, D.F. IV. 12. On this last passage Madv.
167     Not,       1     |             and had taken great hold on his mind One from the Phaedrus
168     Not,       1     |              Plato and Arist. looked on as divine (cf. Somn. Scip.
169     Not,       1     |      Epicurean, and Academic, see n. on II. 17. Earum rerum: only
170     Not,       1     |      comprehensibile. Goerenz's note on these words is worth reading
171     Not,       1     |           the reason must generalize on separate sensations and
172     Not,       1     |            proof. (See Grote's Essay on the Origin of Knowledge,
173     Not,       1     |          Zeller 87. More information on the subject-matter of this
174     Not,       1     |            will be found in my notes on the first part of the Lucullus.
175     Not,       1     |              Plato, and were carried on by Carneades (46).~§43.
176     Not,       1     |        before a consonant; see Munro on Lucr. I. 130. Verum esse [
177     Not,       1     |               for these words see n. on II. 14. The sincerity of
178     Not,       1     |              Cic. supposes; see note on II. 74. Et iam ante Socratem:
179     Not,       1     |           for Democritus see my note on II. 73, for Empedocles on
180     Not,       1     |            on II. 73, for Empedocles on II. 74, for Anaxagoras on
181     Not,       1     |            on II. 74, for Anaxagoras on II. 72. Nihil cognosci,
182     Not,       1     |         difficulty; Πλατων πολυφωνος ων, ουχ ‛ως τινες οιονται πολυδοξος.
183     Not,       2     |                                NOTES ON THE FRAGMENTS.~BOOK I.~1.
184     Not,       2     |              is really not level.~4. On this I have nothing to remark.~
185     Not,       2     |             pass different judgments on one and the same odour.
186     Not,       2     |             result of these assaults on the senses must have been
187     Not,       2     |            as evidence. (In Luc. 81, on the other hand, Cic. drew
188     Not,       2     |           visible from Varro's villa on the Lucrine.~14. The passion
189     Not,       2     |  perspicuitas as in Luc. 17.~19. See on Luc. 57.~BOOK IV.~Further
190     Not,       2     |              IV.~Further information on all these passages will
191     Not,       2     |            will be found in my notes on the parallel passages of
192     Not,       2     |              the preliminary assault on the senses made by Cic.
193     Not,       2     |              a stock which Cic. kept on hand ready made? (Cf. Ad
194     Not,       2     |            had so great an influence on the culture and opinions
195     Not,       2     |      Allusions in Aug. to the attack on the senses by Cic. in Book
196     Not,       2     |             better place in my notes on the latter, but merely give
197     Not,       2     |            man, was absent from Rome on public service too long
198     Not,       2     |          Catulus (9). Catulus called on Lucullus to defend the doctrines
199     Not,       2     |       improbable. Hodie: Drakenborch on Livy V. 27 wants to read
200     Not,       2     |           and does not modify hodie. On this subject see Madv. Opuscula
201     Not,       2     |            holds of quamquam, see n. on I. 5. Calumnia: properly
202     Not,       2     |              quam ... communicem: n. on 23.~§4. Sunt ... celebrata:
203     Not,       2     |           qua, Halm refers to Bentl. on Hor. Sat. I. 6, 15. A passage
204     Not,       2     |           well as Bait., retains it. On the retention or omission
205     Not,       2     |          followed by genitive see n. on I. 33. Non ita decoram:
206     Not,       2     |           dicere is used, and cf. n. on 101. Legatione: to the kings
207     Not,       2     |          Antiquissimi et doctissimi: on the other hand recentissima
208     Not,       2     |          Exprimant: "embody," cf. n. on I. 19.~§8. Probabilia: πιθανα,
209     Not,       2     |              of fact they did decide on a single hearing," etc.
210     Not,       2     |  προμανθανειν, which means "to learn on and on, to learn by degrees" (
211     Not,       2     |         which means "to learn on and on, to learn by degrees" (cf.
212     Not,       2     |              pillars. Consedimus: n. on I. 14.~§10. Servatam oportuit:
213     Not,       2     |        overdoes the attempt to force on his readers a belief in
214     Not,       2     |              name Tertinius is found on Inscr. One good MS. has
215     Not,       2     |          Ursinus pointed out, occurs on denarii of the gens Creperia.
216     Not,       2     |         marginal explanation foisted on the text. As to the statements
217     Not,       2     |         seems unknown. Negat: see n. on 18. Lenior: some MSS. levior,
218     Not,       2     |          Gruter brackets these words on the ground that the statement
219     Not,       2     |             for Democritus, as Madv. on D.F. I. 20 remarks, cf.
220     Not,       2     |           Quale sit: the emphasis is on sit, the sceptic regards
221     Not,       2     |               but one has agnosceret on the margin; see n. on 88.
222     Not,       2     |     agnosceret on the margin; see n. on 88. Fannius: in his "Annals."
223     Not,       2     |              T.D. III. 69 and Arist. on the progress of philosophy
224     Not,       2     |        Zenoni ... obtrectans: see n. on I. 34. These charges were
225     Not,       2     |           Acad. II. 14, 15 and notes on fragm. 2 and 35 of the Academica
226     Not,       2     |             Immutatione verborum: n. on I. 33. This phrase has also
227     Not,       2     |              given. Definitiones: n. on 18. Tenebras obducere: such
228     Not,       2     |             to the Academics, cf. n. on 14, 66, also I. 44 and D.F.
229     Not,       2     |           καταληπτον is unnecessary, on account of the negative
230     Not,       2     |            which impresses its image on the soul as a seal does
231     Not,       2     |              the soul as a seal does on wax, cf. Zeller 76 and 77
232     Not,       2     |             possibility of knowledge on a ground quite different
233     Not,       2     |               υπαρχοντος), cf. my n. on the passage. Thus defined,
234     Not,       2     |         pronounce definite judgments on phenomena. (See 78 of this
235     Not,       2     |               if I may so call them, on all hands it was allowed
236     Not,       2     |           knowledge ultimately rests on sense; therefore its possibility
237     Not,       2     |              its possibility depends on the truth of the individual
238     Not,       2     |             would act, if the things on which he takes action might
239     Not,       2     |            There must he some ground on which action can proceed (
240     Not,       2     |              treats this as a gloss: on the other hand I think it
241     Not,       2     |              Madvig's strong remarks on Goerenz's note here (D.F.
242     Not,       2     |            and Wesenberg's fine note on T.D. V. 102.~§21. Illud
243     Not,       2     |            and n. Memoriae certe: n. on 106. Continet: cf. contineant
244     Not,       2     |       perceptio in universum) cf. n. on I. 38, Madv. D.F. II. 61,
245     Not,       2     |         τεχνη. Sextus often comments on similar complaints of the
246     Not,       2     |         quite unfounded; see Tischer on T.D. III. 4. Tractabit:
247     Not,       2     |            also all επιστημη depends on καταληψεις; cf. I. 40, 41,
248     Not,       2     |          quam with the subj. Tischer on T.D. II. 52 affirms that
249     Not,       2     |            Primum: out of place, see on 21. Agere: the dogmatist
250     Not,       2     |         probably the perfect. Cf. n. on 127.~§26. Quid quod si:
251     Not,       2     |               86. Veri falsi: cf. n. on 92. Quae visa: so Halm for
252     Not,       2     |               the selection depended on the probabile of course,
253     Not,       2     |            the former (32). Now they on the one hand profess to
254     Not,       2     |          between true and false, and on the other hold that no absolutely
255     Not,       2     |            rebus et obscuris: cf. n. on I. 15, and the word συνεσκιασμενος
256     Not,       2     |            eripere: like tollere (n. on 26), cf. 38, 103 and N.D.
257     Not,       2     |              6. For the sense see n. on 16, also 61. Artificio:
258     Not,       2     |              theηγεμονικον, cf. n. on I. 38. Alia quasi: so Faber
259     Not,       2     |                M.D.F. III. 63. Goer. on the other hand says he can
260     Not,       2     |              II. 16, III. 17, cf. n. on I. 41. Ut dixi ... dicemus:
261     Not,       2     |          rather read dicamus; cf. n. on 29. Per se: καθ' αυτην,
262     Not,       2     |           Docere: "to prove," cf. n. on 121. Qui haec distinguunt:
263     Not,       2     |           those of Arcesilas; cf. n. on I. 45. Stellarum numerus:
264     Not,       2     |         discussion here really turns on the use of terms. If it
265     Not,       2     |             Madv. in an important n. on D.F. IV. 30 explains this
266     Not,       2     |              Fam. XV. 18. A.W. Zumpt on Pro Murena 13 rightly defines
267     Not,       2     |          call 'true'." Impressum: n. on 18. Percipi atque comprehendi:
268     Not,       2     |               Cic. proceeds as usual on the principle thus described
269     Not,       2     |             MSS. agree in ve for ne, on which see M.D.F. IV. 76.
270     Not,       2     |               κενως = ψευδως. Cf. n. on I. 35, also II. 47, D.F.
271     Not,       2     |               For the meaning see n. on 47. Relinquitur: so in Sext.
272     Not,       2     |             the διεξωδευμενη; see n. on 33. Primum quia ... deinde:
273     Not,       2     |              est is needless, cf. n. on I. 40. It is the impact
274     Not,       2     |      potestate: this may throw light on fragm. 15 of the Ac. Post.,
275     Not,       2     |             made moral action depend on the freedom of the will;
276     Not,       2     |          freedom of the will; see n. on I. 40. Ante videri aliquid
277     Not,       2     |            passive use of videri, n. on 25. Adsentiatur: the passive
278     Not,       2     |              subj. after necesse est on D.F. V. 25. Tollit e vita:
279     Not,       2     |             cf. M.D.F. III. 4, Mayor on Iuv. VII. 177. Vim: the
280     Not,       2     |           Quod sit a vero: cf. Munio on Lucr. II. 51 fulgor ab auro.
281     Not,       2     |           for the om. of esse cf. n. on I. 29.~§42. Proposita: cf.
282     Not,       2     |         Academics was merely founded on probability, just as their "
283     Not,       2     |            their "truth" was (cf. n. on 29). An Academic would say
284     Not,       2     |          VIII. 283. Patefacturum: n. on 26, εκκαλυπτειν, εκκαλυπτικος,
285     Not,       2     |             view of sensation see n. on 79, 80.~§§4648. Summary.
286     Not,       2     |          Goer. retains the MSS. sunt on the ground that the clause
287     Not,       2     |             D.F. II. 27. Nulla sunt: on the use of nullus for non
288     Not,       2     |        argument is meant to be based on the assumption known to
289     Not,       2     |              produce the same effect on the mind as those which
290     Not,       2     |                for instance," cf. n. on 33. Nihil ut esset: the
291     Not,       2     |             all of them alike depend on sic. Lamb. expunged ut before
292     Not,       2     |           falsa visa mentioned in n. on 47. Sin autem sunt, etc.:
293     Not,       2     |           Hortens. fragm. 47, and n. on 92. Hoc vocant: i.e. hoc
294     Not,       2     | distinguished from the other; see n. on 40. Similes: after this
295     Not,       2     |             guttural condemned in n. on 34. For the argument see
296     Not,       2     |              For the argument see n. on 80 quasi vero quaeratur
297     Not,       2     |            53. Sustinet: επεχει; see on 94. Aliquando sustinere:
298     Not,       2     |             to the exx. qu. by Madv. on D.F. II. 35 of the subj.
299     Not,       2     |           lost Lat. optative. [Madv. on D.F. II. 35 seems to imply
300     Not,       2     |             see this either," cf. n. on I. 5. Habeant: the slight
301     Not,       2     |          money back and received it. On this subject cf. Sextus
302     Not,       2     |              misses his mark; cf. n. on 50. Nulla re differens:
303     Not,       2     |            and printed by the latter on p. 854 of Bait. and Halm'
304     Not,       2     |             sceptic position; see n. on 50. Before leaving this
305     Not,       2     |       between the eggs, we shall not on that account be led into
306     Not,       2     |         pronoun. Impediamini: cf. n. on 33. A veris: if visis be
307     Not,       2     |               Lamb., see however nn. on I. 6, 8. Constitit: from
308     Not,       2     |           unqualified assent. Cf. n. on 104. Id est peccaturum: "
309     Not,       2     |             the phrase sensus tolli, on the ground that the Academics
310     Not,       2     |           qui (for the latter see n. on 81). As aliquis is substantival,
311     Not,       2     |            etc. this may throw light on fragm. 15 of the Acad. Post.,
312     Not,       2     |               62. Motum animorum: n. on 34. Actio rerum: here actio
313     Not,       2     |              an implies, Madv. says (on D.F. V. 87), more doubt
314     Not,       2     |         bonae et copiosae memoriae" (on D.F. I. 34). See Krebs and
315     Not,       2     |           making it mean paulo ante. On the other hand, Halm after
316     Not,       2     |               cf. I. 13. Destitisse: on the difference between memini
317     Not,       2     |            inquirer after truth, and on that very account hold it
318     Not,       2     |           first of these statements, on the ground that it is possible
319     Not,       2     |         insert me (as Lamb.), see n. on I. 7.~§65. Studio certandi: =
320     Not,       2     |          Pertinacia ... calumnia: n. on 14. Iurarem: Cic. was thinking
321     Not,       2     |            or δοξα is judgment based on insufficient grounds. Sed
322     Not,       2     |             7, 3. Visis cedo: cf. n. on 38. Vim maximam: so summum
323     Not,       2     |            the position of in cf. n. on I. 25. The best MSS. have
324     Not,       2     |           altered tamen to tam in n. on D.F. V. 26. The two words
325     Not,       2     |              T.D. IV. 7, cf. also n. on I. 16. Sin autem, etc.:
326     Not,       2     |          quisquam enim. Excogitavit: on interrogations not introduced
327     Not,       2     |              Gram. 450. Eadem dicit: on the subject in hand, of
328     Not,       2     |            not strictly true, see n. on 132. Sensisse: = iudicasse,
329     Not,       2     |            Sensisse: = iudicasse, n. on I. 22. Mnesarchi ... Dardani:
330     Not,       2     |             to read renovata, cf. n. on I. 14. Nominis dignitatem,
331     Not,       2     |             an penuria consideratur. On this point cf. M. Em. 163,
332     Not,       2     |          Gram. 452, obs. 1, 2, Zumpt on Cic. Verr. IV. 73. Honesti
333     Not,       2     |             De antiquis philosophis: on account of the somewhat
334     Not,       2     |             There is an obscure joke on this in Ad Qu. Fratrem II.
335     Not,       2     |               Cic., as Madv. remarks on D.F. I. 20, always exaggerates
336     Not,       2     |            54, Zeller 501, R. and P. on Xenophanes and Parmenides.
337     Not,       2     |           την στιχοποιιαν. Quamquam: on the proper use of quamquam
338     Not,       2     |               for om. of esse see n. on I. 43. Perscripti sunt:
339     Not,       2     |              Perscripti sunt: cf. n. on I. 16. Scire se nihil se
340     Not,       2     |              fuit ratio persequi: n. on 17.~§75. Videorne: = nonne
341     Not,       2     |           consuetudine probantur: n. on 87. Nisi videret: for the
342     Not,       2     |      Cyrenaici (now made by all edd. on the ground that Cyrenaeus
343     Not,       2     |             of falsum indeed, see n. on 47. Eiusdem modi: cf. 40,
344     Not,       2     |               55. Clitomacho: cf. n. on 59.~§§7990. Summary You
345     Not,       2     |        Introd. 55. Infracto remo: n. on 19. Tennyson seems to allude
346     Not,       2     |            also in 101. Epicurus: n. on 19.~§80. Hoc est verum esse:
347     Not,       2     |             does Sext. A.M. VII. 210 on behalf of Epicurus. Sed
348     Not,       2     |            to Newcastle," see Lorenz on Plaut. Miles II. 2, 38,
349     Not,       2     |         those of aliquis and aliqui, on which see 61 n. In Paradoxa
350     Not,       2     |              fragm. 13. Videntur: n. on 25. Amplius: cf. 19 non
351     Not,       2     |            to alter the text, see n. on I. 6.~§82. Quid ego: Bait.
352     Not,       2     |            quasi = circiter cf. note on 74. Madv. on D.F. I. 20
353     Not,       2     |       circiter cf. note on 74. Madv. on D.F. I. 20 quotes Diog.
354     Not,       2     |         Allgayer, Antibarbarus ed. 4 on quin.~§83. In parvo lis
355     Not,       2     |            Anulo: cf. 54. Aliqui: n. on 61. Gallinarium: cf. 57.
356     Not,       2     |          parodied the line qu. in n. on 75, ει μη γαρ ην Χρυσιππος
357     Not,       2     |           subjunctive is, Madv. says on D.F. I. 9, impossible; for
358     Not,       2     |              I have already remarked on his extraordinary power
359     Not,       2     |             putare, a little farther on, has got misplaced. Non
360     Not,       2     |           Ribbeck repeats it thrice, on Halm's suggestion I have
361     Not,       2     |            fortiter arcum. Wakefield on Lucr. III. 1013 puts a stop
362     Not,       2     |            stop at auratum, and goes on with Luna innixans. Taber
363     Not,       2     |             Goer. perversely insists on taking somniantium recordatione
364     Not,       2     |             in P.H. I. 22, qu. in n. on 40. Tum cum movebantur:
365     Not,       2     |           Ambigue dictum: αμφιβολον, on which see P.H. II. 256,
366     Not,       2     |          ancients; see Grote's essay on the Origin of Knowledge,
367     Not,       2     |               B answers "No." A goes on asking whether two, three,
368     Not,       2     |            is still treated in books on logic, cf. Thomson's Laws
369     Not,       2     |       Minutatim: cf. Heindorf's note on κατα σμικρον in Sophistes
370     Not,       2     |       numerous distinct works of his on the Sorites and Mentiens
371     Not,       2     |           and 107, cf. however Munro on Lucr. I. 420. Irretiat:
372     Not,       2     |          gives the Stoic refinements on this subject. Effatum: Halm
373     Not,       2     |           the an was added by Schutz on a comparison of Gellius
374     Not,       2     |         expound but to prove, cf. n. on 121. Primum ... modum: the
375     Not,       2     |          nunc lucere. Chrysippea: n. on 93. Conclusioni: on facere
376     Not,       2     |               n. on 93. Conclusioni: on facere with the dat. see
377     Not,       2     |          facere with the dat. see n. on 27. Cederet: some edd. crederet,
378     Not,       2     |             trans. of Gk. εικειν; n. on 66. Conexi: = συνημμενον,
379     Not,       2     |            III. 29 lays great stress on the necessary truth of disjunctive
380     Not,       2     |             the sentence. Id est: n. on I. 8. Evertit: for the Epicurean
381     Not,       2     |            Nihil ab eo differens: n. on 54. Non comprehensa: n.
382     Not,       2     |              54. Non comprehensa: n. on 96.~§100. Si iam: "if, for
383     Not,       2     |              Ausspr. II. 851); Beier on De Off. I. p. 157 (qu. by
384     Not,       2     |             use of the gerund cf. n. on 26, with Madv. Gram. 418,
385     Not,       2     |          with Madv. Gram. 418, Munro on Lucr. I. 313; for propriam
386     Not,       2     |       communication to Halm (printed on p. 854 of Bait., and Hahn'
387     Not,       2     |            plural are given by Madv. on D.F. V. 16. Nullum: on the
388     Not,       2     |               on D.F. V. 16. Nullum: on the favourite Ciceronian
389     Not,       2     |          Exposuisset adiungit: Madv. on D.F. III. 67 notices a certain
390     Not,       2     |             disapproval merely based on probability. For example,
391     Not,       2     |              yes' or 'no,' dependent on probability." My defence
392     Not,       2     |            force of this see my note on non probans in 148, which
393     Not,       2     |              how memory was possible on my principles. Why, did
394     Not,       2     |            12 Soluto, libero: cf. n. on 8. Implicato: = impedito
395     Not,       2     |            191 sq. Siron: thus Madv. on D.F. II. 119 writes the
396     Not,       2     |                107. Fiet artibus: n. on 27 for the constr., for
397     Not,       2     |          above. Actio ullius rei: n. on actio rerum in 62, cf. also
398     Not,       2     |           form of the gen. cf. Madv. on D.F. I. 14, who doubts whether
399     Not,       2     |       suppressed accus. agrum cf. n. on tollendum in 148. Sequere:
400     Not,       2     |            Esse possit: Bait. posset on the suggestion of Halm,
401     Not,       2     |            hoc ipsum: the ut follows on illo modo urguendum above.
402     Not,       2     |            modum ... item: see Madv. on D.F. III. 48, who quotes
403     Not,       2     |     irreconcilable opinions clinging on to the same formulae is
404     Not,       2     |           have already suggested (n. on 18) that we have here a
405     Not,       2     |             severe remarks of Madvig on D.F. V. 76, a passage which
406     Not,       2     |             given from Cic. by Madv. on D.F. II. 13. Horum neutrum:
407     Not,       2     |             the choice often depends on mere individual taste. De
408     Not,       2     |             De sapiente loquamur: n. on 66.~§§116128. Summary.
409     Not,       2     |              placing all perceptions on the same level. You must
410     Not,       2     |               cf. Sext. P.H. II. 13 (on the same subject) ‛οι Στωικοι
411     Not,       2     |            this expression see Munro on Lucr. I. 734, for the sense
412     Not,       2     |              II. 26). Hence Markland on Cic. Ad Brutum II. 15, 3
413     Not,       2     |        τουτων δε το μεν κατα μεν τοον θερμον ταττει, θατερον δε
414     Not,       2     |        ταττει, θατερον δε κατα το μη ον. Heraclitus: n. on I. 39.
415     Not,       2     |             το μη ον. Heraclitus: n. on I. 39. Melissus: see Simplicius
416     Not,       2     |              τε και εσται. Plato: n. on I. 27. Discedent: a word
417     Not,       2     |            XXXVI. 5.~§121. Posse: n. on I. 29. Strato: R. and P.
418     Not,       2     |             122. Latent ista: see n. on fragm. 29 of the Ac. Post.;
419     Not,       2     |          Prof. Huxley's speculations on protoplasm; he was said
420     Not,       2     |         Theophrastus: who wrote much on the history of philosophy,
421     Not,       2     |         dilucide dicitur. Momenta n. on I. 45.~§125. Verecundius:
422     Not,       2     |         original reading here. Zumpt on Verr. qu. Quint. IX. 2,
423     Not,       2     |             Completa et conferta: n. on I. 27. Quod movebitur ...
424     Not,       2     |                Tam sit mirabilis: n. on I. 25. Innumerabilis: 55.
425     Not,       2     |   Innumerabilis: 55. Supra infra: n. on 92. Ut nos nunc simus, etc.:
426     Not,       2     |             nos nunc simus, etc.: n. on fragm. 13 of Ac. Post. Disputantis:
427     Not,       2     |                καιτοι, "and yet," n. on 5 ac vereor. Invidiam: cf.
428     Not,       2     |           Off. I. 153; cf. Wesenberg on T.D. V. 9, who qu. similar
429     Not,       2     |           σμικρα και ελαχιστα. Madv. on D.F. V. 78 notes that except
430     Not,       2     |            kind. Occultissimarum: n. on I. 15. Occurit ... completur:
431     Not,       2     |             tenses, cf. also Wesenb. on T.D. IV. 35.~§128. Agi secum:
432     Not,       2     |            puto, which surely stands on the same level. Non magis:
433     Not,       2     |          depending in different ways on the same word (definitio).
434     Not,       2     |           notionem. Constituendi: n. on 114. Bonorum summa: cf.
435     Not,       2     |        Herillus (or Erillus as Madv. on D.F. II. 35 spells the name),
436     Not,       2     |          finis of Herillus see Madv. on D.F. II. 43. Megaricorum:
437     Not,       2     |            Tim. c. 7, already quoted on I. 30, see my note there
438     Not,       2     |              term. Diu multumque: n. on I. 4.~§131. Nec tamen consentiens:
439     Not,       2     |              nom; for this see Madv. on D.F. II. 19, who also gives
440     Not,       2     |          nescio. Diodorus: see Madv. on D.F. II. 19. Honeste vivere,
441     Not,       2     |           Clemens Alex. qu. by Madv. on D.F. IV. 15. See n. below
442     Not,       2     |            D.F. IV. 15. See n. below on Carneades. Antiochus probat:
443     Not,       2     |         Polemo did (I. 22). See more on 139. Zeno: cf. D.F. IV.
444     Not,       2     |              there is a similar play on the legal words finis terminus
445     Not,       2     |          Peccat: a Stoic term turned on the Stoics, see I. 37. Academicos
446     Not,       2     |         clauses) cf. I. 7, and Madv. on D.F. I. 43, who how ever
447     Not,       2     |           VIII. 4, X. 16. Inquit: n. on 79. Quid quod quae: so Guietus
448     Not,       2     |              partem follow dicantur, on Orelli's suggestion. When
449     Not,       2     |             n. Theophrasto, etc.: n. on I. 33, 35. Dicente: before
450     Not,       2     |             omission of which see n. on I. 13; add Quint. IX. 4,
451     Not,       2     |            starent: "were in waiting on the senate;" cf. such phrases
452     Not,       2     |             philosopher:" also Madv. on D.F. II. 102. Ille noster:
453     Not,       2     |            for which see I. 19. More on the subject in Madvig's
454     Not,       2     |             De Leg. I. 4, also Madv. on D.F. IV. 55. Obversetur:
455     Not,       2     |              Ne intellegi quidem: n. on I. 7, cf. also T.D. V. 73,
456     Not,       2     |               Normam ... regulam: n. on Ac. Post. fragm. 8. Praescriptionem:
457     Not,       2     |                 fixum: cf. 27 and n. on Ac. Post. fragm. 17. Falso:
458     Not,       2     |      interior, also 76. Epicuri: nn. on 19, 79, 80. Iudicium: κριτηριον
459     Not,       2     |            by Cic.) was manufactured on the spur of the moment,
460     Not,       2     |             the Bible. Artificia: n. on 30. Tolli: n. on 26. Ut
461     Not,       2     |       Artificia: n. on 30. Tolli: n. on 26. Ut opifices concitentur:
462     Not,       2     |             give merely adverat, but on the margin admoverat which
463     Not,       2     |         would they be angry;" cf. n. on. I. 5. Arbitrari: the original
464     Not,       2     |         making the ut follow closely on the negative: for this see
465     Not,       2     |           Obscuritate: cf. I. 44, n. on I. 15. Plus uno: 115. Iacere:
466     Not,       2     |               cf. 79. Plagas: cf. n. on 112.~§148. Ad patris revolvor
467     Not,       2     |           MSS. intellegentes, cf. n. on 132. Qua re: so Manut. for
468     Not,       2     |      irreconcilable; a misconception on this point has considerably
469     Not,       2     |          occurs in the sense "to get on," "to proceed," without
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