bold = Main text
   Liber, Caput     grey = Comment text

 1     Int,      II|       the common sense of the world could have most sympathy92.
 2     Int,      II|       superhuman than a human world, which allured Cicero more
 3     Int,      IV|     finished and given to the world before the latter. Nothing
 4     Not,       1|     satisfied the philosophic world is tranquil. Cf. Ad Att.
 5     Not,       1|  coherent and continuous, the world was formed." For the in
 6     Not,       1|      while believing that our world would be destroyed by fire (
 7     Not,       1| absorption into the Universal World God, who will recreate the
 8     Not,       1|    God, who will recreate the world out of himself, since he
 9     Not,       1|     do. The Stoics give their World God, according to his different
10     Not,       1|     pertinent ad homines: the World God is perfectly beneficent,
11     Not,       1|   before). This is merely the World God apprehended as regulating
12     Not,       1|    cause upon cause. When the World God is called Fortune, all
13     Not,       2|   existence of the phenomenal world, after which he made two
14     Not,       2|      the opposite side of the world. Diog. VIII. 26 (with which
15     Not,       2|      that the universe or the world is a globe (which is held
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