bold = Main text
    Liber, Caput          grey = Comment text

  1     Ded              |          HIS PUPILS~WHO HAVE READ WITH HIM~THE ACADEMICA,~THIS
  2     Pre              |          Germany the last edition with explanatory notes is that
  3     Pre              |           been written throughout with a practical reference to
  4     Pre              |           have read the Academica with a large number of intelligent
  5     Pre              |         thoroughly the philosophy with which Cicero deals.~My text
  6     Pre              |           than they ought to have with the peculiarities and niceties
  7     Pre              |         some special way bound up with the Academica. The two books
  8     Pre              |          are quoted. These books, with Madvig's De Finibus, all
  9     Pre              |      Cicero's philosophical works with quite the purpose which
 10     Pre              |          Should this attempt meet with favour, I propose to edit
 11     Pre              |     Cicero's writings.~In dealing with a subject so unusually difficult
 12     Pre              |           scholarship as compared with that of Germany,~I have
 13     Int,       I(2)  |                 Cf. De Or. II. §1 with II. §5.~
 14     Int,       I     |         He is the only Epicurean, with, perhaps, the exception
 15     Int,       I     |          friend became acquainted with Patro, who succeeded Zeno
 16     Int,       I     |   lectures of Diodotus the Stoic, with whom he studied chiefly,
 17     Int,       I     |         Cicero spent all his days with Diodotus in the severest
 18     Int,       I     |      brilliant Academic.9 Smitten with a marvellous enthusiasm
 19     Int,       I     |          into intimate connection with at least three of the most
 20     Int,       I     |      become thoroughly acquainted with their spirit, and with the
 21     Int,       I     | acquainted with their spirit, and with the main tenets of each.
 22     Int,       I     |      employed himself incessantly with the study of philosophy,
 23     Int,       I     |       that he came into collision with Sulla through the freedman
 24     Int,       I     |     devoted to philosophy, since, with the exception [v] of Demetrius
 25     Int,       I(17) |                   Cf. N.D. I. §93 with Ad Fam. XIII. 1, §1.~
 26     Int,       I     |          now at Athens, and along with Atticus who loved him beyond
 27     Int,       I     |       almost complete familiarity with the Epicurean doctrines.~
 28     Int,       I     |          still continued to think with his earlier teacher. His
 29     Int,       I     |       this time became acquainted with Aristus the brother of Antiochus,
 30     Int,       I     |         views of philosophy, that with Posidonius the pupil of
 31     Int,       I     |        Cicero was well acquainted with the works of the former,
 32     Int,       I     |      doubtless too busily engaged with legal and political affairs
 33     Int,       I     |         old knowledge by converse with his many Roman friends who
 34     Int,       I     |    towards philosophy, as well as with the Greeks who from time
 35     Int,       I     |          man of letters; compared with literature, politics and
 36     Int,       I     |       were [ix] crowded, he says, with the maxims of philosophy35;
 37     Int,       I     |         later we find him reading with enthusiasm the works of
 38     Int,       I     |       keeping up his acquaintance with living Greek philosophers36.
 39     Int,       I     |            and elsewhere. I dwell with greater emphasis on these
 40     Int,       I     |         learned Roman of his age, with the single exception of
 41     Int,       I     |         as "devouring literature" with a marvellous man named Dionysius41,
 42     Int,       I(41) |                Cf. Ad Att. IV. 11 with IV. 8 a.~
 43     Int,       I     |         his continued familiarity with Greek philosophy43. In the
 44     Int,       I     |           life most in accordance with nature, that of the student44.
 45     Int,       I     |          Brutus. His acquaintance with this philosopher was lasting,
 46     Int,       I     |          of Atticus, who was then with Patro at Athens. It was
 47     Int,       I     |        been somewhat disappointed with the state of philosophy
 48     Int,       I(52) |                     Cf. Tim. c. 1 with De Div. I. §5. Brutus, §
 49     Int,       I     |       this practice Cicero speaks with loathing. In one letter
 50     Int,       I     |           Republica54. His wishes with regard to Athens still kept
 51     Int,       I     |           anxious to show Rhodes, with its school of eloquence,
 52     Int,       I     |         where Cicero again stayed with Aristus57, and renewed his
 53     Int,       I     |        and renewed his friendship with other philosophers, among
 54     Int,       I     |         the statesmen of the time with the Scipio he had himself
 55     Int,       I     |     employing his days in arguing with himself a string of abstract
 56     Int,       I     |           the year 46 he returned with desperate energy to his
 57     Int,       I     |        than I renewed my intimacy with my old friends, my books."
 58     Int,       I     |          and a comparison of them with ancient authorities, that
 59     Int,      II     |        Cicero.~In order to define with clearness the position of
 60     Int,      II     |          tested by comparing them with the assertions made by ancient
 61     Int,      II     |          in substantial agreement with the New Academic school,
 62     Int,      II     |        hear arguments put forward with equal persuasiveness on
 63     Int,      II     |           to make any proposition with a conviction of its absolute,
 64     Int,      II     |         requisite of a philosophy with him was that it should avoid
 65     Int,      II     |          men to teach one another with all gentleness and meekness75.
 66     Int,      II     |         view entirely at variance with the whole of the fourth
 67     Int,      II     |      makes it his sole [xix] aim, with Socrates, to rid himself
 68     Int,      II     |        Academic tenets were those with which the common sense of
 69     Int,      II     |    respectable pedigree. Compared with its system, all other philosophies
 70     Int,      II     |  overwhelming importance compared with the first. Philosophy was
 71     Int,      II     |         is there charged by Varro with having deserted the Old
 72     Int,      II     |          is this to be reconciled with his own oft-repeated statements
 73     Int,      II     |           Philo had been too busy with their polemic against Zeno
 74     Int,      II     |     logical grounds, to deal much with ethics. On the other hand,
 75     Int,      II     |          Academica he was charged with constituting himself the
 76     Int,      II     |          the De Legibus spoken of with considerable favour98. All
 77     Int,      II     |          and he frequently speaks with something like shame of
 78     Int,      II     |  remarkable passage Cicero agrees with them, explicitly rejecting
 79     Int,      II     |          Cicero's general feeling with regard to Zeno, and there
 80     Int,      II     |        chiefly the ethics of Zeno with this feeling, while Antiochus
 81     Int,      II     |         Cicero was more in accord with Stoic ethics than Antiochus.
 82     Int,      II     |           and sorrows, refused it with horror108. It must be admitted
 83     Int,      II     | Disputations and the De Officiis.~With regard to physics, I may
 84     Int,      II     |       very strongly to sympathize with the Stoic views about the
 85     Int,      II     |         the true Socratic family. With the Epicureans the case
 86     Int,     III     |         is usual to charge Cicero with a want of originality as
 87     Int,     III     |     overwhelmingly greater degree with the physics than with the
 88     Int,     III     |      degree with the physics than with the ethics of Epicurus.
 89     Int,     III     |      slowly won his way to favour with the public.~In addition
 90     Int,     III     |        Greek language, he replies with indignation, accusing them
 91     Int,     III     |           Roman intellect to deal with philosophical [xxix] enquiries,
 92     Int,     III     |         Greece much in the spirit with which things French were
 93     Int,     III     |         of his age.~In accordance with Greek precedent, Cicero
 94     Int,      IV     |          the Academica. The words with which he introduces his
 95     Int,      IV     |        under that name. It may be with reference to the progress
 96     Int,      IV     |       expresses himself satisfied with the advance he has made
 97     Int,      IV     |          at Rome may reproach him with inaction, they could not
 98     Int,      IV(142)|          esp. Ad Att. XII. 40, §2 with 38, §3.~
 99     Int,      IV     |           of the Academica, along with the De Finibus, is intended.
100     Int,      IV     |       some interest in connection with the Academica, the fact
101     Int,      IV     |       have been still unsatisfied with his choice of interlocutors
102     Int,      IV     |          never been very intimate with Varro: their acquaintance
103     Int,      IV     |       made it difficult to comply with the request172. Varro had
104     Int,      IV     |    himself very much dissatisfied with Varro's failure to fulfil
105     Int,      IV     |        one, but he was so pleased with it that Cicero determined
106     Int,      IV     |           repeatedly communicated with Varro, and to have assured
107     Int,      IV     |       entered into correspondence with Varro himself. Etiquette
108     Int,      IV(187)|          single day. Cf. XIII. 12 with 13.~
109     Int,      IV     |       point of Antiochus combined with any polish my style may
110     Int,      IV     |          I have finished the book with I know not what success,
111     Int,      IV     |        know not what success, but with a care which nothing could
112     Int,      IV     |           reception it would meet with from Varro. He wrote thus
113     Int,      IV     |  illustrious colleague of Marius. With the political career of
114     Int,      IV     |           what was their position with respect to the philosophy
115     Int,      IV     |        nature of their connection with Cicero.~Catulus the younger
116     Int,      IV     |         be found in their ατριψια with respect to philosophy211.
117     Int,      IV(213)|          Cf. esp. De Off. I. §133 with Brutus, §§133, 134.~
118     Int,      IV     |        and deserves to be classed with the ancient worthies of
119     Int,      IV     |        they would rely if Pompey, with such gigantic power concentrated
120     Int,      IV     |         to die, the people answer with one [xlvi] voice "On you217."
121     Int,      IV     |        Cicero's general agreement with Catulus in politics, there
122     Int,      IV     |         the connection of Archias with the Catuli, and to the poem
123     Int,      IV(226)|                     Cf. Ac. II. § with §8.~
124     Int,      IV     |         especially told that even with Greeks his acquaintance
125     Int,      IV     |           Greeks his acquaintance with Greek, and his style of
126     Int,      IV     |    contrasts the Latin historians with the Greek233. He depreciates
127     Int,      IV(234)|                 Cf. ibid. II. §74 with III. §127.~
128     Int,      IV(235)|                      Cf. II. §152 with III. §187.~
129     Int,      IV     |       philosophy, connect Catulus with any particular teacher.
130     Int,      IV     |           in actual communication with any of the prominent Academics,
131     Int,      IV(242)|                Cf. De Or. II. §68 with III. §§182, 187.~
132     Int,      IV     |          no one at all conversant with Greek literature or society
133     Int,      IV     |        fail to be well acquainted with his opinions246. No follower
134     Int,      IV     |    undoubtedly was247, could view with indifference the latest
135     Int,      IV     |      elder Catulus had repudiated with great warmth, even charging
136     Int,      IV     |       warmth, even charging Philo with wilful misrepresentation
137     Int,      IV(250)|                     Ibid. §§1, 1, with my notes.~
138     Int,      IV     |  evidently concerned himself more with the system of the later
139     Int,      IV     |          system of the later than with that of the earlier sceptic.
140     Int,      IV(251)|        heri defensa sunt compared with the words ad Arcesilam Carneademque
141     Int,      IV     |       Lucullus' speech which deal with the constructive part of
142     Int,      IV     |          pivot of the discussion. With this arrangement none of
143     Int,      IV(255)|            II. §§5, 6, 7, 11, 14, with my notes.~
144     Int,      IV(258)|                        Cf. II. §6 with the fragments of the Hortensius;
145     Int,      IV     |      innocent of any acquaintance with philosophy as it was possible
146     Int,      IV     |          was in essential harmony with the Old, and also with those
147     Int,      IV     |    harmony with the Old, and also with those ancient philosophers
148     Int,      IV     |       summary. He must have dealt with the theory of καταληπτικη
149     Int,      IV(264)|                        Cf. II. §1 with I. §4, and II. §§5, 5.~
150     Int,      IV     |          on the headlong rashness with which the dogmatists gave
151     Int,      IV(266)|                        Cf. II. §3 with I. §4.~
152     Int,      IV     | classification of the sensations, with the reasons for refusing
153     Int,      IV     |          closely enough connected with the Academica to render
154     Int,      IV     |         were seated in the xystus with its polished floor and lines
155     Int,      IV(281)|                         Cf. II. § with §12 (signum illud), also §§
156     Int,      IV     |          at least to have dallied with culture, although his chief
157     Int,      IV(286)|                   Cf. II. §§1, 12 with the words quae erant contra
158     Int,      IV     |          such a slight connection with the work, I do not think
159     Int,      IV     |        stood to the other persons with whom we have had to deal.
160     Int,      IV     |           tutor to Lucullus' son, with Cicero for a sort of adviser:
161     Int,      IV     |       Brutus lived to be present, with Cicero, during the war between
162     Int,      IV     |           to the Lucrine lake292. With regard to the feigned date
163     Int,      IV     |          life and that of Cicero, with a few words about his philosophical [
164     Int,      IV     |        between Atticus and Cicero with respect to the dedication
165     Int,      IV     |          of Varro can be gathered with tolerable accuracy from
166     Not,       1     |          on one side charges Cic. with deserting the Old Academy
167     Not,       1     |         New Academy is in harmony with the Old. Varro refers to
168     Not,       1     |         Velit: Walker reads velis with St Jerome. For quod velit =
169     Not,       1     |         in the place of this quod with variants que, quae, qui,
170     Not,       1     |          which should be compared with this prologue throughout.~§
171     Not,       1     |        questions. Cf. Paradoxa 2, with T.D. II. 42 which will show
172     Not,       1     |         Latin agrees very closely with the Greek preserved by Diog.
173     Not,       1     |      opinion of Epicurus is dealt with, we have either ne suspicari
174     Not,       1     |            quidem is esp frequent with suspicari (D.F. II. 20),
175     Not,       1     |         ed. 2), and are connected with other instances of broken
176     Not,       1     |         be supplied from it to go with disserendum, which is harsh.
177     Not,       1     |  philosophers," which would agree with my emendation cum for quo
178     Not,       1     |            Dei VI. 2) quotes this with the reading reduxerunt for
179     Not,       1     |           and by Halm; who quotes with approval Durand's remark, "
180     Not,       1     |          specious. Nesciunt: Halm with his one MS. G, which is
181     Not,       1     |          MSS. reading, for Greece with Cicero is the supreme arbiter
182     Not,       1     |   remained in essential agreement with one anotherthe Peripatetic
183     Not,       1     |    personified, if 28 be compared with Tim. c. 1, this will be
184     Not,       1     |         70. The strangest ellipse with nihil ad elsewhere in Cic.
185     Not,       1     |           cf. II. 63), and though with pairs of nouns and adjectives,
186     Not,       1     |         see Zeller's Socrates 88, with footnote.~§17. Varius et
187     Not,       1     |        Halm's ed., Ac. II. 11, 13 with De Div. I. 6). The older
188     Not,       1     |         on 11. Dubitationem: Halm with one MS., G, gives dubitantem,
189     Not,       1     |          Good, Aristotle did away with what Plato would have considered
190     Not,       1     |          the external, which form with the bodily advantages a
191     Not,       1     |       classes of advantages (22). With this ethical standard, it
192     Not,       1     |        should be closely compared with our passage, and Varro in
193     Not,       1     |         XIX 3. This agrees better with D.F. V. 3436, cf. also
194     Not,       1     |         the Stoics readily united with the φυσει ανθρωπος πολιτικον
195     Not,       1     |          tuendum corresponds best with the division of αγαθα into
196     Not,       1     |    statement of the ethical finis with that in 19 and the passages
197     Not,       1     |        Civ. Dei XIX. 3) coincides with Cic.'s in every particular.
198     Not,       1     |        Descriptione naturae: Halm with one MS. (G) gives praescriptione,
199     Not,       1     |        carefully Zeller, 135 sq., with the footnotes. The clearest
200     Not,       1     |    important coincidence of Force with logical genus (ειδος), and
201     Not,       1     |      ειδος), and of Matter (‛υλη) with logical differentia (διαφορα).
202     Not,       1     |          is formed, as contrasted with materia, unformed matter.
203     Not,       1     |      ποιοτης, see Zeller, 96103, with footnotes.~§25. Bene facis:
204     Not,       1     |     quantus, etc., from the words with which they are syntactically
205     Not,       1     |  Aristotelian. Aristot., starting with the four necessary properties
206     Not,       1     |         Zeller, pp. 155, 187 sq., with footnotes, R. and P. 297
207     Not,       1     |         the universe (Zeller 186, with footnotes). Quae intervalla ...
208     Not,       1     |           would have qualified it with a quasi. Indeed if it is
209     Not,       1     |   existing in (being co-extensive with) universal substance (cf.
210     Not,       1     |     contineantur; cf. N.D. II. 29 with II. 31 In qua ratio perfecta
211     Not,       1     |         are interchangeable terms with the Stoics. See Zeller 145—
212     Not,       1     |            Cic. charges Aristotle with the same inconsistency.
213     Not,       1     |        contrived to fit it all in with the known opinions of old
214     Not,       1     |       Sapientiam: cf. N.D. II. 36 with III. 23, in which latter
215     Not,       1     |       This identification of Fate with Fortune (which sadly puzzles
216     Not,       1     |          above, the student might with advantage read Aristotle'
217     Not,       1     |  Aristotle's Physica II. ch. 46, with M. Saint Hilaire's explanation,
218     Not,       1     |          rerum esse iudicem: Halm with his pet MS. writes esse
219     Not,       1     |    reconciling his own dialectics with Plato's must have been driven
220     Not,       1     |      glided over Plato's opinions with a much more cautious step.~§
221     Not,       1     |     probably defend his agreement with Plato by asserting that
222     Not,       1     |           of Antiochus' real view with Cicero's reminiscences of
223     Not,       1     |           the whole of philosophy with Plato and Aristotle (one
224     Not,       1     |  Aristotle (one might almost add, with moderns too). Its importance
225     Not,       1     |         is really one subdivision with the Stoics and Antiochus, ‛
226     Not,       1     |       persuadendum: το πιθανον is with Arist. and all ancient authorities
227     Not,       1     |           some were in accordance with nature, some at discord
228     Not,       1     |           nature, some at discord with nature, and some were neutral.
229     Not,       1     |         thought could not coexist with virtue and perfect wisdom (
230     Not,       1     |           Bentl. partiretur; this with definiret above well illustrates
231     Not,       1     |          pronomen illud reperiri" with Madvig's utter refutation
232     Not,       1     |         words quae minoris below (with Christ) or for suspecting
233     Not,       1     |       suspecting its genuineness (with Halm). The word media is
234     Not,       1     |            37. To cope thoroughly with the extraordinary difficulties
235     Not,       1     |   Assuming a general acquaintance with Stoic ethics, I set out
236     Not,       1     |       utterly different. I admit, with Madv. (D.F. III. 50), that
237     Not,       1     |          Cic. in 36 had explained with perfect correctness the
238     Not,       1     |    explanation is that Cic. began with the intention to speak of
239     Not,       1     |        which he accordingly dealt with in the latter part of the
240     Not,       1     |       therefore is chargeable not with ignorance of Stoicism but
241     Not,       1     |         ignorance of Stoicism but with careless writing. A striking
242     Not,       1     |        are difficulties connected with the termsικανη αξια and ‛
243     Not,       1     |      added in oblivion of the et. With two nouns, adjectives, adverbs,
244     Not,       1     |          when the conjunctions go with separate clauses it is possible.
245     Not,       1     |           92, 93; cf. Zeller 249, with footnotes). Nec virtutem
246     Not,       1     |           the will was reconciled with the general Stoic fatalism
247     Not,       1     |         53 sq. Now the only thing with Aristotle which is αεικινητος
248     Not,       1     |         stars are mere nodes, and with which they revolve. How
249     Not,       1     |           will compare T.D. I. 43 with the Somn. Scipionis will
250     Not,       1     |       link the mind in its origin with the stars which both Plato
251     Not,       1     |          Stoics (Zeller ch. VIII. with notes) For his view of sensation
252     Not,       1     |       untenable. I entirely agree with Madv. (first Excursus to
253     Not,       1     |         Ciceronianis p. 9, agrees with Madv. For the expression
254     Not,       1     |  curiosity Nos vero, inquit: Halm with Manut. writes inquam. Why
255     Not,       1     |             who usually contends, with Antiochus, that Zeno merely
256     Not,       1     |     φαντασια, instead of carrying with it its own evidence, had
257     Not,       1     |      views were really in harmony with those of Plato, and were
258     Not,       1     |        that esse was needed to go with putandam. This is a total
259     Not,       1     |      Praecurrere: as was the case with the dogmatists. Paria momenta:
260     Not,       2     |  justification of the New Academy with which I suppose Cicero to
261     Not,       2     |      concinere, verbis discrepare with the other schools. This
262     Not,       2     |          determine its connection with the dialogue. Probably Zeno
263     Not,       2     |           such as those connected with the bent oar, the pigeon'
264     Not,       2     |     course of which the clearness with which the fishes were seen
265     Not,       2     |           correspond in substance with 27 of the Lucullus. I note
266     Not,       2     |          passage must have agreed with some lost noun either in
267     Not,       2     |           not often leave out est with the passive verb, Nonius
268     Not,       2     |        probabile was incorporated with Cicero's speech in the second
269     Not,       2     |         speech in the third Book. With this opinion I find it quite
270     Not,       2     |         shape, because it had met with no opposition. The Old Academy
271     Not,       2     |           between it and the New. With Antiochus the historical
272     Not,       2     |          403. For the three nouns with a singular verb see Madv.
273     Not,       2     |      forgets that Luc. had served with distinction in the Social
274     Not,       2     |         Cic. a parenthetic clause with etsi always has a common
275     Not,       2     |          always has a common verb with its principal clause; a
276     Not,       2     |          and the East in alliance with Rome. The censorship was
277     Not,       2     |     Schutz, kept the MSS. reading with the insertion of aut between
278     Not,       2     |       this xystus was a colonnade with one side open to the sea,
279     Not,       2     |        languages cf. Iuv. IV. 130 with Mayor's copious note. Si
280     Not,       2     |         sustentatus, which occurs with labefactatus in Cat. Mai.
281     Not,       2     |       meaning being "to appeal to with tears," see Corss. I. 361.
282     Not,       2     |          MSS. levior, as is usual with these two words. In 11 one
283     Not,       2     |          Those very philosophers, with the exception of Empedocles,
284     Not,       2     |         argument ought to be held with a sceptic, since argument
285     Not,       2     |    however do allow of discussion with sceptics. Philo in his innovations
286     Not,       2     |       made the disgraceful treaty with Numantia repudiated by home
287     Not,       2     |     connection these brothers had with the schemes of Gracchus
288     Not,       2     |              ut suspicantur: Halm with Gruter brackets these words
289     Not,       2     |           and reads quot for quod with Bentl. For the meaning cf.
290     Not,       2     |          the supposed philosopher with one Agnon just mentioned
291     Not,       2     |         it is no more use arguing with a sceptic than with a corpse.
292     Not,       2     |       arguing with a sceptic than with a corpse. Ullam rationem
293     Not,       2     |         wax, cf. Zeller 76 and 77 with footnotes. Ex eo unde esset ...
294     Not,       2     |   therefore Philo deluded himself with words, there was nothing
295     Not,       2     |            if then Philo did away with the καταλ. φαντ. and substituted
296     Not,       2     |           the reprint by Orelli). With regard to (3), it it not
297     Not,       2     |       frequently mentioned, along with numerous other instances
298     Not,       2     |        καταληψεις; cf. I. 40, 41, with notes, Zeller 88, R. and
299     Not,       2     |      inserts ut after potius quam with the subj. Tischer on T.D.
300     Not,       2     |          to the other; cf. I. 262 with I. 270, and Munro's n.,
301     Not,       2     |          Cic. uses this adjective with the dat, and also with the
302     Not,       2     |  adjective with the dat, and also with the ablative preceded by
303     Not,       2     |         futurum est: for the dat. with facio and fio see Madv.
304     Not,       2     |          the probabile of course, with the Academics. Veri falsique:
305     Not,       2     |    similar way.~§§3036. Summary. With respect to physical science,
306     Not,       2     |        nature has constructed man with great art. His mind is naturally
307     Not,       2     |    absolute presence. Let us deal with these rather than with the
308     Not,       2     |       deal with these rather than with the former (32). Now they
309     Not,       2     |           All powers of sensation with the Stoics, who are perhaps
310     Not,       2     |           false while you do away with the notion of true and false
311     Not,       2     |       sensations to be in harmony with it. (Sext. as above 175—
312     Not,       2     |        the concomitant sensations with the principal one. Circumstances
313     Not,       2     |    Perspicua: εναργη, a term used with varying signification by
314     Not,       2     |           therefore who does away with assent does away with all
315     Not,       2     |        away with assent does away with all action in life (38,
316     Not,       2     |         Totidem verbis: of course with a view to showing that nothing
317     Not,       2     |           can be perceived (known with certainty) and those which
318     Not,       2     |           oratio to obliqua. Halm with Manut. reads potest. Cf.
319     Not,       2     |       Lucullus confuses essential with apparent difference. Non
320     Not,       2     |           explained in connection with 50 and with the general
321     Not,       2     |         in connection with 50 and with the general plan of the
322     Not,       2     |          true ones, or to be only with difficulty distinguishable
323     Not,       2     |     section placed out of harmony with 50. Plane proxime: = quam
324     Not,       2     |         Manut. wrote non inquiunt with an interrogation at omnino.
325     Not,       2     |   sensations so probable as to be with difficulty distinguishable
326     Not,       2     |       should probably be written (with Manut. and others) for et
327     Not,       2     |        Utimur: "we have to put up with," so χρησθαι is used in
328     Not,       2     |       optative to express a wish (with ει γαρ, etc., and even without
329     Not,       2     |         such points of similarity with the Gk. optative, having
330     Not,       2     |       that such doctrines do away with all probability even. Their
331     Not,       2     |        etc. was a favourite theme with the sceptics, while the
332     Not,       2     |        and made one deposit money with Aristo, while the other
333     Not,       2     |      Lucullus confounds essential with phenomenal difference, and
334     Not,       2     |          φαντασιων supplies Sext. with one of the sceptic τροποι,
335     Not,       2     |  adversative use of que is common with potius, e.g.D.F. I. 51.
336     Not,       2     |           and Orelli have potest, with one MS. Quasi: the em. of
337     Not,       2     |           visa. In animos: Orelli with one MS. reads animis; if
338     Not,       2     |     formas is a trans. I have met with no other passage where any
339     Not,       2     |   statement corresponds tolerably with the Academic belief, if
340     Not,       2     |       aliquis must not be written with impersonal nouns like terror (
341     Not,       2     |       aliquis (In Verr. IV. 146). With a proper name belonging
342     Not,       2     |   Quintilian (Inst. Or. X. 1, 31, with Mayor's n.) Iuratusque:
343     Not,       2     |     become a cant phrase at Rome, with which Cic. was often taunted.
344     Not,       2     |           quoted in Introd. p. 46 with respect to Catulus, in most
345     Not,       2     |           way of taking modo exc. with non, ejected it. Madv. (
346     Not,       2     |           slips, but we must deal with the sapiens, whose characteristic
347     Not,       2     |        However, a few words first with Antiochus. When he was converted,
348     Not,       2     |          Adsentiri quicquam: only with neuter pronouns like this
349     Not,       2     |         Plato must not be classed with these. Why? Socrates said
350     Not,       2     |       lasted to our time. Do away with opinion and perception,
351     Not,       2     |          om. non, which Or. added with two very early editions.
352     Not,       2     |          a γνησιη γνωσις, dealing with the realities of material
353     Not,       2     |           who ought to be charged with scepticism. They advanced
354     Not,       2     |        present passage pp 293—300 with the footnotes. Cf. also
355     Not,       2     |             also the construction with ita iudico in 113. Ex eo,
356     Not,       2     |   exanclatum in 108. Recte, which with the ordinary stopping expresses
357     Not,       2     |          He would have a bad time with me. For even granting that
358     Not,       2     |           narrower than he seems. With all his enormous speed,
359     Not,       2     |        sensation has side by side with it a false one indistinguishable
360     Not,       2     |          this gives us of the art with which nature has constructed
361     Not,       2     |          id]: I have bracketed id with most edd. since Manut. If,
362     Not,       2     |     maneant ... iaceat, a reading with some MSS. support, adopted
363     Not,       2     |       themselves but merely dealt with the appearances they present,
364     Not,       2     |          has audiret ... ageretur with Dav., Bait. audiet, egerit.
365     Not,       2     |        regionem. We are thus left with the slight change from video
366     Not,       2     |          view was a favourite one with Cic., see Ad Att. I. 13,
367     Not,       2     |           almost in the same line with identically the same meaning
368     Not,       2     |       which however agrees better with Pliny. Quod abesset: "whatever
369     Not,       2     |         enter into an altercation with the god. The phrase, like
370     Not,       2     |     elliptic constructions in Gk. with ‛ομοιον, μεταξυ, μεσος,
371     Not,       2     |         introduces a construction with ceteris omnibus which is
372     Not,       2     |    evidently a fem. adj. agreeing with natura. Dav. and Ern. made
373     Not,       2     |        siccorum. Madere is common with the meaning "to be drunk,"
374     Not,       2     |           Goer. to omit the verb, with one MS., cf. 15 and I. 13.
375     Not,       2     |        difficulties supply Sextus with one of his τροποι, i.e. ‛
376     Not,       2     |   Pacuvius; a favourite quotation with Cic.; see Ad Att. XIV. 14,
377     Not,       2     |    sentences cf. Virg. Aen. I. 48 with the FileOutputStreams of
378     Not,       2     |     Protagoras must in accordance with his doctrine παντων μετρον
379     Not,       2     |         Diana, usually identified with the moon, has led edd. to
380     Not,       2     |           at auratum, and goes on with Luna innixans. Taber strangely
381     Not,       2     |       which are identical in form with the Mentiens, and yet refuse
382     Not,       2     |           the arguments identical with it in form must stand or
383     Not,       2     |           26, 27. In geometriane: with this inquiry into the special
384     Not,       2     |           201, and Zeller 109 sq. with footnotes. An instance of
385     Not,       2     |          in which Carneades dealt with Dialectic cf. Zeller 510,
386     Not,       2     |          cf. the use of defendere with an accus. "to put in as
387     Not,       2     |  reminiscence. Illustribus: Bait. with some probability adds in,
388     Not,       2     |           only used in connection with religious and legal formulae
389     Not,       2     |          and were given by Manut. with the exception of nunc which
390     Not,       2     |            Conclusioni: on facere with the dat. see n. on 27. Cederet:
391     Not,       2     |          be carefully read, along with N.D. I. 69, 70. Aug. Contra
392     Not,       2     |      occurs in 103. Esse conexum: with great probability Christ
393     Not,       2     |           this admission together with the tenet of Epicurus, and
394     Not,       2     |         the usual construction is with ad and the gerund; cf. De
395     Not,       2     |           recta to obliqua cf. 40 with n. Percipiendi notam: =
396     Not,       2     |          the gerund cf. n. on 26, with Madv. Gram. 418, Munro on
397     Not,       2     |          cf. 98; autem is omitted with the same constr. in D.F.
398     Not,       2     |      second. The same is the case with nego and aio. I trace the
399     Not,       2     |            I. 58, IV. 71. Vibrat: with the ανηριθμον γελασμα of
400     Not,       2     |         μνημη and νοησις is dealt with in exactly the same way
401     Not,       2     |           om. of esse cf. 77, 113 with notes. Herculi: for this
402     Not,       2     |           make ipse agree in case with the reflexive, but writes
403     Not,       2     |         Summary. If I had to deal with a Peripatetic, whose definitions
404     Not,       2     |      school. What am I to do then with my dear friend Diodotus,
405     Not,       2     |         states here is at discord with what is known of the tenets
406     Not,       2     |          esse, or like Bait., who with Kayser prints esse after
407     Not,       2     |          often used in connection with the ethical finis; cf. 129
408     Not,       2     |           How much better to side with Socrates and Aristo, who
409     Not,       2     |        thus always closely joined with pronouns in Cic. Sententiam
410     Not,       2     |           essence of the universe with the Stoics, cf. Zeller 138—
411     Not,       2     |       chariot which a fly covered with its wings, and a ship which
412     Not,       2     |        the world. Diog. VIII. 26 (with which passage cf. Stob.
413     Not,       2     |            was of course bound up with the doctrine that the universe
414     Not,       2     |         writes quo quid for quod (with Christ), and inserts corpus
415     Not,       2     |        mostly have latiores. Halm with Lamb. reads altiores, in
416     Not,       2     |      belong to the class of verbs with which this usage is found,
417     Not,       2     |           produces many instances with puto, which surely stands
418     Not,       2     |        the xystus (9) was adorned with statues; edd. qu. Plin.
419     Not,       2     |           a case of a plural noun with a singular gerund like spe
420     Not,       2     |         three ethical systems can with plausibility be defended (
421     Not,       2     |           see Zell. Socr. 222 sq, with footnotes, R. and P. 174
422     Not,       2     |      school was closely connected with the Megarian. Fuit: = natus
423     Not,       2     |          the omission of the verb with the gerundive (which occurs
424     Not,       2     |        Quid quod quae: so Guietus with the approval of Madv. (Em.
425     Not,       2     |        the Stoic πρωτα κατα φυσιν with τα του σωματος αγαθα και
426     Not,       2     |          point out that this goes with habeo and not with probabilius;
427     Not,       2     |           goes with habeo and not with probabilius; adhuc for etiam
428     Not,       2     |      probabilius; adhuc for etiam with the comparative does not
429     Not,       2     |         similar expressions occur with a reference to Epicurus
430     Not,       2     |            brackets the second ut with Lamb. Carneades ... defensitabat:
431     Not,       2     |         must not be taken closely with depugnet; cf. Hor. Sat.
432     Not,       2     |         by telling them I do away with the arts altogether? When
433     Not,       2     |  Dialectic had been already dealt with in 9198 here it is merely
434     Not,       2     |           it is merely considered with a view to the choice of
435     Not,       2     |           and Physics in 116128. With the enumeration of conflicting
436     Not,       2     |      Constituit: note the constr. with in, like ponere in. Cogitationis:
437     Not,       2     |          Sext. A.M. VIII. 115117 with the same purpose as here,
438     Not,       2     |           several times mentioned with Antipater in Diog., as VII.
439     Not,       2     |        sensations into two parts; with the Academic and other schools
440     Not,       2     |        the sense "to seize firmly with the mind." Adverterat: the
441     Not,       2     |         passage. The word is used with a double reference to adsensus
442     Not,       2     |      score of times in this book; with regard to the second meaning,
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