IntraText Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library |
Marcus Tullius Cicero Academica Concordances (Hapax - words occurring once) |
bold = Main text Liber, Caput grey = Comment text
1007 Not, 2 | their friends, and Delian breeders of fowls could tell from 1008 Int, IV | have the "Splendidiora, breviora, [xliii] meliora." Still, 1009 II, XVII | a perspiciendo temporis brevitate excluditur. Quamquam totum 1010 Not, 2 | false sorites, which may be briefly described thus: A asks B 1011 Int, IV | glistened and quivered under the bright sun, and changed colour 1012 Int, IV | doctrines which had been so brilliantly supported by the pupil of 1013 Pre | for maturer scholars, as bringing together much scattered 1014 Not, 2 | constantiam: which philosophy brings, see 23. Cognitionem: επιστημην. 1015 Not, 2 | thinks he may be a little broader or narrower than he seems. 1016 Not, 1 | Here it is ουσια in the broadest sense, all that exists. 1017 Not, 2 | The only connection these brothers had with the schemes of 1018 Int, IV(303)| also Krische, pp. 49, 50. Brückner, Leben des Cicero, I. p. 1019 Not, 2 | ed. some comparison from building operations to illustrate 1020 Int, II | he were thrust into the bull of Phalaris103. In another 1021 Int, I | age34. In the midst of his busiest political occupations, when 1022 Int, I | which Atticus had, beneath a bust of Aristotle, than in the 1023 Int, II | statement of belief are mere busybodies81. The Academics glory in 1024 Int, IV(277)| the villa Cicero wished to buy after Hortensius' death. 1025 Not, 2 | meaning of this was "to be a bystander," or "to be an eye-witness," 1026 Not, 1 | etc.? In profundo: Dem. εν βυθω, cf. II. 32. The common 1027 Not, 1 | two near the time of Cic. (C.I. vol. I. nos. 571 and 1007) 1028 II, XXXIII | quae sub quemque sensum cadunt, sentiet. Mare illud, quod 1029 I, Inc | autem non modo ad sapientiam caeci videmur, sed ad ea ipsa 1030 Abbr | Divinatio in Quintum Caecilium; In Cat. = In Catilinam.~ 1031 Not, 2 | schraffirnadel, C.F. Hermann caelatura, which does not seem to 1032 Int, IV | for instance as Sulpicius, Caelius, Paetus, Plancus, and Trebatius. 1033 Not, 1 | loves. Ceteris: the spelling caeteris (Klotz) is absolutely wrong, 1034 Not, 2 | attributed to Aristotle (iram calcar esse virtutis). Dicebant: 1035 Not, 1 | Virgil. Chalcedonium: not Calchedonium as Klotz, cf. Gk. Χαλκηδονιον. 1036 Not, 2 | Archimedes go through his calculations, but that the sapiens, however 1037 Not, 1 | Calchedonium as Klotz, cf. Gk. Χαλκηδονιον. Praestantissimos: Halm 1038 II, XXIX | inquit: ego enim, ut agitator callidus, prius quam ad finem veniam, 1039 Not, 2 | according to rule to write Calliphon in the nom; for this see 1040 II, XLV | animum solum complectitur, ut Calliphontem sequar, cuius quidem sententiam 1041 Not, 2 | Callipho: as the genitive is Calliphontis, Cic. ought according to 1042 Not, 2 | veritatis. Facere dicerent: so Camerarius for the MSS. facerent. Sustinere: 1043 Int, I | the midst of his eastern campaigns, put himself to much trouble31; 1044 II, XXXV | agere ieiune. Cum sit enim campus in quo exsultare possit 1045 Not, 2 | took verum as meaning fair, candid, in this explanation I concur. 1046 II, XVI | eadem sint? ut, si lupi canibus similes sunt, eosdem dices 1047 II, VII | deinceps 'equus est, ille canis.' Cetera series deinde sequitur, 1048 II, VII | illud est album, hoc dulce, canorum illud, hoc bene olens, hoc 1049 Not, 2 | conspiracy, had become a cant phrase at Rome, with which 1050 II, VII | multa, quae nos fugiunt in cantu, exaudiunt in eo genere 1051 I, IIII | Lucullus §121.~29. Martianus Capella V. §517, p. 444, ed. Kopp. 1052 II, XX | Zenoni adsentiens, cavere ne capiatur, ne fallatur videre. Nihil 1053 Not, 2 | incommoda tibi in hac re capies nisi caves, cf. also 127, 1054 II, XXXI | modi igitur visis consilia capiet et agendi et non agendi, 1055 II, XXXII | tacentibus ex uno Epicuri capite, altero vestro perceptio 1056 II, XLV | Stoicus Diogenes ad senatum in Capitolio starent, A. Albinum, qui 1057 II, XXVI | non possit. Horum quattuor capitum secundum et tertium omnes 1058 II, XXIX | Quid enim ad illum, qui te captare volt, utrum tacentem irretiat 1059 II, III | primum audierunt, oratione capti de rebus incognitis iudicant 1060 II, XV | interrogationibus eorum captionesque discutere: quod deinceps 1061 II, XIV | praestigiis quibusdam et captionibus depellamur. Nam qui voluit 1062 II, XXIX | ante sustineo nec diutius captiose interroganti respondeo. 1063 II, XV | est, quod fallacibus et captiosis interrogationibus circumscripti 1064 II, XVI | hoc reprehendendum, quod captiosissimo genere interrogationis utuntur, 1065 II, XVI | grano. Vitiosum sane et captiosum genus! Sic enim adscenditis: 1066 II, XVII | somno oppressos aut mente captos tam absurde, ut tum diceremus 1067 II, XLIII | praeter virtutem homini partim cara esse, partim etiam necessaria. 1068 Not, 2 | n. Percipiendi notam: = χαρακτηρα της συγκταθεσεως in Sext. 1069 Not, 1 | misunderstand one of the cardinal and best known doctrines 1070 Int, I | in which Cicero's private cares overwhelmed all thought 1071 II, XLVI | communitas cum hominum genere, caritas, amicitia, iustitia, reliquae 1072 II, XXVII | inflavit tibicen, a perito carmen agnoscitur. Quid? hoc nonne 1073 II, XLVIII | sententiam, quam quidem ille Carneadeam esse dicebat, ut percipi 1074 Not, 2 | tells us that while the Carneadeans believed all things to be 1075 Not, 2 | principiis naturalibus), II. 42 (Carneadeum illud quod is non tam ut 1076 II, XXXI | simus, iam explicata tota Carneadis sententia Antiochea ista 1077 Int, II | down82. So far does Cicero carry this freedom, that in the 1078 Not, 1 | καταληπτικη φαντασια, instead of carrying with it its own evidence, 1079 Not, 2 | might be expected from a Carthaginian;" cf. D.F. IV. 56, tuus 1080 Not, 1 | aut ... aut ... aut: This casting about for an excuse shows 1081 Not, 2 | 82, Ad Fam. VII. 1, 1), casus (De Off. III. 33). In the 1082 Not, 1 | Arist. calls one of his categories το ποιον and ποιοτης indifferently 1083 Abbr | Caecilium; In Cat. = In Catilinam.~Plat. = Plato: Rep. = Republic; 1084 Int, IV | for the suppression of the Catilinarian conspiracy, and was the 1085 II, II | cum Graecas litteras M. Catonem in senectute didicisse acceperim, 1086 Not, 2 | ducenda, of the latter An Catoni ducenda. These quaestiones 1087 Int, I | Orator, and the Laudatio Catonis, to which Caesar replied 1088 II, III | postridie venissemus, quam apud Catulum fuissemus. Quo quidem etiam 1089 Int, II | can be no doubt that he caught it from Antiochus who, in 1090 Not, 2 | omnium horum vitiorum una cautio est, also 51 of this book.~§§ 1091 Not, 1 | opinions with a much more cautious step.~§31. Sensus omnis 1092 II, XXIX | Erunt enim, nisi cavetis. Cautum est, inquit. Placet enim 1093 Not, 2 | Catus: so Lamb. for MSS. cautus. Tardum: De Div. II. 103 1094 II, XIX | comperisse dixisses. Hoc, quaeso, cave ne te terreat. De causa 1095 II, XLIII | utramque partem et paria? nonne caveam ne scelus faciam? Scelus 1096 II, XLIV | animis nostris datas: metum cavendi causa, misericordiam aegritudinemque 1097 II, XX | maximam, Zenoni adsentiens, cavere ne capiatur, ne fallatur 1098 II, XIX | monuit, inquit adridens, ut caveres ne quis improbus tribunus 1099 Not, 2 | tibi in hac re capies nisi caves, cf. also 127, 140 of this 1100 Int, IV(302)| De Civ. Dei, XIX. cc. 1—3.~ 1101 Not, 1 | about ιδεαι, which had long ceased. Krische Uber Cicero's Akademika 1102 II, XLI | lucere nunc, quam, cum cornix cecinerit, tum aliquid eam aut iubere 1103 Not, 1 | Scaliger derived it from πολυ χειρ (Curtius' Grundz ed. 3, 1104 II, XVIII | est? Unum tamen illud non celant, nihil esse quod percipi 1105 II, XVIII | tandem ista mysteria? aut cur celatis, quasi turpe aliquid, sententiam 1106 Int, I | In the year 88 B.C. the celebrated Philo of Larissa, then head 1107 II, XXVI | tanta incitatione fertur, ut celeritas eius quanta sit ne cogitari 1108 II, XXXIX | cum circum axem se summa celeritate convertat et torqueat, eadem 1109 II, I | continuo praetor—licebat enim celerius legis praemio—, post in 1110 Not, 2 | Xenoplatonem. Ed. Rom. (1471) has Cenonem, which would point to Zenonem, 1111 II, XLIII | omnibus sit, beatum fore censeat, si sapiens sit. Distrahor: 1112 II, VIII | quoque et immutabilem esse censemus, itemque sapientiam, artem 1113 I, II | hominis idem bonum esse censent: apud nostros autem non 1114 I, IV | esse a nostra cognitione censeret vel, si maxime cognita essent, 1115 II, XXXII | scripsisset isdem de rebus ad L. Censorinum, eum, qui consul cum M. 1116 Not, 2 | alliance with Rome. The censorship was in 199 B.C. About the 1117 II, II | legatione illa nobili, quam ante censuram obiit, Panaetium unum omnino 1118 Not, 2 | Cic. against the strong censure of Madv. (Pref. to D.F. 1119 Int, IV | Thus Philo becomes the central point or pivot of the discussion. 1120 Not, 2 | reprobare belongs to third century Latinity, also sua visa 1121 Not, 2 | of Chios, not Aristo of Ceos, who was a Peripatetic; 1122 II, XXVI | Quid? si in eiusdem modi cera centum sigilla hoc anulo 1123 I, VIII | cui crederetur, quia sola cerneret id, quod semper esset simplex 1124 II, XVII | interesse. 54. Ne hoc quidem cernunt, omnia se reddere incerta, 1125 I, IV | Platonis ubertate completi certam quandam disciplinae formulam 1126 I, XII | accepimus, Arcesilas sibi omne certamen instituit, non pertinacia 1127 II, XX | consilioque totius vitae aut certare cum aliis pugnaciter aut 1128 II, XXXIII | a quibus ipse didicit, certas habuerint, cur id sapiens 1129 II, XXXIII | omnes praeter eum Stoici certissimam putant, vera esse haruspicum [ 1130 I, I | solebant, nec tamen istum cessare, sed celare quae scribat 1131 II, XIX | te ab hoc dissentire. Sin cesseris, non magno opere mirabor. 1132 II, XL | corporum cedat et qua quidque cesserit aliud ilico subsequatur? 1133 II, XXII | philosophorum nemo probet. Itaque cessit, et ut ii, qui sub Novis 1134 I, Inc | Academico sapienti ab omnibus ceterarum sectarum, qui sibi sapientes 1135 I, Inc | iudicio suo, qui omnium ceterorum judicio sit secundus.~35. 1136 I, XII | dissentiret, unum tamen praeter ceteros mirabatur, incredibili quadam 1137 Not, 2 | heap. The true sorites or chain inference is still treated 1138 Int, I | Aristotle, than in the ivory chair of office. Towards the end 1139 Int, II | constituting himself the champion of an exploded and discredited 1140 Int, III | been diverted into other channels that so little progress 1141 Not, 1 | πρωτα κατα φυσιν see Zeller, chap XI. Ipsa per sese expetenda: 1142 Not, 1 | certainly abrupt, but if chapter IX. ought to begin here, 1143 Not, 1 | must read the whole of the chapters on Stoic ethics in Zeller 1144 Not, 1 | multiplex, et copiosus: these characteristics are named to account for 1145 Int, II | are necessary in order to characterize Cicero's estimate of the 1146 Not, 1 | present.) Cic. therefore is chargeable not with ignorance of Stoicism 1147 Int, IV | with great warmth, even charging Philo with wilful misrepresentation 1148 Not, 2 | ivory, and especially for a chariot which a fly covered with 1149 Int, II | orator, inclined him to charity and toleration, and repelled 1150 II, VI | minus in [Aeschine], in Charmada eloquentiae, in Melanthio 1151 Pre | which have been published in cheap and convenient forms.~Although 1152 Not, 2 | ring merchant to rival your chicken rearer of Delos? But, you 1153 Int, II | was, as he puts it, the child of the Academy90. Orators, 1154 Not, 2 | about twins and seals is childish (54). They press into their 1155 Not, 2 | Aristonem: this is Aristo of Chios, not Aristo of Ceos, who 1156 Not, 1 | quibusdam, quae. Expressa: chiselled as by a sculptor (cf. expressa 1157 Int, IV | Stoics like Cato should be chosen to represent Antiochus, 1158 Not, 2 | once more we have Lucullus' chronic and perhaps intentional 1159 Not, 2 | Persius VI. 80. inventus, Chrysippe, tui finitor acervi. The 1160 II, XXIV | eos colligam, cum habeam Chrysippum, qui fulcire putatur porticum 1161 Int, I | Sulla through the freedman Chrysogonus, who was implicated in the 1162 Not, 2 | existence. Quasi modo nascentes: Ciacconus thought this spurious, cf. 1163 Not, 1 | duos autem: the conj. of Ciaconus "ex asse heredem, secundos 1164 Not, 2 | dimissa revocatur: sc. a Cicerone. Philo's only notable pupils 1165 I, III | 377, ed. Keil. Varro ad Ciceronem tertio fixum et Cicero Academicorum 1166 Not, 2 | Contra. Ac. I. 7 placuit Ciceroni nostro beatum esse qui verum 1167 Not, 1 | Schuppe, De Anacoluthis Ciceronianis p. 9, agrees with Madv. 1168 Int, III | against the confusion of Ciceros ideas. Such outcry, now 1169 Not, 2 | plunge us into more than Cimmerian darkness? (61) By holding 1170 Not, 2 | XII. 131, Festus, s.v. Cimmerii, to show that the town or 1171 Int, IV | the same year, except when Cinna held the office, may have 1172 Not, 2 | Αναξαγορας τωι λευκην ειναι την χιονα, ανετιθει ‛οτι χιων εστιν ‛ 1173 Int, IV | between Antium and [xxxii] Circeii134. Here he sought to soften 1174 Not, 2 | pedalis fortasse. For quasi = circiter cf. note on 74. Madv. on 1175 II, XXXIX | in mundo moveri: quae cum circum axem se summa celeritate 1176 Not, 2 | correct how marvellously circumscribed it is! But say you, we desire 1177 Not, 2 | aut minorem) sed latius circumscribit, ne bis quidem tantum esse, 1178 II, XV | captiosis interrogationibus circumscripti atque decepti quidam, cum 1179 II, XI | fecerit diligentissimeque circumspexerit, exsistat aliquid quod et 1180 II, XXVIII | incinctae angui incedunt, circumstant~cum ardentibus taedis.'~ 1181 Not, 1 | and retired to the inner citadel of the καταληπτικη φαντασια. 1182 Not, 2 | the fame of illustrious citizens diminished, but enriched, 1183 II, XLIV | sapientem? postremo, solum civem, solum liberum? insipientis 1184 I, VII | meriturus mihi videris de tuis civibus, si eos non modo copia rerum 1185 I, III | consentaneum aut etiam ad nostros civis erudiendos nihil utilius 1186 I, Inc | consuesse.~36. Augustin. De Civit. Dei VI. 2. Denique et ipse 1187 Abbr | Academicos; De Civ. Dei = De Civitate Dei.~Quintil. = Quintilian; 1188 II, I | constituendis temperandisque civitatibus, tanta aequitas, ut hodie 1189 Int, II | that the Academy, though claiming to seek for the truth, has 1190 II, XIV | tutentur, non eorum qui clament nihilo magis vera illa esse 1191 Not, 2 | ludicros sermones: = aut clar. vir. serm. ludic. esse 1192 II, XXVII | mentitus. Sed ut ad ea, quae clariora sunt, veniam, res iam universas 1193 II, I | introduximus paene in urbem currum clarissimi viri: cuius mihi consilium 1194 II, VI | labefactare volt, conatus est clarissimis rebus tenebras obducere? 1195 II, VI | propterea quod nihil esset clarius εναργειαι, ut Graeci: perspicuitatem 1196 II, II | gravis illigari. Quasi vero clarorum virorum aut tacitos congressus 1197 II, XXIX | interrogati, dives pauper, clarus obscurus sit, multa pauca, 1198 Not, 1 | compared, Pro Cluentio 16, Classen and Baiter now om. the word. 1199 Not, 1 | The word is foreign to the Classic Greek Prose, as are ετυμος 1200 Int, IV | probably gave a summary classification of the sensations, with 1201 Not, 2 | philosopher."~§99. Genera: here = classifications of, modes of dividing visa. 1202 II, XLVII | aliter placet. Quid? cum Cleanthe doctore suo quam multis 1203 II, XXIII | philosophum non anteponit Cleanthi, Chrysippo, reliquis inferioris 1204 Not, 2 | perhaps make the sentence clearer. The words are a trans. 1205 Not, 1 | with the footnotes. The clearest view of Aristotle's doctrine 1206 Not, 2 | words used by Polemo; cf. Clemens Alex. qu. by Madv. on D.F. 1207 II, XLIV | misericordiam aegritudinemque clementiae, ipsam iracundiam fortitudinis 1208 Not, 2 | by Halm as the em. of Io. Clericus for MSS. sed mihi minores. 1209 Not, 1 | which is the work of a clever emendator, gives nescient 1210 Int, I | endeavours of your friends, clients, acquaintances, freedmen, 1211 Not, 2 | irreconcilable opinions clinging on to the same formulae 1212 Not, 2 | idea of Orelli, that Cic. clipped these trite sophisms as 1213 Not, 1 | senses they thought heavy and clogged and unable to gain knowledge 1214 Not, 1 | who, having stolen the clothes of the Stoics, proceeded 1215 Not, 1 | G). Natura sentiente: a clumsy trans. of αισθητη ουσια = 1216 Not, 1 | themselves existing in (being co-extensive with) universal substance ( 1217 II, XI | cum convicio veritatis coacti perspicua a perceptis volunt 1218 Not, 2 | like γλαυκ' εσ' Αθηνας and "coals to Newcastle," see Lorenz 1219 II, XI | irridentur. Non enim urguent, ut coarguant neminem ulla de re posse 1220 I, IV | eorum, qui ita putarunt, coarguit. Est, inquit, ut dicis: 1221 Int, IV | pleasantly situated on the Latin coast between Antium and [xxxii] 1222 Not, 1 | modestia pudicitia are said coerceri, the writer's thoughts having 1223 II, XX | reprehenditur, calumnia etiam coercetur, ego de omni statu consilioque 1224 II, II | nostram numquam a populari coetu removimus, sed ne litteram 1225 Not, 1 | reason he thought could not coexist with virtue and perfect 1226 Not, 2 | quid non mortalia pectora cogis auri sacra fames? Sapientem 1227 II, XXX | cum concesseris superius, cogit inferius concedere. Quid 1228 II, XLI | videmur, humana despicimus, cogitantesque supera atque caelestia haec 1229 Not, 2 | says, multo tamen saepius "cogitatio" pro "cognitio" substituitur 1230 II, XX | enim sum sapiens—et meas cogitationes sic dirigo, non ad illam 1231 II, XXXVI | qui sibi cum oratoribus cognationem esse, qui claros viros a 1232 I, IV | censeret vel, si maxime cognita essent, nihil tamen ad bene 1233 I, XII | quicquam esse turpius quam cognitioni et perceptioni adsensionem 1234 II, VI | plane confidas perceptum id cognitumque esse, quod est tale, quale 1235 II, XIII | rationis quasi fundamenta cognoscere. Componunt igitur primum 1236 II, IV | diligentius, ut causam ex eo totam cognoscerem. Itaque compluris dies adhibito 1237 II, I | admirarentur omnes, ingenium cognoscerent. Post ad Mithridaticum bellum 1238 II, XXVI | Deliacum illum, qui ova cognosceret?~ 1239 II, XIX | licebat, qui ex te illa cognoveram, negabis esse rem ullam 1240 I, XII | philosophiae partis ignarus et, ut cognovi ex iis, qui illum audierant, 1241 II, II | cum paucis ex ipso saepe cognovimus. Maiore enim studio Lucullus 1242 II, XLVII | quaeque iurati iudices cognovissent, ea non ut esse facta, sed 1243 II, II | ea saepe audiendo facile cognovit, quae vel semel audita meminisse 1244 I, VI | neque enim materiam ipsam cohaerere potuisse, si nulla vi contineretur, 1245 Not, 1 | commutari above), which is coherent and continuous, the world 1246 II, XXIX | certis et illustrioribus cohibes adsensum. Hoc idem me in 1247 II, XXI | sapientem adsensus omnes cohibiturum, ut videndum tibi sit, idne 1248 Not, 1 | consulted for the important coincidence of Force with logical genus ( 1249 Not, 1 | Aug. De Civ. Dei XIX. 3) coincides with Cic.'s in every particular. 1250 Not, 1 | his note on that passage coins the word inaestimatio.) 1251 II, XXIII | aetatis? qui mihi cum illo collati quintae classis videntur. 1252 Int, IV(286)| contra ακαταληψιαν praeclare collecta ab Antiocho: Ad Att. XIII. 1253 II, XXIV | sane. Certe tam multa non collegisset, quae nos fallerent probabilitate 1254 II, XXIV | conclusiunculae. Sed quid eos colligam, cum habeam Chrysippum, 1255 Int, I | supposed that he came into collision with Sulla through the freedman 1256 I, XI | comprehensionem illam, quam dixi, collocabat, eamque neque in rectis 1257 I, X | cupiditatem, alia rationem collocarent, ne his quidem adsentiebatur. 1258 II, II | populus Romanus hoc in gradu collocavit, nisi ne quid privatis studiis 1259 II, II | ludicros sermones aut rerum colloquia leviorum! Etenim, si quodam 1260 Not, 2 | remove a, quoting exx. of collucere without the prep., which 1261 II, XXXIII | quodque nunc, qua a sole collucet, albescit et vibrat dissimileque 1262 Not, 2 | punctuation, by which a colon is placed at perspicuum 1263 Not, 2 | spatio: this xystus was a colonnade with one side open to the 1264 II, XXXII | quibus numquam dictum sit aut colorem aut saporem aut sonum nullum 1265 II, XXV | in columba pluris videri colores nec esse plus uno. Deinde 1266 Not, 2 | other. In Plutarch Adv. Colotem p. 1121 F, want of novelty 1267 Not, 2 | a rule.~9. The different colours which the same persons show 1268 II, XXV | id, quod videatur, et in columba pluris videri colores nec 1269 Not, 2 | points." Bentl. boldly read columina, while Dav. proposed vimina 1270 I, IIII | Maenio dicta sunt; unde et columna Maenia. Cic. Academicorum 1271 Int, II | anxious that people should combat his opinions; for he makes 1272 Not, 2 | This definition Arcesilas combated. This is the controversy 1273 Not, 2 | lacerat. Madv. Em. 176 in combating the conj. of Goer. si maneant ... 1274 Not, 2 | D. V. 9, who qu. similar combinations from D.F. V. 11, 58. Elatiores: 1275 Not, 1 | separate sensations and combine them before we can know 1276 Not, 1 | 25. Bene facis: passim in comedy, whence Cic. takes it; cf. 1277 Not, 2 | pollicetur prolaturum qui se ipse comest quod efficit dialecticorum 1278 Int, I | books." These gave him real comfort, and his studies seemed 1279 Not, 2 | he does verses from the comic writers is untenable. In 1280 Not, 2 | latrat. Dav. conjectured comically blaterat iste tamen et, 1281 Not, 2 | Laert. VII. 166—7. A vero: "coming from a reality," cf. 41, 1282 II, II | obiit, Panaetium unum omnino comitem fuisse, nec litterarum Graecarum 1283 Not, 2 | reward of his merits as a commander and civil administrator, 1284 II, V | primo anno consul fuit, commemorant reliquos, qui leges popularis 1285 II, XXIII | de antiquis philosophis commemorari atque seditiosi solerent 1286 I, II | admittuntur ad eos nec satis commendati multitudini possunt esse.~ 1287 Int, IV | views, at the same time commending his father's knowledge of 1288 Not, 2 | that quos legisset = quorum commentarios legisset I think improbable. 1289 Int, IV | Greek265. He probably also commented on the headlong rashness 1290 II, XXI | locum non debeat se sapiens committere. Sin autem omnino nihil 1291 I, IV | simul videre satisne ea commode dici possit Latine? Quae 1292 I, VI | voluptatibus et multis vitae commodis anteponebantur. Haec quidem 1293 Not, 1 | But firstly, a verse so commonplace, if familiar, would occur 1294 Not, 2 | movebantur: so Halm for MSS. tum commovebantur, the em. is supported by 1295 II, XIX | simus adstricti, ut nos commovere nequeamus. 62. Sublata enim 1296 II, VI | autem, dum nova quaedam commovet, quod ea sustinere vix poterat, 1297 II, XVI | depingit, non simul ac se ipse commovit atque ad se revocavit, sentit 1298 I, IV | philosophiam et ad vitam communem adduxisse, ut de virtutibus 1299 II, XXII | sunt inter illos non nulla communia: haec Academicorum est una 1300 II, XXV | distinguis? Desine, quaeso, communibus locis: domi nobis ista nascuntur. 1301 II, XIV | dilucide perspicere nec ulla communione visorum impediri, comprehendere 1302 II, XXII | summum bonum: qui ex illius commutata sententia docere vellet 1303 I, X | tam rebus quam vocabulis commutaverat, sic inter recte factum 1304 Not, 1 | non-appearance elsewhere, while the companion adjective Antiochius is 1305 Int, I | Peripatetic, was one of his companions in this sojourn at Athens21. 1306 II, XV | auxilia totidem sunt contra comparanda. Adversatur enim primum, 1307 Not, 2 | adhuc for etiam with the comparative does not occur till the 1308 II, XXXV | angustias et in Stoicorum dumeta compellimus? si enim mihi cum Peripatetico 1309 Pre | from my own or some more competent hand. It must be regarded 1310 Int, IV | magnitude of that work. His complaint that Varro had been writing 1311 Not, 2 | often comments on similar complaints of the Stoics. Aliud eiusmodi 1312 Not, 2 | mostly, if that is retained complebitur must be read. Madv. Opusc. 1313 II, XXXVI | ut ego ista innumerabilia complectens nusquam labar, nihil opiner? 1314 II, XLV | simus expertes, animum solum complectitur, ut Calliphontem sequar, 1315 Pre | prepare the way for the completer knowledge now required in 1316 I, IV | utrique Platonis ubertate completi certam quandam disciplinae 1317 Not, 2 | the simplest and the most complex truths, and tries to condemn 1318 I, I | venientem vidimus: atque ilium complexi, ut mos amicorum est, satis 1319 Not, 2 | through sense, these rise in complexity till we arrive at definitions 1320 Int, IV | engaged; and after more compliments had been bandied about, 1321 II, IV | adhibito Heraclito doctisque compluribus et in iis Antiochi fratre, 1322 Int, IV | had made it difficult to comply with the request172. Varro 1323 II, XIII | quasi fundamenta cognoscere. Componunt igitur primum artem quandam 1324 Int, II | mainly or solely, really composed a single school, denoted 1325 II, XIII | his causa comprehenditur. Composita ea conclusio sic est: 'Eorum, 1326 Not, 2 | finibus: all these were composite fines. Adhuc: I need scarcely 1327 Int, IV | Priora Academica are the compositions in question. If this conjecture 1328 Not, 2 | Persi par pugnat uti non compositum melius (sc. par) cum Bitho 1329 I, IV | quandam disciplinae formulam composuerunt et eam quidem plenam ac 1330 II, XLVII | talem esse dicebat, cuius compotem nisi sapientem esse neminem. 1331 Not, 2 | substituted is more difficult to comprehend. Sextus indeed tells us 1332 I, V | animi autem, quae essent ad comprehendendam ingeniis virtutem idonea, 1333 I, XI | omnia, quae essent in re, comprehenderet, sed quia nihil quod cadere 1334 Not, 2 | as in 99, the opposite of comprehendibilia III. 1, 41. The past partic. 1335 II, XXII | Dionysius ille Heracleotes utrum comprehendisset certa illa nota, qua adsentiri 1336 II, VII | meminit, quod non animo comprehendit et tenet? Ars vero quae 1337 II, XIII | conclusione tota ab his causa comprehenditur. Composita ea conclusio 1338 II, XXXVII | probaverit, eam sic animo comprehensam habebit, ut ea, quae sensibus, 1339 II, XXXIII | igitur memoria perceptarum comprehensarumque rerum est, omnia, quae quisque 1340 Not, 1 | authority than the vulg comprehensibile. Goerenz's note on these 1341 II, XIV | possint esse. Ergo si rebus comprehensis et perceptis nisa et progressa 1342 Not, 2 | for ut comprobem quae tu comprobas cf. 125. Impudenter: 115. 1343 II, XLVII | Quam rationem maiorum etiam comprobat diligentia, qui primum iurare ' 1344 II, XXVIII | uxorem interemebat, cum conabatur etiam patrem, non perinde 1345 I, VII | haec nunc primum tractare conamur? 26. Tu vero, inquam, Varro, 1346 Not, 2 | which the wings of a bee concealed. See Plin. Nat. Hist. VII. 1347 II, XVIII | non repugnabo: quin etiam concedam illum ipsum sapientem, de 1348 II, XXIV | nihil posse percipi, tu concedas numquam adsensurum esse.~ 1349 II, XXX | impetrent ut verum esse concedat quod ita effabimur, 'aut 1350 II, XVII | minimum quidem intersit, concedatur tibi ut in hoc quoque nostro 1351 Int, III | Greeks119. He will not even concede that the Greek is a richer 1352 Int, II | followed them, although he conceded that they were Socratic107. 1353 II, XVI | me tibi primum quidque concedente, meum vitium fuerit: sin 1354 II, XVII | estis contenti, praesertim concedentibus nobis? et cur id potius 1355 II, XIII | ex his duo sibi putant concedi: neque enim quisquam repugnat. 1356 II, XX | opinari tu quoque, Luculle, concedis. Quod quoniam a te probatur— 1357 II, XXXV | Peripatetici et vetus Academia concedit: vos negatis, Antiochus 1358 II, XVII | quid tibi vis in geminis? Conceditur enim similis esse, quo contentus 1359 II, XXVI | secundum et tertium omnes concedunt. Primum Epicurus non dat; 1360 Int, IV | with such gigantic power concentrated in his hands, were to die, 1361 Not, 1 | ethical works. The abstract conception of nature in relation to 1362 II, XXX | Ipsa enim ratio conexi, cum concesseris superius, cogit inferius 1363 Not, 2 | Epicurus veretur ne si hoc concesserit, concedendum sit fato fieri 1364 II, XXXVI | mathematicorum, quibus non concessis digitum progredi non possunt. 1365 Not, 2 | gain in point. Qy, should concessit be read, as in 118 concessisse 1366 II, XLVII | comprehendi posset, artificia concidere dicebas neque mihi dabas 1367 II, XIII | possit. Haec autem universa concidunt etiam minutius. Ut enim 1368 II, XLII | autem vivere, quod ducatur a conciliatione naturae, Zeno statuit finem 1369 II, XLII | iis, quas primas natura conciliavisset. Honeste autem vivere, quod 1370 II, XLII | quas primas homini natura conciliet, et vetus Academia censuit, 1371 I, I | voluminibus?~2. Nonius s.v. concinnare p. 43. Idem in Academicis 1372 Not, 2 | tabernarios quid neqoti est concitare? Expromam: Cic. was probably 1373 I, VIII | possent, aut ita mobiles et concitatae, ut nihil umquam unum esset 1374 II, XXVIII | ambiguorum intellegentiam concludendique rationem, tum paucis additis 1375 Not, 2 | supposed to correspond to concludere. It is more likely to be 1376 II, XIV | sicut occursum est. Nam concludi argumentum non potest nisi 1377 II, XXX | quidquid igitur eodem modo concluditur probabitis aut ars ista 1378 I, II | nihil apta interrogatione concludunt, nullam denique artem esse 1379 Not, 2 | συλλογισμος), cf. De Leg. I. 48 conclusa oratio. Fab. refers to Gell. 1380 II, XXX | si via, si vis denique conclusionis valet, eadem est in utroque. 1381 Not, 2 | the truth of the elaborate conclusions which that geometer rears 1382 Not, 1 | that interrogatiuncula and conclusiuncula are almost convertible terms. 1383 II, XXIV | enim appellantur fallaces conclusiunculae. Sed quid eos colligam, 1384 Int, I | the Magnesian concerning concord62; or employing his days 1385 Not, 2 | affirms the existence of a concrete individual. I can quote 1386 I, X | naturaque et condolescere et concupiscere et extimescere et efferri 1387 I, II | ita enim appellat atomos—concursione fortuita loqui? Nostra tu 1388 II, XXII | videtur non potuisse sustinere concursum omnium philosophorum. Etenim 1389 II, XX | sed etiam mores et naturam condemnandam puto. Nam, si in minimis 1390 Int, III | great poet in his sweeping condemnation, and being unwilling to 1391 II, XXXVII | et tanti repudiati ab eo condemnatique discedent. 119. Quamcumque 1392 Not, 2 | Cicero's definition and condenses it thus; his signis verum 1393 Not, 1 | The ablative is always conditioned by some verb, see Madv. 1394 Not, 2 | persons show in different conditions, when young and when old, 1395 I, X | tollerent, naturaque et condolescere et concupiscere et extimescere 1396 II, X | obscuris, qui lucem eripere conetur? Sed disputari poterat subtiliter, 1397 II, VI | retenta est: post autem confecta a Carneade, qui est quartus 1398 II, XLVIII | propria sententia. Ita sermone confecto Catulus remansit: nos ad 1399 II, V | illorum nec Arcesilae calumnia conferenda est cum Democriti verecundia. 1400 Int, I | from Cilicia he spoke of conferring on the city some signal 1401 Int, III | which he does not freely confess to be taken wholly from 1402 Not, 2 | instances the Stoic sapiens confessedly does (99, 100). Our sapiens 1403 II, VII | utitur, explere numeros et conficere versus? Quod idem in similibus 1404 II, XLVII | Et hoc quidem Zeno gestu conficiebat. Nam, cum extensis digitis 1405 II, XI | confidere sibi poterunt. Ut enim confidant, notum iis esse debebit 1406 II, VI | quicquam comprehendi, ut plane confidas perceptum id cognitumque 1407 Not, 2 | philosophers if they had not even confidence in their one dogma (29).~§ 1408 II, XXVIII | Eurysthei filios, ita suos configebat sagittis, cum uxorem interemebat, 1409 II, XXI | conclusionem Arcesilas probabat: confirmabat enim et primum et secundum. 1410 II, XXVI | amplius duodeviginti partibus confirmant maiorem esse quam terram. 1411 II, XI | adspectu probabile videtur, id confirmatur, quid eo levius? 36. Sin 1412 Not, 2 | expression (naves malleolis confixae) and in Pliny Nat. Hist. 1413 Int, II | Mill, to show that the free conflict of opinion is necessary [ 1414 Not, 2 | patitur: again Lucullus confounds essential with phenomenal 1415 II, XVII | nullo modo potest. 55. Dein confugis ad physicos eos, qui maxime 1416 II, XIX | philosophiam sequere quae confundit vera cum falsis, spoliat 1417 II, XXXVII | se, minutas, eas primum confusas, postea in ordinem adductas 1418 I, IIII | linguae haesitatione et confusione trepidare, Cic. Academicorum 1419 Int, IV | ακαταληπτα would be a peculiarly congenial task. Thus the commendation 1420 Not, 1 | which fall into two classes, congenital and acquired, virtue being 1421 II, XXXVII | natum umquam et sempiternum, conglobata figura: Parmenides ignem, 1422 II, XLVIII | contulisse. Saepius enim congredientes nos, et maxime in Tusculanis 1423 Not, 2 | Concreta: so Manut. for MSS. congregata. In 121 the MSS. give concreta 1424 II, II | clarorum virorum aut tacitos congressus esse oporteat aut ludicros 1425 II, XIV | convincuntur, cum haec duo pro congruentibus sumunt tam vehementer repugnantia: 1426 II, V | nominibus differentis, re congruentis, a quibus Stoici ipsi verbis 1427 Not, 2 | FileOutputStreams of Wagner and Conington. Tam certa putat: so Sextus 1428 Not, 2 | Madv. D.F. III. 70 "in hac coniunctione—hoc fieri non potest nisi— 1429 Not, 2 | potest nisi—fere semper coniunctivus subicitur praesentis—futuri 1430 Not, 1 | duplici genere voluptatis coniunctus Ernesti em. cunctos, Dav. 1431 II, XLV | illud idem cum honestate coniungerent, nec multo secus eos, qui 1432 Pre | and that only where the conjecttires of other Editors seemed 1433 Int, IV | can have no difficulty in conjecturing at least a portion of the 1434 Abbr | conjectures'; conjug. = conjugation; constr. = construction; 1435 Not, 1 | barely possible, but when the conjunctions go with separate clauses 1436 I, IIII | videtur, quodque nunc a sole conlucet.... = Lucullus §105.~24. 1437 Int, IV | about Greek philosophy, connect Catulus with any particular 1438 Not, 2 | For the omission of any connecting particle between the members 1439 Not, 2 | and Verr. V. 64, the que connects clauses and does not modify 1440 Int, IV | he felt now compelled to conquer, otherwise he must either 1441 Not, 2 | was allowed to paint the conqueror, cf. Ad Fam. V. 12, 7.~§ 1442 Int, I | return to the city after his conquest of the Marian party in Italy, 1443 II, III | idque summa cura studioque conquirimus. Etsi enim omnis cognitio 1444 II, XXVII | Stoici, dum studiose omnia conquisierit contra sensus et perspicuitatem 1445 II, XXXI | tollatur. 100. Quid enim? conscendens navem sapiens num comprehensum 1446 Not, 1 | not this division, either consciously or unconsciously, though 1447 Not, 1 | that wisdom consists in a consciousness of ignorance. Moral exhortation 1448 II, XVII | anulis impressorum pueriliter consectantur. Quis enim nostrum similitudines 1449 II, XXVII | somnia reri et cuius furor consederit, putare non fuisse ea vera, 1450 Not, 2 | concessisse is now read for MSS. consensisse? A vero: cf. 41.~§78. Quae 1451 II, XLIV | 135. Quid? illa, in quibus consentiunt, num pro veris probare possumus? 1452 II, XXXIII | quos quoniam appetitio consequatur, actionem sequi: tolli autem 1453 Not, 2 | Dialectici refused to allow the consequences of their own principles, 1454 Not, 1 | Krische wishes to read consequens for consentiens, comparing 1455 Int, IV | prominent position than Cato. Consequently Cato must have taken the 1456 II, XXXI | nullum esse, ut perceptio consequeretur, ut autem probatio, multa. 1457 II, VIII | aequitatem et fidem, ut eius conservandae causa nullum supplicium 1458 I, VI | reperiebatur: quod erat in conservatione earum rerum, quas natura 1459 Not, 1 | sentiment to come from a conservative like Cic. The words often 1460 II, XX | conclusio quam habeat vim considera.~ 1461 I, IV | Tum, ille. Istuc quidem considerabo, nec vero sine te. Sed de 1462 II, XI | circumspectione aliqua et accurata consideratione, quod visum sit, id se dicent 1463 Not, 1 | cf. Somn. Scip. 15) These considerations will be enough to show that 1464 Not, 2 | copiane sit agri an penuria consideratur. On this point cf. M. Em. 1465 Not, 2 | about this passage because considero does not belong to the class 1466 Not, 1 | clause in Brut. 24, and considitur in De Or. III. 18. Mihi 1467 Not, 2 | II. 360. Consignamus: cf. consignatae in animis notiones in T. 1468 II, XLV | quod minime voltis. Quid consilii datis? Testatur saepe Chrysippus 1469 II, XX | coercetur, ego de omni statu consilioque totius vitae aut certare 1470 Not, 1 | one and indivisible and to consist solely of Reason, to which 1471 II, XLV | in voluptate contemnenda consistat, honestatem cum voluptate 1472 Not, 2 | that the sceptic must, if consistent, be ανενεργητος εν βιωι ( 1473 II, IX | praesertim cum in eo summa consisteret: hanc enim esse regulam 1474 Not, 2 | Constitit: from consto, not from consisto cf. 63 qui tibi constares. 1475 Abbr | Epistles; Consol. ad Helv. = Consolatio ad Helvidium.~Epic. = Epicurus; 1476 Int, IV | that a friend tried to console him for the death of Tullia, 1477 Int, IV | the first edition. If he consoles Atticus for the uselessness 1478 Not, 1 | 37. Tunc: rare before a consonant; see Munro on Lucr. I. 130. 1479 I, II | interpretati, quadam hilaritate conspersimus, multa admixta ex intima 1480 I, IV | nesciat. Quae cum diceret constanter et in ea sententia permaneret, 1481 II, XVII | confundere. Quaerimus gravitatis, constantiae, firmitatis, sapientiae 1482 I, XI | essent aliena firmae et constantis adsensionis, a virtute sapientiaque 1483 II, XIV | in perspicuis firmius et constantius, maiore quadam opus est 1484 II, XXII | apud Philonem tam diu, ut constaret diutius didicisse neminem, 1485 II, V | disciplinae gravissimae constitissent, tum exortus est ut in optima 1486 II, XLIII | discrimine. Nam aut Stoicus constituatur sapiens aut veteris Academiae. 1487 I, V | bonum quo omnia referrentur, constituebantque extremum esse rerum expetendarum 1488 II, I | tanta prudentia fuit in constituendis temperandisque civitatibus, 1489 II, X | dicere.~32. Nec vero satis constituere possum quod sit eorum consilium 1490 Int, II | Academica he was charged with constituting himself the champion of 1491 II, IX | regulam totius philosophiae, constitutionem veri falsi, cogniti incogniti: 1492 II, XXXIII | XXXIII. Sic igitur inducto et constituto probabili, et eo quidem 1493 Not, 2 | I. 6, 8. Constitit: from consto, not from consisto cf. 63 1494 II, XXVII | nostros mentemque et totam constructionem hominis fabricata natura! 1495 Not, 1 | passage requires careful construing: after quasdam virtutes 1496 Not, 2 | contrahens aut remittens; Orelli construxerat; MSS. mostly contexerat. 1497 I, Inc | usque vixissent, aperire consuesse.~36. Augustin. De Civit. 1498 Int, IV | Catulus was one of the viri consulares who had given their unreserved 1499 II, XLIV | sapientis esse? neminem consulem, praetorem, imperatorem, 1500 Int, IV | unfortunate as to have two bad consuls in the same year, except 1501 Int, IV | advisable to do so, after a consultation195. The meeting ultimately 1502 I, IV | virtutis studium cohortandis consumebatur, ut e Socraticorum libris, 1503 Not, 2 | though he prints Asiae). Consumere followed by an ablative 1504 Not, 2 | passage, I note hoc loco consumitur in T.D. IV. 23, where Baiter' 1505 II, I | Ponto gerente in Asia pace consumpserat. Sed incredibilis quaedam 1506 II, IV | in ista una disputatione consumpsimus. Sed ea pars, quae contra 1507 II, I | totum iter et navigationem consumpsisset partim in percontando a