0-aiste | aiter-break | breed-consu | conta-dim | dimin-exami | exanc-grumb | grund-inter | intim-medio | mediu-omono | omoy-posse | possi-remov | remum-stirp | stirs-unive | unjus-zoes
                           bold = Main text
     Liber, Caput          grey = Comment text

5047 II, XXX | invenitur, ut respondere possitis verane an falsa sint, ubi 5048 Not, 1 | than Xenocrates and the post-Aristotelian Peripatetics, to whom it 5049 II, XXXI | superiorem divisionem: contra posteriorem nihil dici oportere: qua 5050 II, XIV | interesset: ita priori posterius, posteriori superius non iungitur.~45. 5051 II, XIV | tamquam interesset: ita priori posterius, posteriori superius non 5052 II, XLVIII | dixi, est mihi perorandum. Posthac tamen, cum haec quaeremus, 5053 II, III | et Lucullus nosque ipsi postridie venissemus, quam apud Catulum 5054 II, IX | hoc illud est natum, quod postulabat Hortensius, ut id ipsum 5055 II, IX | modo potius erat ab his postulandum, ut hoc unum saltem, percipi 5056 II, XXX | hoc extremum eorum est: postulant ut excipiantur haec inexplicabilia. 5057 II, XVII | itemque homines. Deinde postulas, ut, si mundus ita sit par 5058 II, X | eorum, perinde ut causa postulat, dicere.~32. Nec vero satis 5059 Not, 2 | not allow the very first postulate of your Dialectic (97). 5060 II, XL | vide ne impudenter etiam postules, non solum adroganter, praesertim 5061 II, VII | incorruptisque sensibus an postulet melius aliquid, non videam 5062 I, VI | eius partis, quam primam posui, forma atque descriptio.~ 5063 Not, 2 | alludes to this (‛οτι χρυσιου ποταμος ειη ρεοντος). This is the 5064 Not, 2 | Guietus humorously conj. potantis, Durand oscitantis (cf. 5065 I, Inc | agendum sine adsensione potent invitare. ... Talia, inquit 5066 Not, 1 | there is some conditional or potential force in the sentence; see 5067 Not, 1 | Passive matterυλη is only potentially τοδε τι, passing into actual 5068 I, II | A Graecis enim peti non poterant ac post L. Aelii nostri 5069 II, XXXIII | possit? an tu in soritis poteris hoc, cum voles: ille in 5070 I, II | lunae quae liniamenta sint potesne dicere? cuius et nascentis 5071 II, VII | iudicium, quia sentiatur:—potestne igitur quisquam dicere inter 5072 Not, 2 | singular gerund like spe rerum potiendi, etc., but of two genitives 5073 II, XLI | solem dominari et rerum potiri putat. Ita cogimur dissensione 5074 Not, 1 | efficta, moulded as by a potter (see II. 77); the word was 5075 II, XVII | esse, quo contentus esse potueras: tu autem vis eosdem plane 5076 I, II | scire possent, ea, quantum potuinihil enim magno opere meorum 5077 II, III | rudes et indocti iudicare potuissentstatuere enim qui sit sapiens 5078 II, II | vel semel audita meminisse potuisset. Delectabatur autem mirifice 5079 Pre | published in 1810. To the poverty and untrustworthiness of 5080 Not, 1 | B, φαμεν αναγκαιον ειναι που τοον ‛απαν εν τινι τοπω. 5081 Not, 1 | of their αδιαφορα as the practising ground for virtue (D.F. 5082 I, IX | suavis et ita moratus, ut prae se probitatem quandam et 5083 Not, 1 | Academica, also quotes Plutarch Præc. Polit. 7. Inepte ... docet: 5084 II, XXIX | locus is, quo ferentur equi, praeceps erit. Sic me, inquit, ante 5085 Not, 2 | nunc in Aristippi furtim praecepta relabor, also D.F. V. 6 5086 I, II | disserendi putant. Nos autem praeceptis dialecticorum et oratorum 5087 II, XLIV | et, ut Tuberoni Panaetius praecipit, ad verbum ediscendus libellus. 5088 II, XXI | potius omnis adsensio, ne praecipitet, si temere processerit. 5089 Not, 2 | these words MSS. om. Tam in praecipiti: for the position of in 5090 Not, 2 | esse putaret, Epic. non praecise definit (tantum enim esse 5091 II, XL | mente rem ullam effici posse praeclaram? et cum in uno mundo ornatus 5092 II, XLI | vereatur temere opinari praeclareque agi secum putet, si in eius 5093 II, XXXVIII | novo consilio inito tam praeclari operis inceptio, et ita 5094 Not, 1 | meant is L. Aelius Stilo or Praeconinus, the master of Varro, and 5095 II, I | pari pietate et industria praedito paternas inimicitias magna 5096 Int, IV(155)| De Fin. Praef. p. lvii. ed. 2.~ 5097 II, I | quadam laude provinciae praefuit; deinde absens factus aedilis, 5098 Not, 2 | Laus: "merit," as often, so praemium, Virg. Aen. XII. 437, means 5099 Abbr | Euseb. = Eusebius; Pr. Ev. = Praeparatio Evangelii.~Aug. or August. = 5100 I, X | minoris. Quae pluris, ea praeposita appellabat, reiecta autem 5101 II, III | potestas, nec ut omnia, quae praescripta et quasi imperata sint, 5102 Not, 1 | Halm with one MS. (G) gives praescriptione, which is in II. 140, cf. 5103 Not, 2 | semper coniunctivus subicitur praesentis—futuri et perfecti indicativus 5104 I, IV | Abundantia quadam ingeni praestabat, ut mihi quidem videtur, 5105 Not, 2 | Platonem semper excipio—praestans; also D.F. V. 7, De Leg. 5106 I, V | autem sensus integros et praestantiam aliquam partium singularum, 5107 II, I | prosunt, hoc erat memoria illa praestantior, quam fuisse in Themistocle, 5108 Not, 1 | who speaks of Goerenz's "praestantissima recensio," and founds his 5109 I, IV | reliquisset, duos autem praestantissimo studio atque doctrina, Xenocratem 5110 Not, 1 | Klotz, cf. Gk. Χαλκηδονιον. Praestantissimos: Halm wrongly, cf. Brut. 5111 II, XIV | sint ipsa per sese, quasi praestigiis quibusdam et captionibus 5112 II, XXXII | sensibus falsum videatur, praesto est qui neget rem ullam 5113 II, XX | copiosi et parati et nihil praetereuntis eorum, quae pro illa causa 5114 II, XXXIV | respondeat. 111. Ne illam quidem praetermisisti, Luculle, reprehensionem 5115 I, I | multa scribas, genus hoc praetermittas, praesertim cum et ipse 5116 II, IV | quae contra Philonem erat, praetermittenda est: minus enim acer est 5117 II, XIII | Haec duo proposita non praetervolant, sed ita dilatant, ut non 5118 II, XLIV | esse? neminem consulem, praetorem, imperatorem, nescio an 5119 Not, 2 | αληθες και το ψευδες εν τοις πραγμασι συνεχωρει (Numen in Euseb. 5120 Not, 2 | εστιν." τωι δε τοιουτωι πραγματι ουκετι της αισθησεως εργον 5121 Not, 2 | οσον δε επι τη φυσει των πραγματων αυτων καταλ.). But Arcesilas 5122 Not, 2 | φαντασιαν αχθηναι του τοιουτου πραγματος "τουτο λευκον εστι και τουτο 5123 Not, 2 | affirms this as well as πραιοτης to be a name for the sceptic 5124 Int, III | approbation he most cared, praised the books, and many were 5125 Int, IV | the younger Catulus, whose praises were sung in the fervid 5126 Not, 2 | the usual θεωρητικαι and πρακτικαι, also Quint. II. 18, 1 and 5127 II, XL | sentire est melius quam tam prava sentire. 126. Non ergo id 5128 I, X | bonis actionibus ponens, prave, id est peccata, in malis: 5129 I, XI | neque in rectis neque in pravis numerabat, sed soli credendum 5130 II, VIII | lumenque vitae, tamenne in ista pravitate perstabitis? Nam quaerendi 5131 I, V | quid rectum in oratione pravumve, quid consentiens, quid 5132 Not, 1 | 23. Agendi aliquid: Gk. πραξεως, the usual translation, 5133 Not, 2 | Ευρυσθεος, την ακολουθον πραξιν ταυτηι τη φαντασιαι συνηψεν. 5134 Not, 2 | a pure verbal noun like πραξις, cf. De Off. I. 83, and 5135 Not, 2 | good voice is a thing to be prayed for, and not to be got by 5136 Int, III | combination after another of pre-existing tenets. It would be hasty 5137 Int, IV | dialogues Cicero took every precaution against anachronisms.~The 5138 Int, IV | Cicero begged him to take all precautions to prevent it from getting 5139 Int, III | In accordance with Greek precedent, Cicero claims to have his 5140 Not, 2 | allows it to stand, the ut precedes a vowel; Cic. therefore 5141 Int, I | Academia, as Appius, his predecessor, had done at Eleusis53. 5142 Int, II | merely because one of their predecessors has laid it down82. So far 5143 Not, 2 | probabilia is a sort of tertiary predicate after efficere ("to manufacture 5144 Not, 2 | after punctum as strongly predicative ("there is a point," etc.), 5145 Not, 1 | to bring them under the predominance of the will. How the moral 5146 Not, 2 | strong censure of Madv. (Pref. to D.F. p. lxiii.) who 5147 Not, 2 | above), (2) that Cic. has by preference described the point and 5148 Not, 2 | Madv. The scribes often prefix h to parts of the pronoun 5149 Int, I | political partizanship, and prejudices based on facts irrelevant 5150 Not, 2 | most likely belonged to the preliminary assault on the senses made 5151 Not, 2 | μονολημματοι (involving only one premise) in Sext. P.H. I. 152, 159, 5152 Pre | weighing the evidence he presents; and I have also studied 5153 Not, 1 | necessary to enrich it and preserve it. Of the things enumerated 5154 Not, 2 | called by and held under the presidency of magistrates, all of whom 5155 Not, 1 | itself Ciceronian, recalls presse loqui, and N.D. II. 149. 5156 Not, 1 | I. 133. One old ed. has pressionem, which, though not itself 5157 Not, 1 | writing. Though I do not presume to say that his usage did 5158 Int, III | to the Romans. He never pretended to present new views of 5159 Pre | over-fastidiousness which is so prevalent in this University, and 5160 Not, 2 | kinds of εποχη, one which prevents a man from expressing any 5161 I, I | Varrone, venisse eum Roma pridie vesperi et, nisi de via 5162 Not, 1 | Tim. 35 A. Prima sunt: primae (sc. qualitates) is the 5163 Pre | Although this edition is primarily intended for junior students, 5164 I, IX | autem et Xenocrates, qui primi Platonis rationem auctoritatemque 5165 II, I | Themistocle, quem facile Graeciae principem ponimus, singularem ferunt: 5166 II, II | earum rerum disputationem principibus civitatis non ita decoram 5167 I, XI | quasi normam scientiae et principium sui dedisset, unde postea 5168 Not, 1 | most edd. since Gulielmus print this without essent as a 5169 II, VI | pro hac evidentia quicquam priores fuisse dicturos, sed ad 5170 II, XIV | tamquam interesset: ita priori posterius, posteriori superius 5171 II | ACADEMICORUM PRIORUM~LIBER II.~ 5172 Not, 2 | commoner, also that even Priscian (see M.D.F. V. 12) made 5173 II, I | non est necesse. Itaque privabo illum potius debito testimonio 5174 II, XIX | falsis, spoliat nos iudicio, privat approbatione, omnibus orbat 5175 Not, 2 | in a note communicated privately to Halm and printed by the 5176 II, II | collocavit, nisi ne quid privatis studiis de opera publica 5177 Not, 2 | Alexandros: Lysippus alone was privileged to make statues of Alexander, 5178 Not, 2 | 111).~105. Inducto ... prob.: so Aug. Cont Ac. II. 12 5179 II, XXVII | vero aeque ac vigilanti probabantur. Quid? Iliona somno illo:~' 5180 II, XXXII | dissimilitudines, ut aliae probabiles videantur, aliae contra: 5181 II, XXXIII | igitur inducto et constituto probabili, et eo quidem expedito, 5182 II, XXXIV | quoniam non habet, utitur probabilibus. Itaque non metuit ne confundere 5183 II, XXIV | collegisset, quae nos fallerent probabilitate magna, nisi videret iis 5184 II, XXXII | alterum tenere, ut sequens probabilitatem, ubicumque haec aut occurrat 5185 II, XXXI | nihil se offeret quod sit probabilitati illi contrarium, utetur 5186 II, XXXVI | unum e physicis potissimum probabit? Nec plus uno poterit. Non 5187 II, XXX | igitur eodem modo concluditur probabitis aut ars ista nulla est. 5188 Not, 2 | It is strange that our Probables do not seem sufficient to 5189 Not, 2 | dogmatists) δογματολογιας προβαινειν, πλασματωδεις ‛υπαρχουσας ( 5190 I, VIII | notis ducibus utebantur ad probandum et ad concludendum id, quod 5191 II, XXXVI | vobis, quae describunt, probant. Non quaero ex his illa 5192 II, VI | disputare cum iis, qui nihil probarent, Antipatrumque Stoicum, 5193 II, XLV | intellegere potuisse quid Carneadi probaretur. Sed, si istum finem velim 5194 II, XLVI | loquendi multi et multum probati, aut ipsum Aristotelem, 5195 II, XXXI | consequeretur, ut autem probatio, multa. Etenim contra naturam 5196 Not, 2 | also Aristoph. Plut. 922 προβατιου βιον λεγεις and βοσκηματων 5197 II, IV | quam valde ea, quae dico, probaturus sim, eo minus conturbor. 5198 II, XXX | Vide ergo hanc conclusionem probaturusne sis: 'Si dicis te mentiri 5199 II, IV | prope dimissa revocatur, probatus et nobilis: cum quo Antiochum 5200 II, XXX | potes hanc non probare, cum probaveris eiusdem generis superiorem? 5201 II, XXXVII | Quamcumque vero sententiam probaverit, eam sic animo comprehensam 5202 II, XXIII | persecutus non esset, nisi probavisset. Ironiam enim alterius, 5203 II, XLII | Zenonis fuisset auditor, re probavit ea quae ille verbis, nihil 5204 I, IX | ita moratus, ut prae se probitatem quandam et ingenuitatem 5205 Not, 2 | φανηναι. Faber qu. Arist. Problemata XVII. 31 δια τι εις το πλαγιον 5206 Not, 2 | adding semperque Carneades προβολην pugilis et retentionem aurigae 5207 Not, 2 | passages the Academy is called procax. Mentitur: cf. 12. Ita negaret: 5208 II, XVI | fuerit: sin ipse tua sponte processeris, tuum. 50. Quis enim tibi 5209 II, XXI | ne praecipitet, si temere processerit. Ita enim finitima sunt 5210 Int, III | history. The only thing he proclaims to be his own is his style. 5211 II, XXXIV | uxore ducenda, in liberis procreandis plurimisque in rebus, in 5212 | procul 5213 Not, 1 | for the proper meaning of procurator and procuratio see Jordan 5214 II, VIII | potius quam aut officium prodat aut fidem, cur has igitur 5215 II, XLIII | dicebas esse, Luculle, dogma prodere. Contineo igitur me, ne 5216 II, IX | quorum nullum sine scelere prodi poterit. Cum enim decretum 5217 II, IX | quo e vitio et amicitiarum proditiones et rerum publicarum nasci 5218 II, I | omni genere belli fuit, proeliis, oppugnationibus, navalibus 5219 Not, 2 | answer was made recently to Prof. Huxley's speculations on 5220 Not, 1 | been written.~§10. Causa: = προφασις. Probabilem: = specious. 5221 II, XIV | perspicuitate seiungere, nihil profecit: ipsius enim opinionis errorem 5222 II, XXVI | esse visum verum a sensu profectum, cui non appositum sit visum 5223 Not, 2 | III. 12 doceas oportet nec proferas; cf. also Orat. 59 vocis 5224 II, I | memoriae, quae tum primum proferebatur, traditurum respondisse 5225 II, XI | volebat, sive aliud quid proferes quod sequare, ad visum illud, 5226 II, V | Platonem etiam et Socratem profertis. Sed neque Saturninus, ut 5227 II, V | ex antiquis claros viros proferunt, quos dicant fuisse popularis, 5228 II, XXVIII | consentire.' Omnia autem haec proferuntur, ut illud efficiatur, quo 5229 Int, I | distracting occupations; a work professedly modelled on Plato and the 5230 Int, IV | speech of Antiochus, which he professes to have heard210. For the 5231 Int, II | the Antiochean88. While professing, however, this philosophic 5232 I, V | putas, qui philosophiam iam professus sim populo nostro exhibiturum? 5233 Not, 2 | III. 22. Proficit: Dav. proficis, but Madv. rightly understands 5234 II, XXXVII | et mathematicorum initiis proficisci volunt omnia. Ex his eliget 5235 II, XXXVI | Geometrae provideant, qui se profitentur non persuadere, sed cogere, 5236 Not, 2 | this ought properly to be profuerit, but the conditional dicerem 5237 II, XXVII | veniam, res iam universas profundam, de quibus volumina impleta 5238 II, XIV | superius non iungitur.~45. Sed progrediamur longius et ita agamus, ut 5239 II, XXIX | addidero, multane erunt? Progrediere rursus, quoad videbitur. 5240 II, XIV | comprehensis et perceptis nisa et progressa ratio hoc efficiet, nihil 5241 II, XXVIII | tota nata sit: quae primo progressu festive tradit elementa 5242 | Proinde 5243 Not, 2 | MSS. for v. Maenianorum: projecting eaves, according to Festus 5244 Int, IV | of various other literary projects, we find no express mention 5245 Not, 2 | Stoics, but merely were εν προκοπηι; see Diog. VII. 91, Zeller 5246 Not, 1 | For the Stoic προκορη, προκοπτειν εις αρετην, cf. M.D.F. IV. 5247 Not, 1 | intensely Stoic. For the Stoic προκορη, προκοπτειν εις αρετην, 5248 Not, 2 | sed ad extremum pollicetur prolaturum qui se ipse comest quod 5249 Not, 2 | as usual. Rerum notitiis: προληψεσι, Zeller 403 sq. Constituit: 5250 Not, 2 | as a translation both of προληψις and εννοια, for which see 5251 Not, 2 | Gellius XVI. 8 (from Varro) prologium. Aut verum esse aut falsum: 5252 Not, 1 | section throughout cf. the prologues to D.F. I., T.D. I. and 5253 Not, 2 | the same force as προ in προμανθανειν, which means "to learn on 5254 Not, 1 | first brought into strong prominence by the Stoics, whom it enabled 5255 Not, 1 | have first been brought prominently forward by Heraclitus, if 5256 Int, IV | s failure to fulfil his promise. From this it is evident 5257 Not, 1 | Philo. Varro agrees, and promises an exposition of the principles 5258 Int, IV | books in Atticus' power, promising to approve any course that 5259 Not, 1 | vel ita appellemus, vel promota et remota. If this language 5260 Not, 2 | teque hilari animo esse et prompto ad iocandum valde me iuvat. 5261 Not, 1 | prudentium quandam: the Greek προνοια is translated both by prudentia 5262 Int, I | Dionysius41, and laughingly pronouncing that nothing is sweeter 5263 II, XLVII | esse facta, sed ut 'videri' pronuntiarentur.~ 5264 Not, 2 | is found, in De Fato 26 pronuntiatio, in Gellius XVI. 8 (from 5265 Int, IV | have a mention that new prooemia had been added to the Catulus 5266 I, II | in his ipsis antiquitatum prooemiisphilosophe scribere voluimus, 5267 Not, 2 | officers from its operation. Prooemio, which has been proposed, 5268 Not, 1 | merito, which begins one of Propertius' elegies. Auctoritas: "system". 5269 Not, 2 | irresistible. Temeritatem: προπετειαν, εικαιοτητα.~§109. In navigando: 5270 Int, IV | philosopher. He has to be propped up, like Catulus, by the 5271 Int, I | look foolish to build a προπυλον at the Academia, as Appius, 5272 | prorsus 5273 Not, 1 | cf. Tim. 52 A. φθοραν ου προσδεχομενον). Non in nihilum: this is 5274 Not, 2 | the infamous Memmius who prosecuted him. In urbem: until his 5275 Not, 2 | λημματα, separately λημμα and προσληψις (sumptio et adsumptio De 5276 Not, 2 | τους περιεχοντας τι των μη προσοντων τοις ‛οριστοις, and the 5277 Int, I | fruit than in his days of prosperity66. The tenor of all his 5278 Not, 2 | 29.~§42. Proposita: cf. προτασεις passim in Sext. In sensus: = 5279 Not, 2 | hypothesis of a suppressed protasis, but as in his Gram. 351 5280 Not, 1 | the qualia. Of course the προτευλη, whether Platonic or 5281 Not, 1 | happiness. The Stoics loudly protested against their being called 5282 Not, 2 | nisi nobilem), where Cic. protests against being compared to 5283 Not, 2 | this sense cf. Top. 57. The προτος λογος αναποδεικτος of the 5284 Int, III | as it was then called, protreptic.~For a list of the philosophical 5285 II, XIX | occultissimas aperueris in lucemque protuleris iuratusque dixeris ea te 5286 Not, 2 | quod is non tam ut probaret protulit, quam ut Stoicis quibuscum 5287 Not, 2 | sceptic doctrine must be provable. Cf. 109 of this book. Postulanti: 5288 Not, 2 | proverbio: so venire in proverbium, in proverbii usum venire, 5289 II, XXXVI | necessitatem. Geometrae provideant, qui se profitentur non 5290 Not, 1 | translated both by prudentia and providentia in the same passage, N.D. 5291 II, I | admirabili quadam laude provinciae praefuit; deinde absens 5292 Not, 2 | nothing indeed excepting the provisional proof of the deceptiveness 5293 Not, 2 | was often excused by the provocation Zeno gave, see Aug. Contra 5294 II, V | qui leges popularis de provocationibus tulerint, cum consules essent; 5295 I, Inc | inquisitorem decet esse sapientem. [Proximis post hunc locum verbis perspicue 5296 Not, 2 | to learn by degrees" (cf. προυμαθον στεργειν κακοις), not, as 5297 Int, II | most probable, was the only prudent course74. Cicero's temperament 5298 I, VII | sunt ei subiectae, quasi prudentiam quandam, procurantem caelestia 5299 Not, 1 | the mundus a God. Quasi prudentium quandam: the Greek προνοια 5300 Not, 2 | εχοντα αγνωσιαν. So in the Psalms, God only "telleth the number 5301 II, XLVIII | mendaciis et de sorite aut pseudomeno, quas plagas ipsi contra 5302 II, IX | amicitiarum proditiones et rerum publicarum nasci solent. Non potest 5303 Pre | years, it seems better to publish them than to withhold from 5304 Not, 2 | as in Ovid. Metam. I. 758 pudet haec opprobria nobis Et 5305 Not, 1 | ibid. II. 73 pudor modestia pudicitia are said coerceri, the writer' 5306 Not, 1 | together, and ibid. II. 73 pudor modestia pudicitia are said 5307 Int, I(3) | Phaedrus nobis,... cum pueri essemus, valde ut philosophus 5308 II, XXXVI | quid faciam Stoico, quem a puero audivi? qui mecum vivit 5309 Not, 2 | semperque Carneades προβολην pugilis et retentionem aurigae similem 5310 II, XXVI | quoque conceditis. Omnis pugna de quarto est. 84. Qui igitur 5311 II, III | sententiam, quam adamaverunt, pugnacissime defendere quam sine pertinacia 5312 II, XX | vitae aut certare cum aliis pugnaciter aut frustrari cum alios 5313 II, XXVI | Haec refelli possunt, sed pugnare nolo. Ad id enim, quod agitur, 5314 Not, 2 | 19 Rupili et Persi par pugnat uti non compositum melius ( 5315 II, XXIV | obtrectandi causa cum Zenone pugnavisse, sed verum invenire voluisse 5316 II, XXX | Cum hoc igitur dialectici pugnent, id est, Antiochus et Stoici: 5317 II, XVIII | similes viderentur? 57. Hic, pugnes licet, non repugnabo: quin 5318 II, XLVII | manum adverterat et illum pugnum arte vehementerque compresserat, 5319 II, XLVII | Tum cum plane compresserat pugnumque fecerat, comprehensionem 5320 II, XIX | ne illarum quoque rerum pulcherrimarum a te ipso minuatur auctoritas. 5321 II, XX | quid invenerim? Sed, ut hoc pulcherrimum esse iudico, vera videre, 5322 Not, 1 | occur in inscr., exc. pulchre, which is found once (Corp. 5323 Not, 1 | On the other hand only pulcrai, pulcrum, etc., occur in 5324 Not, 1 | other hand only pulcrai, pulcrum, etc., occur in inscr., 5325 Not, 1 | Ernesti em. cunctos, Dav. punctos, ingeniose ille quidem says 5326 Not, 2 | read si is, to cure a wrong punctuation, by which a colon is placed 5327 II, V | aliquot annis ante secundum Punicum bellum tribunus plebis tulerit 5328 Int, I | have attended, though M. Pupius Piso, a professed Peripatetic, 5329 Int, IV | Italy236. The undefiled purity of his Latin style made 5330 Not, 1 | space does not allow me to pursue this difficult subject farther. 5331 II, VI | Stratoniceus Metrodorus putabatur. 17. Iam Clitomacho Philo 5332 II, V | propterea vitiosum in illo non putandum, quod idem fuerit in Socrate.~ 5333 Not, 2 | quasi pedalem 82) solem esse putaret, Epic. non praecise definit ( 5334 II, II | philosophis ingenio scientiaque putaretur Antiochus, Philonis auditor, 5335 I, IV | erroremque eorum, qui ita putarunt, coarguit. Est, inquit, 5336 II, XVIII | venire, ut, quos numquam putassemus a nobis internosci posse, 5337 II, XLVI | me minus hominem quam te putaveris. Tantum interest, quod tu, 5338 I, Inc | probabilia vel veri similia putavi nominanda: quae tu si alio 5339 I, I | nullam moram interponendam putavimus quin videremus hominem nobiscum 5340 Not, 2 | and often. Approbari: sc. putavit. Such changes of construction 5341 I, II | alabaster plenus unguenti puter esse videtur.~ 5342 II, XL | Tune aut inane quicquam putes esse, cum ita completa et 5343 I, III | 17. Diomedes p. 373, ed. Putsch.: p. 377, ed. Keil. Varro 5344 Int, IV | notice a fact which might puzzle the student. In some old 5345 Not, 1 | P. 294). The distinction puzzled Plutarch (quoted in R. and 5346 Not, 1 | with Fortune (which sadly puzzles Faber and excites his wrath) 5347 Not, 1 | 32, 2, Dicaearchi περι ψυχης utrosque, the word libros 5348 Not, 2 | made two αρχαι, θερμον και ψυχρον τουτων δε το μεν κατα μεν 5349 Abbr | or Pyrrh. Hyp. or P.H. = Pyrrhoneôn Hypotyposeôn Syntagmata.~ 5350 Int, II | This is equally true of the Pyrrhonian scepticism and of the dogmatism 5351 Not, 2 | Heraclides Ponticus and some Pythagoreans. Sext. A.M. X. 174 speaks 5352 II, XXXVII | censet a deo sempiternum. Pythagorei ex numeris et mathematicorum 5353 Not, 1 | which edd. used to take for quaecunque. Cf. Goerenz's statement " 5354 II, XXXIII | nihil percipimus? Sic enim quaerebas. Quid? meminisse visa nisi 5355 II, XLVIII | Posthac tamen, cum haec quaeremus, potius de dissensionibus 5356 I, V | alia in re nisi in natura quaerendum esse illud summum bonum 5357 II, XXVI | distinctio? an tibi erit quaerendus anularius aliqui, quoniam 5358 II, XXIV | ingeniis tantisque studiis quaerentibus. Quid inventum sit paulo 5359 II, IV | Heracliti memoriam implorans, quaerere ex eo viderenturne illa 5360 Not, 2 | tam quererer for the tamen quaereretur of the MSS. is due to Manut. 5361 II, XLI | completur animus voluptate. 128. Quaeret igitur haec et vester sapiens 5362 II, VII | nec intellegi quicquam nec quaeri disputarive potest. 22. 5363 II, XXVI | contemni. Maiora fortasse quaeris. Quid potest esse sole maius? 5364 II, XXXIV | enim, quem ad modum, si quaesitum ex eo sit, stellarum numerus 5365 II, XXIV | honesta et digna sapiente. Quaesivit de Zenone fortasse quid 5366 Not, 2 | copies Epicurus, and Seneca Quaest. Nat. I. 3, 10 (solem sapientes 5367 Not, 2 | Cont. Ac. III. 5 ne in quaestionis campis tua eqitaret oratio. 5368 II, VIII | est appetitio cognitionis quaestionisque finis inventio. At nemo 5369 II, I | adolescentiam in forensi opera, quaesturae diuturnum tempus Murena 5370 Not, 2 | Quae visa: so Halm for MSS. quaevis, which edd. had changed 5371 Not, 1 | II. 160 (where there is a quaint jest on the subject), Zeller 5372 Not, 1 | metaphor is, requires no qualification, see a good instance in 5373 Not, 1 | materia, unformed matter. Qualitas is here wrongly used for 5374 I, VII | necesse erit. Earum igitur qualitatum sunt aliae principes, aliae 5375 Not, 2 | existence of an abstract quality, is prior to that which 5376 I, X | matrem esse immoderatam quamdam intemperantiam. Haec fere 5377 II, XIV | in aliam rem transferri quamlubet? Si posse dixerint, quid 5378 II, XXVIII | dictum sit, quid sequatur quamque rem, quid repugnet? Si haec 5379 | Quamvis 5380 I, IV | est, inquit, quod audio? Quanam, inquam, de re? Relictam 5381 Not, 1 | quoque novis: MSS. have quanquam which however is impossible 5382 Not, 1 | Quantum possum: some MSS. have quantam, which is scarcely Latin, 5383 II, XXXVIII | levitatem temere adsentientium, quanti libertas ipsa aestimanda 5384 II, XXVI | maiorem esse quam terram. Quantulus nobis videtur! Mihi quidem 5385 II, X | insimulemus omnia incerta dicere, quantumque intersit inter incertum 5386 II, XXVI | conceditis. Omnis pugna de quarto est. 84. Qui igitur P. Servilium 5387 II, XXVI | possint, alia non possint, quartum nullum esse visum verum 5388 Not, 2 | 33 makes it probable that quemnam was the original reading 5389 Not, 2 | recrimination, cf. Pro Deiotaro 9 querellae cum Deiotaro. The reading 5390 II, XLVII | illud, cum artificia tolli quereris a nobis, nisi ut opifices 5391 II, XXVII | etiam a Chrysippo:—de quo queri solent Stoici, dum studiose 5392 Not, 2 | cf. Philipp. XII. 21. Queru potissimum? quem?: In repeated 5393 Not, 2 | seen that the process of questioning above described can be applied 5394 Int, I | philosophy. His zeal was quickened by the conviction that the 5395 II, XLIII | inquit: statue aliquando quidlibet. Quid, quod quae dicuntur 5396 II, XXIX | inquit Carneades, non modo quiescas. Sed quid proficit? Sequitur 5397 II, XXIX | quam ad multa perveniat quiescere, id est, quod ab his dicitur, ‛ 5398 Not, 2 | Arrian, Diss. I. 27, 15) quietly suppresses a sceptic by 5399 II, XLIV | imperatorem, nescio an ne quinquevirum quidem quemquam nisi sapientem? 5400 Not, 2 | propositions, Gk. ‛υποθεσεις. Quintal III. 5, 5 gives as an ex. 5401 Not, 2 | name formed like Pompilius, Quintilius, Sextilius. Qy, should Petrilius, 5402 | quippe 5403 Not, 2 | the corresponding case of quisnam, not quis, in the second 5404 II, XIV | aliquid definierint, roget eos quispiam, num illa definitio possit 5405 Int, IV | the horizon glistened and quivered under the bright sun, and 5406 II, XXXII | notissima. Licet enim haec quivis arbitratu suo reprehendat, 5407 | quoad 5408 II, X | tum etiam propter usum. Quocirca et sensibus utitur et artis 5409 | quomodo 5410 | quondam 5411 II, XVII | esse mundos et quidem sic quosdam inter sese non solum similis, 5412 Int, IV | a wrong view of Nonius' quotations, which are always from the 5413 Not, 2 | edd. had changed to quae a quovis. Repudiari: the selection 5414 Int, III | of the whole of Italy115. Rabirius and Catius the Insubrian, 5415 Int, III | the fact that the Italian races had as yet a strong practical 5416 Not, 2 | must be proof against the rack; cf. esp. D.F. III. 29, 5417 Not, 2 | oculis postremum lumen radiatum rape." So in Soph. Aiax 5418 II, XLI | magnitudinem—ipse enim hic radiatus me intueri videtur ac monet 5419 II, XXXIX | penitusne defixa sit et quasi radicibus suis haereat an media pendeat? 5420 Int, IV | happened that continual rain fell during the first few 5421 Int, II | Wherever authority has loudly raised its voice, says Cicero, 5422 Int, II | doctrines were mere outworks or ramparts within which the ordinary 5423 Not, 2 | probability" then is mere random guess work (35). Even if 5424 Int, I | addressed to Atticus, which range over the years 6862 B.C., 5425 Not, 2 | postremum lumen radiatum rape." So in Soph. Aiax 100 the 5426 Not, 1 | of quoniam, as marking a rapid transition from one subject 5427 II, XXXVI | solus, sed ad suam quisque rapiet. Age, restitero Peripateticis, 5428 Not, 2 | an ellipse of excessive rarity in Cic., see Madv. Opusc. 5429 Not, 2 | mentiantur aut nihil, is rash. Semel: see 79. Qui ne nunc 5430 Not, 2 | the subj. of the verb, he rashly ejects nihilne est igitur 5431 Not, 2 | can never be discovered. Rational proof requires that something, 5432 Not, 2 | note that they can be most rationally explained as elliptic constructions 5433 I, XII | approbationemque praecurrere. Huic rationi quod erat consentaneum faciebat, 5434 Not, 2 | this is L. Cassius Longinus Ravilla, a man of good family, who 5435 Int, IV | Although the work of re-editing was vigorously pushed on, 5436 Not, 1 | Mental and Moral Science, now re-published in Grote's Aristotle.) Zeno' 5437 Not, 2 | 1) that Philo headed a reaction towards dogmatism, (2) that 5438 Not, 2 | cf. percipere fruges, "to reap," Cat. Mai. 24. Caruit: " 5439 Int, II | this practical art could be reared. This is equally true of 5440 Not, 2 | merchant to rival your chicken rearer of Delos? But, you say, 5441 Not, 2 | conclusions which that geometer rears upon them. Cicero is arguing 5442 Not, 2 | real Old Academy are more reasonable than those of Antiochus. 5443 Not, 1 | Dissereret: was a deep reasoner. Bentl. missing the meaning 5444 Not, 1 | knowledge only came through the reasonings of the mind, hence they 5445 Not, 1 | 228 sq.). All emotions are reasonless; ‛ηδονη or laetitia for 5446 I, XI | sensus et mentem effici rebantur, non adhiberet. Statuebat 5447 Int, IV | alone was bold enough to rebuke the follies, on the one 5448 Not, 1 | though not itself Ciceronian, recalls presse loqui, and N.D. II. 5449 Int, I | himself to take, he naturally recals the example of Socrates, 5450 Int, II | statements that he never recanted the doctrines Philo had 5451 Int, IV | speedily cast aside on the receipt of a letter from Atticus, 5452 Not, 2 | sense. In D.F. III. 33 it receives its proper meaning, for 5453 Not, 1 | Goerenz's "praestantissima recensio," and founds his own text 5454 Int, IV | to have required that the recipient of a dedication should be 5455 II, XXXVII | Plato ex materia in se omnia recipiente mundum factum esse censet 5456 Int, II | there seemed to be something reckless and disgraceful, unworthy 5457 Not, 2 | and omit negatives very recklessly, so that the point may remain 5458 Not, 2 | VIII. 147, 317; where it is reckoned among things αιωνιον εχοντα 5459 Not, 2 | have no infallible mode of recognising Cotta. You say that no such 5460 Int, III | Any one who attempts to reconcile the contradictions of Stobaeus, 5461 Not, 1 | s door, for Antiochus in reconciling his own dialectics with 5462 Not, 1 | Coelo I. 2, in a curious and recondite fashion. Cic. is certainly 5463 I, IV | Antiocho iam pridem audita recordari? et simul videre satisne 5464 II, XXVIII | enim id quaeritur, qualis recordatio fieri soleat eorum, qui 5465 Not, 2 | famous dream of Ennius, recorded in his Annals, is referred 5466 Not, 1 | unnecessary for Romans to have recourse to Greece for philosophy. 5467 Not, 1 | superhuman except by the recovery of Aristotle's lost works, 5468 Not, 1 | Universal World God, who will recreate the world out of himself, 5469 Not, 2 | λοιδορειν τινα implies mutual recrimination, cf. Pro Deiotaro 9 querellae 5470 I, XI | collocabat, eamque neque in rectis neque in pravis numerabat, 5471 Not, 2 | reminiscence of the frequently recurring Greek terms εκκαλυπτειν, 5472 Not, 1 | Brutus: the same praise often recurs in D.F. and the Brutus Graecia 5473 II, III | alii a nobis dissentiant recusare: quamquam nostra quidem 5474 II, VIII | causa nullum supplicium recuset, nisi iis rebus adsensus 5475 II, XII | in nostra potestate sita, reddenda adsensio. 38. At vero animus 5476 II, XXX | vitiose, minam Diogenes reddet.' Ab eo enim Stoico dialecticam 5477 II, XXVI | similitudo, dubia omnia reddiderit. Sublato enim iudicio illo, 5478 I, IX | suo decore imbecillamque reddidit, quod negavit in ea sola 5479 II, XXXIX | sciri putat posse. 124. Sed redeo ad animum et corpus. Satisne 5480 Not, 1 | honestique: these words are redolent of the Stoa. Earum rerum: 5481 Int, IV | Brutus cannot have been reduced to the comparatively secondary 5482 Not, 1 | Lael. 12, Brut. 86, we have reducere, where Durand's rule requires 5483 Not, 1 | honoris causa sed errantes reducimus humanitatis." The words, 5484 Not, 1 | include both producta and reducta, in D.F. III. 16 appeterent 5485 Not, 2 | Carneades largely used the reductio ad absurdum method. Contineant ... 5486 Not, 1 | quotes this with the reading reduxerunt for deduxerunt, which is 5487 I, I | intervallo ad suam villam reduximus. 2. Hic pauca primo, atque 5488 I, IV | ut nihil adfirmet ipse, refellat alios: nihil se scire dicat 5489 II, V | tribuebat iis, quos volebat refellere. Ita, cum aliud agnosceret 5490 II, XXVI | alius, nullum granum.' Haec refelli possunt, sed pugnare nolo. 5491 II, XXVIII | somniantium recordatione ipsorum refellitis. Non enim id quaeritur, 5492 II, XVIII | non adsentior potiusque refello propter id, quod dilucide 5493 II, XX | praepostere tecum agam, mox referam me ad ordinem—haec primum 5494 II, VIII | bonorum, ignorans quo omnia referantur, qui poterit esse sapientia? 5495 II, XLII | bonorum et malorum summa referatur: qua de re est igitur inter 5496 I, V | illud summum bonum quo omnia referrentur, constituebantque extremum 5497 Not, 2 | potuisse et non potuisse referri; cf. also par pari referre 5498 Int, I | amiable disposition and refined style. He is the only Epicurean, 5499 Not, 1 | prima naturae. A little reflection will show that in no other 5500 Not, 2 | Contra Ac. trans. εποχη by refrenatio cf. also Lael. 63. Superbus 5501 Int, IV | February, 45 B.C., Cicero took refuge in the solitude of his villa 5502 Not, 2 | 80.~§§4648. Summary. The refusal of people to assent to the 5503 Not, 2 | faulty (92). If it is so, refute it. The plan of Chrysippus 5504 II, XLI | mente praeditus, qua omnia regantur. Cleanthes, qui quasi maiorum 5505 II, XXXVII | omnia moderetur, moveat, regat. Erit ei persuasum etiam 5506 II, V | P. Valerio, qui exactis regibus primo anno consul fuit, 5507 Not, 1 | fond of using sedes, locus, regio together, see Pro Murena, 5508 Not, 1 | cf. M.D.F. V. 69. Genus: regularly used by Cic. as opus by 5509 Not, 1 | World God apprehended as regulating the orderly sequence of 5510 I, II | perpendiculis, non normis, non regulis.~9. Nonius p. 394. Siccum 5511 Pre | in the subject.~JAMES S. REID.~CHRIST'S COLLEGE, CAMBRIDGE, 5512 I, X | ea praeposita appellabat, reiecta autem quae minoris. Atque 5513 Not, 2 | not the gen. after nihil, reip. the gen. after operae, 5514 Not, 2 | D.F. III. 7 nihil operae reipublicae detrahens, a passage often 5515 Not, 2 | he wished to avoid, his rejection of Zeno's definition of 5516 Not, 2 | see Ribbeck Trag. Lat. rel. p. 205. Cic. in De Or. 5517 Not, 2 | Aristippi furtim praecepta relabor, also D.F. V. 6 rapior illuc: 5518 Int, IV | however, notice the close relationship in which Brutus stood to 5519 Not, 2 | οργης Aristoph. Ran. 700, relaxare is used in the neut. sense 5520 Int, I | never his heart.~The year 62 released him from the consulship 5521 Int, IV | superficial260. We are thus relieved from the necessity of forcing 5522 Int, III | society and on the Christian religion itself.~When Cicero began 5523 I, X | neutra autem in mediis relinquebat, in quibus ponebat nihil 5524 II, III | studium exquirendi defetigati relinquemus, neque nostrae disputationes 5525 II, XLVII | autem satis esset ipsis relinquere. Quam rationem maiorum etiam 5526 I, XI | quod cadere in eam posset relinqueret quodque natura quasi normam 5527 I, XI | quidem: erit enim utendum in reliquo sermone saepius. Sed ad 5528 II, XLVI | igitur par quod depugnet reliquum est, voluptas cum honestate. 5529 Int, IV | people on whom they would rely if Pompey, with such gigantic 5530 II, XLVIII | sermone confecto Catulus remansit: nos ad naviculas nostras 5531 Not, 2 | referred to). It is worth remarking (as Petrus Valentia did, 5532 I, IV | licuerit, nostro familiari, remigrare in domum veterem e nova 5533 Not, 2 | for that exception. I just remind you that Epicurus would 5534 Not, 1 | 1). Cic., after adroitly reminding Varro that the promised 5535 Not, 1 | real view with Cicero's reminiscences of the Theaetetus and of 5536 I, II | eius unda, cum est pulsa remis, purpurascit: et quidem 5537 Not, 2 | cum furor eius initio remissior paulatim incitatior et vehementior 5538 Not, 2 | things passed over," cf. in remissis Orat. 59. Primum igitur ... 5539 II, XXXIII | minime vis, aut memoriam mihi remittas oportet et fateare esse 5540 Not, 2 | 94 digitum contrahens aut remittens; Orelli construxerat; MSS. 5541 Not, 1 | we seem here to have a remnant of the distinction drawn 5542 Not, 1 | appellemus, vel promota et remota. If this language be closely 5543 II, XIV | causa, qui ita disserunt, remotissimam. Definitiones enim et partitiones 5544 Not, 2 | I. 38. Probabilia: the removal of passion and delight is 5545 II, VII | sunt ac valentes et omnia removentur, quae obstant et impediunt. 5546 II, II | numquam a populari coetu removimus, sed ne litteram quidem


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