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

5547 II, XXVI | de nave? Vidi enim a te remum contemni. Maiora fortasse 5548 Not, 1 | Antiochus, that Zeno merely renamed old doctrines (cf. 43). 5549 Not, 2 | throughout his notice as a renegade. (2) is evident from the 5550 I, III | habebam et, ne obsolescerent, renovabam, cum licebat, legendo. Nunc 5551 Not, 1 | independent value, took it. Renovare in Cic. often means "to 5552 Not, 2 | Manut. here wished to read renovata, cf. n. on I. 14. Nominis 5553 Not, 2 | οτι χρυσιου ποταμος ειη ρεοντος). This is the constant judgment 5554 Not, 2 | as to be called scopulus reorum. Pompeium: apparently the 5555 Not, 1 | things into nothing and their reparation out of nothing again. See 5556 Int, II | bohemianism, Cicero indignantly repels the charge that the Academy, 5557 Not, 2 | aliud, also T.D. IV. 47 repenam fortasse, sed illud ante. 5558 II, XX | me et ardere studio veri reperiendi et ea sentire, quae dicerem. 5559 II, VI | putatur, obtrectans nihil novi reperienti, sed emendanti superiores 5560 II, XXX | didici ab Antiocho, nec reperio quo modo iudicem 'si lucet, 5561 II, XVI | generum nihil interesset, reperirentur quae et in suo genere essent 5562 Not, 1 | Stoics, Zeller 293296. The repetitions hominem, humani, hominibus, 5563 II, V | similes esse videantur. Repetunt ii a P. Valerio, qui exactis 5564 Int, I | Catonis, to which Caesar replied by his Anticato, were all 5565 Not, 1 | At all events, Varro's report (Aug. De Civ. Dei XIX. 3) 5566 Not, 1 | though they were authentic reports of Socratic conversations, 5567 II, XXXII | haec quivis arbitratu suo reprehendat, quod negemus rem ullam 5568 II, VI | qui multus in eo fuisset, reprehendebant, nec definiri aiebant necesse 5569 II, XVI | dicenda. Et primum quidem hoc reprehendendum, quod captiosissimo genere 5570 II, II | fecimus nisi forensem, quis reprehendet nostrum otium, qui in eo 5571 II, XX | minimis rebus pertinacia reprehenditur, calumnia etiam coercetur, 5572 Not, 2 | nec for ne, incurring the reprehension of Madv. D.F. p. 814, ed 5573 II, XXXIV | praetermisisti, Luculle, reprehensionem Antiochi—nec mirum: in primis 5574 II, III | III. Restat unum genus reprehensorum, quibus Academiae ratio 5575 II, VI | aperte mentitur, ut est reprehensus a patre Catulo, et, ut docuit 5576 Not, 2 | things and give a correct representation of the things, from those 5577 Not, 2 | convicted of ignorance, for representing Carneades as dividing visa 5578 Int, III | Epicureans are continually reproached [xxviii] by Cicero for their 5579 Int, IV | Plato. Lucullus, therefore, reproves him as a rebel in philosophy, 5580 Not, 2 | where Madv. is wrong in reproving Torquatus for using the 5581 II, XXXVIII | dilapsus occidat. Tibi hoc repudiare, illud autem superius sicut 5582 II, XXXVII | ceteri tot viri et tanti repudiati ab eo condemnatique discedent. 5583 II, XXXIV | illud usitatum et saepe repudiatum refers, non ut Antipater, 5584 Not, 2 | αποκειμεναι νοησεις (Plut. De Sto. Repug. p. 1057 a). In Sext. Adv. 5585 II, XXXV | Carneade quidem huic loco valde repugnante: nunc quid facere possum? 5586 Abbr | Sto. Rep. = De Stoicis Repugnantiis.~Sext. = Sextus; Sext. Emp. = 5587 I, Inc | nomine vis vocare, nihil repugno. Satis enim mihi est te 5588 Int, II | Cicero. Nothing was more repulsive to his mind than dogmatism. 5589 Int, IV | which old scholars of great repute put forward concerning the 5590 Not, 1 | anxious to satisfy Greek requirements, but rather to render it 5591 II, XLVIII | nostris, si quae videbuntur, requiremus. Optime, inquam, sed quid 5592 II, II | philosophiae iam ullum auctorem requiro. 6. Restat ut iis respondeam, 5593 Int, II | irrefragable truth. One requisite of a philosophy with him 5594 II, XXIV | signatum et effictum. Post requisitum etiamne, si eiusdem modi 5595 Not, 1 | reads rebus from 26. Varro's researches into the Latin tongue are 5596 Not, 1 | Stobaeus, in a passage closely resembling ours makes ελαττων αξια 5597 Int, II | Antiochus accepted without reserve the Stoic paradoxes, Cicero 5598 Not, 2 | exx. given in 20. Fons: "reservoir," rather than "source" here. 5599 Int, IV | during the whole of his residence in [lix] the East he sought 5600 Not, 2 | μοναις λαβειν ταληθες (which resides only in the αξιωμα) ου δυναται 5601 Int, II | almost beyond the power of resistance. In respect of their ethical 5602 II, IX | possent, Carneades acutius resistebat. Nam tantum abesse dicebat, 5603 II, XXIV | magna, nisi videret iis resisti non facile posse. 76. Quid 5604 Int, II | Philosophers of the highest respectability had held the most opposite 5605 Int, II | school which had the most respectable pedigree. Compared with 5606 Not, 1 | 16, a passage in other respects exceedingly like this. Rhetoricam: 5607 Not, 2 | thus corrected the MSS. responde superbe; Halm writes facis 5608 II, XXIX | addito aut dempto certum respondeamus [non] habemus.—93. At vitiosi 5609 II, XXV | amplius quid desideras? quid respondeas?—Utinam quidem roget? Audiret 5610 I, II | requiris. Itaque non haesitans respondebo, sed ea dicam, quae mihi 5611 II, XXXII | adsentiri: altero, cum se a respondendo, ut aut approbet quid aut 5612 II, X | tum omnia fore incerta,' respondent: 'Quid ergo istud ad nos? 5613 II, XXVII | contraque rationem, ipsum sibi respondentem inferiorem fuisse, itaque 5614 II, XXIX | diutius captiose interroganti respondeo. Si habes quod liqueat neque 5615 II, XXV | quaedam volucres longius. Responderem igitur audacter isti vestro 5616 II, XV | quae pro perspicuitate responderi possunt, in promptu habere, 5617 II, XLI | percipiat, nullam rem percipit. Responderint posse percipi quantus sol 5618 II, XXXV | quod comprehendi possit. Respondet mihi non Aristoteles aut 5619 II, I | proferebatur, traditurum respondisse dicitur oblivisci se malle 5620 Not, 2 | change from ille, credo (sc. respondit), the credo being now repeated 5621 Not, 1 | Antiochus, whom Madv. considers responsible for the error, could have 5622 Not, 2 | latter in De Haruspicum Responsis 60, but the last of these 5623 Not, 1 | 34. Antiochus doubtless rested his theory almost entirely 5624 II, XXXVI | suam quisque rapiet. Age, restitero Peripateticis, qui sibi 5625 Not, 2 | Or. III. 68 is right, the restriction does not hold. Admodum: " 5626 Not, 2 | tribune being under fewer restrictions than the right of the others. 5627 Not, 2 | 33, who, however, unduly restricts the usage. In three out 5628 Not, 1 | obliged to break off and resume at sed ad haec. The explanation 5629 Int, IV | the conversation, which is resumed by Lucullus. His speech 5630 Not, 2 | Sed tamen: this often resumes the interrupted narrative, 5631 Not, 1 | which H. adopts. Varro's resumption of his exposition is certainly 5632 Not, 2 | occuret mostly, if that is retained complebitur must be read. 5633 II, VI | dicendi, proxime a Lacyde solo retenta est: post autem confecta 5634 Not, 2 | Bait., retains it. On the retention or omission of this qui 5635 Not, 2 | Carneades προβολην pugilis et retentionem aurigae similem facit εποχη. 5636 II, XVIII | quas non habeat dinotatas, retenturum adsensum nec umquam ulli 5637 II, XXIX | ars, quasi Penelope telam retexens, tollit ad extremum superiora. 5638 II, VI | Academiam suscipitur a nobis, ut retineamus eam definitionem, quam Philo 5639 II, XXII | cum a re ipsa descisceret, retinere voluisse, quod erant qui 5640 Not, 1 | positions to the sceptic and retired to the inner citadel of 5641 Not, 1 | authorities would have led Halm to retract his bad em. notationibus 5642 Not, 2 | feint intended to cover his retreat towards dogmatism. A glimpse 5643 Not, 2 | astonished to find Bait. returning to the reading of Lamb. 5644 Int, I | him, and that he therefore returns unreservedly to the life 5645 II, XI | de quo agimus, tibi erit revertendum. 34. In eo autem, si erit 5646 II, I | victor a Mithridatico bello revertisset, inimicorum calumnia triennio 5647 Int, IV | state when Cicero began to revise the Academica151. The final 5648 Pre | submitting my views to repeated revision during four years, it seems 5649 Int, I | then on his way to Cilicia, revisited Athens, much to his own 5650 Not, 1 | Rebatur: an old poetical word revived by Cic. De Or. III. 153; 5651 II, XVII | sobrii: dubitant, haesitant, revocant se interdum iisque, quae 5652 II, XVI | ipse commovit atque ad se revocavit, sentit quid intersit inter 5653 Int, IV | show that the New Academic revolt against the supposed old 5654 Not, 2 | not be regarded as having revolted against the Old, all that 5655 Not, 2 | to ancient names like a revolutionist, yet Anaxagoras, Democritus, 5656 Not, 1 | nodes, and with which they revolve. How natural then, in the 5657 Not, 1 | ροη, πανταρει, ‛οιον ‛ρευματα κινεισθαι τα παντα, etc., 5658 Not, 1 | oratorum Pearce conj. rhetorum. Rhetor, however is not thus used 5659 Int, I | doubt that from the great rhetorician Molo, then Rhodian ambassador 5660 Int, I | of Greek philosophers and rhetoricians. The first six months passed 5661 Not, 1 | For oratorum Pearce conj. rhetorum. Rhetor, however is not 5662 II, VI | eloquentiae, in Melanthio Rhodio suavitatis. Bene autem nosse 5663 Not, 1 | to make up the hexameter rhythm. Phrases like quae cum essent 5664 Int, III | destitute where Greek was richest. He often tries by the most 5665 Int, II | aim, with Socrates, to rid himself and others of the 5666 Not, 2 | find an answer to all the riddles of the universe! (120) Nothing 5667 II, XLVIII | videtur, Hortensi? Tum ille ridens: Tollendum. Teneo te, inquam: 5668 Not, 2 | the moment, in order to ridicule these two philosophers, 5669 Not, 1 | editedmost recently by Riese (published by Teubner). 5670 Not, 2 | old lex annalis in all its rigour, and yet excepted his own 5671 Not, 1 | σωμα, that fiery external rim of the universe of which 5672 Not, 2 | rings? (85) Can you find a ring merchant to rival your chicken 5673 Not, 2 | the impressions of signet rings? (85) Can you find a ring 5674 Int, IV | lines of statues, the waves rippled at their feet, and the sea 5675 Not, 2 | Ad Qu. Fratrem II. 13, 1 risi nivem atram ... teque hilari 5676 Int, IV | presentation will be at your own risk. So if you begin to hesitate, 5677 Not, 2 | find a ring merchant to rival your chicken rearer of Delos? 5678 Not, 1 | from Academicism by the rivalry of two fellow pupils. Cf. 5679 Not, 1 | Preller. There is no royal road to the knowledge, which 5680 Int, II | best of every school85. He roams in the wide field of philosophy, 5681 Not, 2 | throughout are supposed to rob people of their senses. 5682 Not, 2 | omened and unknown name. Rocus, as Ursinus pointed out, 5683 Not, 1 | fluerent: cf. the phrasesροη, πανταρει, ‛οιον ‛ρευματα 5684 Not, 2 | Duodeviginti: so in 128. Goer. and Roeper qu. by Halm wished to read 5685 Int, IV | borrowed from Zeno. The rôle given to Hortensius, however, 5686 II, IV | Rogus, qui se illa audivisse Romae de Philone et ab eo ipso 5687 Not, 2 | 12. Nostri quidem: i.e. Romani. Admodum: i.e. adm. pauci 5688 II, II | est nobis, quos populus Romanus hoc in gradu collocavit, 5689 Not, 2 | these contiones see Lange, Romische Alterthumer II. 663, ed 5690 Int, IV | Baiae, close to Cimmerium, round which so many legends lingered279. 5691 Not, 2 | Why then, Lucullus, do you rouse the mob against me like 5692 Not, 1 | and Preller. There is no royal road to the knowledge, which 5693 Not, 2 | Epicurum quem hebetem et rudem dicere solent Stoici; cf. 5694 II, III | sapientem, probarem, si id ipsum rudes et indocti iudicare potuissent— 5695 II, I | profectus rei militaris rudis. Habuit enim divinam quandam 5696 Not, 2 | Siccorum: cf. Cic. Contra Rullum I. 1 consilia siccorum. 5697 Not, 2 | cf. Hor. Sat. I. 7, 19 Rupili et Persi par pugnat uti 5698 II, XXXVIII | quidem muneris: sed cum sacerdotes deorum vacationem habeant, 5699 Not, 2 | mortalia pectora cogis auri sacra fames? Sapientem nec prius: 5700 I, III | descriptiones temporum, tu sacrorum iura, tu sacerdotum, tu 5701 Not, 2 | 466) introduces by conj. a sad confusion into the text, 5702 Not, 1 | Fate with Fortune (which sadly puzzles Faber and excites 5703 Not, 2 | Lowland Scottish "no just sae". Historiae loquantur: hist. 5704 Not, 2 | solet V. D. in hoc pronomen saevire," says Madv. The scribes 5705 II, XXVIII | filios, ita suos configebat sagittis, cum uxorem interemebat, 5706 Int, I | library which was then for sale; expressing at the same 5707 II, XXXI | videatur se illuc venturum esse salvum. Huius modi igitur visis 5708 Not, 1 | of this new Latin may be sampled by Ac. II. 1, 43. Ad virtutis 5709 Not, 2 | solum Latina non est, sed sanae menti repugnat." For the 5710 Int, II | of divine power. Piety, sanctity, and moral good, were impossible 5711 Not, 2 | no good to talk about the saner moments of such people; 5712 II, VII | sensibus veritas, si et sani sunt ac valentes et omnia 5713 II, XXVIII | Catule, Tuditanus? quisquam sanissimus tam certa putat quae videt 5714 II, XVII | possit exploratum esse de sua sanitate? quod velle efficere non 5715 I, V | quid ago? inquit, aut sumne sanus, qui haec vos doceo? nam 5716 Not, 2 | reads non esse illa probanda sap. after Lamb., who also conj. 5717 Not, 2 | Halm's MSS. Before Halm sapientemne was read, thus was destroyed 5718 I, VII | mundi eandemque esse mentem sapientiamque perfectam, quem deum appellant, 5719 Not, 2 | non sit: so Manut. for the sapientisque sit of the MSS. Halm after 5720 II, V | numerum solent. Duos vero sapientissimos et clarissimos fratres, 5721 I, IV | arbitrari ab Apolline omnium sapientissimum esse dictum, quod haec esset 5722 Not, 2 | always considers Thales to be sapientissimus e septem (De Leg. II. 26). 5723 II, VII | in vocibus, in odore, in sapore, ut nemo sit nostrum qui 5724 II, XXXII | dictum sit aut colorem aut saporem aut sonum nullum esse, illud 5725 Not, 1 | fragments of Varro's Menippean Satires remain, and have often been 5726 Not, 1 | metaphor. Menippum: a Cynic satirist, see Dict. Biogr. Considerable 5727 Not, 1 | ικανη απαξια which are not satisfactorily treated in the ordinary 5728 Not, 1 | Brutus was not anxious to satisfy Greek requirements, but 5729 Not, 1 | Stoic philosophy in order to save Cicero's consistency. On 5730 II, III | delati, ad eam tamquam ad saxum adhaerescunt. 9. Nam, quod 5731 Not, 2 | ανθρωπον τοι πωματος, Brut. 163 Scaevolae dicendi elegantia, De Or. 5732 Not, 2 | Nunc: Halm huc after Jo. Scala. Carneades: this finis is 5733 Not, 1 | Similarly in modern times J.C. Scaliger derived it from πολυ χειρ ( 5734 Not, 2 | of Book II. in Aug. are scarce, but to it I refer Contra. 5735 Not, 2 | See 78 of this book.) The scarcity of references to Philo in 5736 I, II | II.: frangere avaritiam, scelera ponere, vitam suam exponere 5737 II, IX | δογματα, quorum nullum sine scelere prodi poterit. Cum enim 5738 Not, 1 | gloss hunters, here himself scented a miserable gloss; Schutz, 5739 Not, 2 | completed by Metrodorus of Scepsis, for whom see De Or. II. 5740 Not, 2 | say "patet errare eos qui scepticis adnumerandum Empedoclem 5741 Not, 2 | these brothers had with the schemes of Gracchus seems to be 5742 Not, 1 | the student should read Schleiermacher's Essay on the Worth of 5743 Not, 2 | MSS. vetera: C.F. Hermann (Schneid Philol. VII. 457), thinking 5744 Pre | unproductiveness of English scholarship as compared with that of 5745 II, XXV | ille nescio qui, qui in scholis nominari solet, mille et 5746 Int, I | abandoned Epicureanism, but his schoolfellow, T. Pomponius Atticus, received 5747 Not, 2 | τοις ‛οριστοις, and the schoolmen's maxim definitio non debet 5748 Not, 2 | aqua Orelli conj. acu = schraffirnadel, C.F. Hermann caelatura, 5749 Int, IV(187)| the absurdity of the dates Schütz assigns to these letters. 5750 Not, 1 | anacoluthon in De Off. I. 153. Schuppe, De Anacoluthis Ciceronianis 5751 II, XXIII | sciamusne aliquid an nihil sciamus, ne id ipsum quidem, nescire 5752 II, XXIII | Nego,' inquit, 'scire nos sciamusne aliquid an nihil sciamus, 5753 II, V | profiteri se scire quam sciant. 15. Quod si illi tum in 5754 Int, IV(139)| Ut scias me ita dolere ut non iaceam.~ 5755 I, IV | se nihil scire, id unum sciat, ob eamque rem se arbitrari 5756 II, XLVIII | ut intellegat se opinari sciatque nihil esse quod comprehendi 5757 II, XXXIII | credidit, num illa etiam, quae sciebat, oblitus est? Atqui, falsum 5758 II, XLVII | voluerunt, deinde ita teneri 'si sciens falleret,' quod inscientia 5759 II, II | autem e philosophis ingenio scientiaque putaretur Antiochus, Philonis 5760 II, XIX | tantis offusis tenebris ne scintillam quidem ullam nobis ad dispiciendum 5761 II, XLV | A. Albinum, qui tum P. Scipione et M. Marcello coss. praetor 5762 II, XXXI | negabat, sed sibi, quia sciret aquam nigram esse, unde 5763 Not, 2 | 119 writes the name, not Sciron, as Halm. Fateare: the em. 5764 Not, 2 | comparing 138. Add D.F. I. 23 (sciscat et probet), III. 17 (adsciscendas 5765 II, XL | Democritum: semper enim, ut scitis, studiosus nobilitatis fui. 5766 Not, 2 | sceptic by saying ουκ αγω σχολην προς ταυτα" (Zeller 85, 5767 Not, 2 | a judge as to be called scopulus reorum. Pompeium: apparently 5768 Not, 2 | non ita cf. the Lowland Scottish "no just sae". Historiae 5769 Not, 1 | orthodox one that the Atom was scouted as a silly absurdity. Cf. 5770 I, I | quid sit cur, cum multa scribas, genus hoc praetermittas, 5771 I, I | cessare, sed celare quae scribat existimo. Minime vero, inquit 5772 Not, 2 | easy, as Halm notes, to a scribe who understood caelum to 5773 I, IV | contra ea Philonis Antiochus scripserit. 14. Immo vero et ista et 5774 II, XXXII | Lucilium scripsit poëtam, cum scripsisset isdem de rebus ad L. Censorinum, 5775 Not, 2 | memoria as opposed to de scripto; he says, "laudem habet 5776 Not, 1 | Expressa: chiselled as by a sculptor (cf. expressa effigies De 5777 Not, 2 | its image on the soul as a seal does on wax, cf. Zeller 5778 Int, III | literature. Philosophy was a sealed study to those who did not 5779 Not, 2 | Plato. The dialogues of search as they are called, while 5780 Int, IV | magnificent280. As the party were seated in the xystus with its polished 5781 Not, 1 | the old derivations from secare, and sequi. Quanto id magis: 5782 Not, 1 | the name of its author. Secondly, most MSS. have sint or 5783 Not, 1 | influencing every other sect, and it placed νους εν αιθερι ( 5784 Not, 2 | Varro) ullam philosophiae sectam esse dicendam, quae non 5785 I, Inc | sapienti ab omnibus ceterarum sectarum, qui sibi sapientes videntur, 5786 Pre | Preller. The pages, not the sections, of the fourth edition of 5787 Not, 1 | 149. Saecula: the spelling secula is wrong; Corss. I. 325, 5788 I, Inc | sibi sapientes videntur, secundas partes dari; cum primas 5789 Not, 2 | lumen is for lux (si te secundo lumine his offendere—Ad 5790 Not, 1 | Ciaconus "ex asse heredem, secundos autem" is as acute as it 5791 I, Inc | omnium ceterorum judicio sit secundus.~35. Augustin. c. Acad. 5792 Not, 1 | alterations are intended to secure. Interrogatio is merely 5793 II, XLV | coniungerent, nec multo secus eos, qui ad honestatem prima 5794 II, XLIV | cotem esse dicebant, recte secusne alias viderimus. 136. Atrocitas 5795 II, XLII | modo nominavi, deinde eum secuti Parmenides et Zeno, itaque 5796 I, III | deerravissent, sic vitam deviam secutis corrigere errorem paenitendo, 5797 I, III | lib. III.: et ut nos nunc sedemus ad Lucrinum pisciculosque 5798 Not, 1 | causas. Cic. is fond of using sedes, locus, regio together, 5799 Int, II | Academy, though claiming to seek for the truth, has no truth 5800 Not, 2 | systems the sapiens we are seeking will select (117). He must 5801 II, XIV | opinionem a perspicuitate seiungere, nihil profecit: ipsius 5802 Not, 2 | in Plato in the sense "to seize firmly with the mind." Adverterat: 5803 Not, 2 | sapiens we are seeking will select (117). He must choose one 5804 Int, IV | so-called Old Academy. How he selected this school from, among 5805 Not, 2 | a quovis. Repudiari: the selection depended on the probabile 5806 Not, 2 | 118). Whatever system he selects he must know absolutely; 5807 Int, II | disgraceful, unworthy of a self-controlled character76. Here we have 5808 Not, 1 | extent as to destroy the self-identity of things; even the word 5809 Not, 2 | Zeller 114). This bears a semblance of inference and is not 5810 Not, 2 | Id quod significatur: το σημειωντον in Sext.~§§3740. Summary 5811 Int, IV | Varro remained in the same semi-friendly state. About the year 54 5812 Not, 2 | Recte ... additum: the semicolon at Arcesilas was added by 5813 I, IX | ab ea disciplina omnino semovendus est: qui cum maxime necessariam 5814 Not, 2 | agitator equosque, adding semperque Carneades προβολην pugilis 5815 I, VII | immutabilem continuationem ordinis sempiterni: non numquam eandem fortunam, 5816 Not, 2 | I. 155 For the word cf. Sen. Ep. 117 enuntiativum quiddam 5817 II, XXXVIII | mutationemque moliri, nulla senectus diuturnitate temporum exsistere, 5818 Not, 2 | 5 ut oratorum laus ... senescat ... , philosophia nascatur.~§ 5819 I, II | dicere? cuius et nascentis et senescentis alias hebetiora, alias acutiora 5820 Not, 2 | indeed arguments against sense-knowledge, but held that real knowledge 5821 Not, 1 | the προηγμενα, though no sensible reader would suppose Cic. 5822 II, XIX | ipsum, cum annos multos alia sensisset, simul ac visum sit, sententia 5823 II, XX | ista cum acriter mentem sensumve pepulerunt, accipio iisque 5824 II, XLVIII | disciplinas, quam de oculorum sensuumque reliquorum mendaciis et 5825 I, XI | XI. De naturis autem sic sentiebat, primum, ut quattuor initiis 5826 II, XIX | quoque, iocansne an ita sentiens—non enim satis intellegebam—, 5827 Not, 1 | the universe was itself sentient, cf. N.D. II. 22, 47, 87. 5828 Not, 1 | Correcta et emendata: a fine sentiment to come from a conservative 5829 II, V | cum aliud agnosceret atque sentiret, libenter uti solitus est 5830 Not, 2 | dogma. Sentitis enim: cf. sentis in D.F. III. 26. Fluctuare: " 5831 II, XLVI | falsis nullo discrimine separantur, praesertim cum iudicia 5832 Not, 2 | called together λημματα, separately λημμα and προσληψις (sumptio 5833 Not, 1 | is exceedingly fond of separating tam quam ita tantus quantus, 5834 II, XX | sed Helicen et clarissimos Septemtriones, id est, rationes has latiore 5835 Not, 1 | Corp. Inscr. I. no 1019). Sepulchrum, however, is frequent at 5836 II, XIX | dispiciendum reliquerunt: quos si sequamur, iis vinculis simus adstricti, 5837 II, XXXIII | somnia, vaticinationes, seque ab adsensu sustineat: quod 5838 II, XXX | sumptis adiungam ex his sequendas esse alias, alias improbandas, 5839 II, XXXII | adsentiatur, alterum tenere, ut sequens probabilitatem, ubicumque 5840 II, XXXII | partem respondere possimus, sequentes tantum modo, quod ita visum 5841 II, XXII | etiam fore ut ii, qui se sequerentur, Antiochii vocarentur. Mihi 5842 Not, 2 | is future, as in 109, or sequeris, the constant form in Cic. 5843 II, XVI | Ennium, cum in hortis cum Ser. Galba vicino suo ambulavisset, 5844 Not, 2 | 1) they do not make a serious endeavour to see the light 5845 Not, 2 | sermones: = aut clar. vir. serm. ludic. esse oporteat. Rerum 5846 Not, 1 | is hampered by the patrii sermonis egestas, which compels him 5847 II, I | Asia Luculli institutis servandis et quasi vestigiis persequendis. 5848 Not, 2 | Cic. forgets that Luc. had served with distinction in the 5849 II, XLI | nesciamus soli an aetheri serviamus. Solis autem magnitudinem5850 Int, IV | Cato, whose half-sister Servilia was wife of Lucullus289. 5851 Not, 2 | peculiar marks (55, 56). The Servilii were distinguished from 5852 II, XVIII | Fac enim antiquos illos Servilios, qui gemini fuerunt, tam 5853 II, XXVI | quarto est. 84. Qui igitur P. Servilium Geminum videbat, si Quintum 5854 Not, 2 | Liv. XXXV. 16) had been settled. Holding that illa in the 5855 Int, I | days with Diodotus in the severest study, but he seems never 5856 Not, 2 | I. 2. Ipsa veritas: MSS. severitas, a frequent error; cf. In 5857 Not, 1 | practically Aristotle's, who severs αρεται into διανοητικαι 5858 Not, 2 | like Pompilius, Quintilius, Sextilius. Qy, should Petrilius, a 5859 Int, IV | Deorum and other works are shadowed forth284. In another passage 5860 Not, 2 | surrounded, (2) their faith is shaken by sceptic paradoxes (46). 5861 Not, 2 | are called, while exposing sham knowledge, all assume that 5862 Int, II | speaks with something like shame of the treatment they had 5863 Not, 2 | former the moulding and shaping of the utterance by conscious 5864 Int, IV | which would fall to Cicero's share, a proposal was made to 5865 Not, 2 | essence are divisible into sharply-defined genera, but would deny that 5866 Not, 1 | been driven to desperate shifts. Cicero's very knowledge 5867 Not, 2 | covered with its wings, and a ship which the wings of a bee 5868 Int, IV | Within sight lay the Cuman shore and Puteoli, thirty stadia 5869 Not, 2 | Crinitus: ακερσεκομης, "never shorn," as Milton translates it. 5870 Int, IV | sources of information. A short account of the points of 5871 Int, I | is made to suffer for the shortcomings of Cicero the politician. 5872 Int, IV | thither!" Atticus on his part "shuddered" at the idea of taking the 5873 I, II | aegris, alius sanis, alius siccis, alius vinulentis ...~10. 5874 Int, IV | his train when he went to Sicily was the poet Archias, and 5875 Not, 2 | young and when old, when sick and when healthy, when sober 5876 Not, 1 | course haecque, like hicque, sicque, would be un-Ciceronian. 5877 Not, 1 | in II. 76. Obscuritate: a side-blow at declaratio 41. Confessionem 5878 Not, 1 | schools. For multiplex "many sided," cf. T.D. V. 11. Una et 5879 Int, II | equal persuasiveness on both sides of a case. It seemed to 5880 Not, 2 | and pressing upwards or sideways. Cf. Aristot. Eth. Eud. 5881 Int, I | Athens on the approach of its siege during the Mithridatic war. 5882 Not, 1 | naturally dull, reason may sift out the certain from the 5883 II, XXVI | eiusdem modi cera centum sigilla hoc anulo impressero, ecquae 5884 Not, 2 | verum posse comprehendi quae signa non potest habere quod falsum 5885 Int, I | conferring on the city some signal favour55. Cicero was anxious 5886 II, XXII | docere vellet nihil ita signari in animis nostris a vero 5887 II, XXIV | sicut esset, impressum et signatum et effictum. Post requisitum 5888 Not, 2 | about the impressions of signet rings? (85) Can you find 5889 Not, 1 | words have no philosophical significance here, but are simply specimens 5890 I, IX | videtur, quod vides idem significare Pomponium.~ 5891 II, XLVIII | quoniam non solum nauta significat, sed etiam Favonius ipse 5892 Not, 2 | and condenses it thus; his signis verum posse comprehendi 5893 Not, 2 | qu. Plin. N.H. III. 5, Sil. Ital. XII. 131, Festus, 5894 Not, 1 | have aided the corruption. Similarly in modern times J.C. Scaliger 5895 II, XI | possit item falsum videri. Simili in errore versantur, cum 5896 II, VII | conficere versus? Quod idem in similibus quoque artibus continget, 5897 II, XVII | ova ovorum et apes apium simillimae: quid pugnas igitur? aut 5898 Not, 2 | art of memory was begun by Simonides (who is the person denoted 5899 Not, 2 | degree of certainty to the simplest and the most complex truths, 5900 I, VII | Principes sunt unius modi et simplices: ex his autem ortae variae 5901 II, XLVI | virtus, sed fallax imitatio simulatioque virtutis. Audi contra illos, 5902 Int, IV | as having been finished simultaneously at Astura.~Another view 5903 Int, II | theory that all emotion was sinful; Cicero, who was very human 5904 I, VII | essent astra mentesque, singulare eorumque quattuor, quae 5905 II, XL | innumerabilis supra infra, dextra sinistra, ante post, alios dissimilis, 5906 Int, IV | Hortensius and Catulus now sink to a secondary position 5907 Not, 2 | which is equivalent to sinning," cf. I. 42. Iam nimium 5908 Not, 2 | by Goer.) lunavitque genu sinuosum fortiter arcum. Wakefield 5909 Int, II | videtur84." The Academic sips the best of every school85. 5910 Not, 2 | 4) "imprimere wird klas sisch verbunden in aliqua re, 5911 II, XII | est in nostra potestate sita, reddenda adsensio. 38. 5912 | sitis 5913 Int, IV | Astura, which was pleasantly situated on the Latin coast between 5914 II, XII | igitur virtus, si nihil situm est in ipsis nobis? Maxime 5915 Not, 1 | utter refutation in the sixth Excursus to his D.F. Solum 5916 Not, 1 | 468—399) who died nearly sixty years before him. Omnis 5917 Not, 2 | carere comes from a root skar meaning to divide, see Corss. 5918 Not, 2 | and foreground, so in Gk. σκια and σκιασμα are opposed 5919 Not, 2 | opposed to λαμπρα; cf. also σκιαγραφειν, adumbrare, and Aesch. Agam. 5920 Not, 2 | foreground, so in Gk. σκια and σκιασμα are opposed to λαμπρα; cf. 5921 Not, 2 | wrote a book entitled, ωι σκοπια (egg investigation) η περι 5922 Not, 2 | adducing passages to show that sky and water were important 5923 Not, 2 | 41. Edormiverunt: "have slept off the effects," cf. αποβριζειν 5924 Not, 2 | 17, 15. There is not the slightest reason for this, Agnon and 5925 Not, 2 | MSS., and I would easily slip in. Eosdem: once more we 5926 Not, 2 | Pliny (see Forc.) for the slope of a hill. Nulla crassitudo: 5927 Int, III | an obscure man and only slowly won his way to favour with 5928 Not, 2 | attempt to prove the sense of smell untrustworthy. Different 5929 Not, 2 | 119. Exigua et minima: σμικρα και ελαχιστα. Madv. on D.F. 5930 Not, 2 | Apol. 21 εοικα γουν τουτου σμικρωι τινι αυτωι τουτωι σοφωτερος 5931 Not, 2 | Heindorf's note on κατα σμικρον in Sophistes 217 D. Interrogati: 5932 Int, I | the brilliant Academic.9 Smitten with a marvellous enthusiasm 5933 Not, 2 | esset: the expression is sneered at in 87. Quem ad modum 5934 Not, 2 | made no ‛ομοιομερειαι of snow, but only of water, which, 5935 II, XVII | approbatione faciunt qua sobrii: dubitant, haesitant, revocant 5936 II, XVII | inter vigilantium visa et sobriorum et sanorum et eorum, qui 5937 I, II | humore ... Siccum dicitur et sobrium, non madidum ... Cic. Academicorum 5938 Not, 1 | Varro, however, has humana societas in Aug. XIX. 3. Cetera autem: 5939 II, XXIII | dubitari non possit quin Socrati nihil sit visum sciri posse. 5940 I, IV | ac refertam, illam autem Socraticam dubitationem de omnibus 5941 I, IV | cohortandis consumebatur, ut e Socraticorum libris, maximeque Platonis, 5942 II, XXXVII | Anaximandro, populari et sodali suo, non persuasit: is enim 5943 Not, 1 | Arist. (who adds αγχινοια σοφια φρονησις), and the docilitas, 5944 Not, 2 | egg investigation) η περι σοφιστειας προς Ακαδημαικους, mentioned 5945 Not, 2 | Antisthenes and Diogenes were not σοφοι according to the Stoics, 5946 Int, IV | man would opine255 (τον σοφον δοξασειν), seems another 5947 Not, 2 | σμικρωι τινι αυτωι τουτωι σοφωτερος ειναι, ‛οτι α μη οιδα ουδε 5948 Int, IV | Circeii134. Here he sought to soften his deep grief by incessant 5949 II, XLV | Testatur saepe Chrysippus tres solas esse sententias, quae defendi 5950 II, XXVIII | qualis recordatio fieri soleat eorum, qui experrecti sint, 5951 II, XVI | informantur, quod fieri solere concedimus, sive in quiete 5952 II, XVIII | absurdum sit, quod interdum soletis dicere, cum visa in animos 5953 Int, IV | had been given for these solicitations, Atticus naturally grew 5954 Not, 2 | same meaning Dav. quotes Solinus and Plin. N.H. VII. 21, 5955 II, XVIII | autem etiam heri audiebamus solitum esse eo delabi interdum, 5956 II, V | atque sentiret, libenter uti solitus est ea dissimulatione, quam 5957 Not, 2 | the seven is assigned to Solon. Infinitatem naturae: το 5958 II, XLIV | denique scripta Lycurgi, Solonis, duodecim tabulas nostras 5959 II, XXXVI | est. 115. Neque vero tu solus, sed ad suam quisque rapiet. 5960 Not, 2 | general experience. You say he solved them, even if he did, which 5961 Pre | which is not touched upon somewhere in the Academica, it is 5962 II, XXIV | quo quid colore aut quo sono sit scire, sed tantum sentire 5963 Not, 2 | father; to our notions, the sons would have gained greater 5964 Int, I | says "I assure you I had no sooner returned to Rome than I 5965 Not, 2 | lumen radiatum rape." So in Soph. Aiax 100 the hero, after 5966 Not, 2 | difficulty is discussed in Plato Sophist. 238—239. Ex multis animi 5967 I, III | si, ut illi Aeschylum, Sophoclem, Euripidem, sic hi Platonem 5968 II, XLVIII | reliquorum mendaciis et de sorite aut pseudomeno, quas plagas 5969 II, XXXIII | dubitare non possit? an tu in soritis poteris hoc, cum voles: 5970 I, IV | differebant. Nam cum Speusippum, sororis filium, Plato philosophiae 5971 Int, III | exertion by the deepest sorrow125. Philosophy took the 5972 Int, II | very human in his joys and sorrows, refused it with horror108. 5973 Int, I | their intrinsic value. I am sorry to be obliged to instance 5974 II, IV | librum etiam ederet, qui Sosus inscribitur. Tum igitur 5975 Not, 1 | Plato had often spoken of souls at death flying away to 5976 Not, 2 | quibus omnia constant: this sounds like Lucretius, omnia = 5977 Not, 2 | Quint. IX. 4, 18, where Spalding wished to read in Herodoti, 5978 Pre | needed for discussing, even sparingly, in the notes, questions 5979 Not, 2 | αν τρανην και πληκτικην σπαση φαντασιαν. Sui iudicii: 5980 Not, 2 | with a singular gerund like spe rerum potiendi, etc., but 5981 Int, IV | Hortensius, in which the same speakers had been engaged; and after 5982 Int, IV | Antiochus303.~The exact specification of the changes in the arrangement 5983 Int, I | This may be taken as a specimen of his spirit throughout 5984 Not, 1 | προφασις. Probabilem: = specious. Nesciunt: Halm with his 5985 Not, 1 | incidentally adopts it, so it may speciously be said to belong to the 5986 Not, 2 | accept his formulae; but the spectacle of men of the most irreconcilable 5987 II, XLVII | tabernas iubes? quo enim spectat illud, cum artificia tolli 5988 Not, 2 | translated (Ad Fam. XV. 16) by spectra, Zeller 432. Tu vero: etc. 5989 Not, 2 | recently to Prof. Huxley's speculations on protoplasm; he was said 5990 Not, 2 | seems. With all his enormous speed, too, he appears to us to 5991 Int, IV | Brutus169. This plan was speedily cast aside on the receipt 5992 Not, 2 | as Madv. on D.F. II. 35 spells the name), Pyrrho and Aristo 5993 Int, I | and political affairs to spend much time in systematic 5994 II, XXII | gloriae causa facere dicerent, sperare etiam fore ut ii, qui se 5995 I, IV | nominibus differebant. Nam cum Speusippum, sororis filium, Plato philosophiae 5996 Int, II | from his dialectic. In the sphere of morals he felt the danger 5997 Not, 2 | Aug. Cont. Ac. II. 6; the spinae of the Stoics are often 5998 Not, 2 | would most repel. Hermann's spinosissimi is ingenious, and if an 5999 Not, 2 | I. 7 qu. R. and P. 375), spiritus per omnia maxima ac minima 6000 Int, I | sarcastic in speech, and spiteful in spirit, hence in striking 6001 Not, 2 | His conversion gave a splendid opening for an argumentum 6002 Int, IV | people, wishes to have the "Splendidiora, breviora, [xliii] meliora." 6003 Not, 1 | which accounts for the split of Stoicism from Academicism 6004 II, XIX | confundit vera cum falsis, spoliat nos iudicio, privat approbatione, 6005 I, IX | auctoritatem veteris disciplinae: spoliavit enim virtutem suo decore 6006 Not, 2 | philosophers were the constant sport of the sceptics, cf. Sext. 6007 Int, I | because of the idea now spread abroad that Cicero was a 6008 II, I | illam, quam Themistocles spreverat, disciplinam. Itaque ut 6009 Int, IV | other schools can the orator spring, and the whole tone of the 6010 Not, 2 | was manufactured on the spur of the moment, in order 6011 Not, 2 | must defend the Stoics and spurn Aristotle from you, while 6012 Int, III | those evil times he was spurred on to exertion by the deepest 6013 Not, 2 | plumb line, norma a mason's square, the word being probably 6014 Not, 2 | was once used, e.g. "a squire of low degree" in the ballad. 6015 Not, 1 | Walker reads velis with St Jerome. For quod velit = 6016 Int, II | systems which seemed to afford stability to moral principles had 6017 Not, 2 | Dialectic cannot lead to stable knowledge, its processes 6018 II, XLVII | eos omnis, qui in contione stabunt, exsules, servos, insanos 6019 Not, 2 | power to see is a straight staff bent in a pool". Manent 6020 Not, 2 | by the three succeeding stages the resemblance is made 6021 Not, 1 | Brut. 125. Stagiritem: not Stagiritam as Lamb., for Cic., exc. 6022 II, XXXIX | eadem effici omnia, quae, si stante terra caelum moveretur. 6023 Int, IV | him when any question is started which touches on Greek literature 6024 Not, 1 | Aristotelian. Aristot., starting with the four necessary 6025 Int, I | this time living. Of these Staseas of Naples, who lived some 6026 Not, 2 | ειναι τας αισθησεις ... ‛ης στασεως ηρξε Στρατον. All powers 6027 Int, I | several times contrasts the statesmen of the time with the Scipio 6028 II, XX | etiam coercetur, ego de omni statu consilioque totius vitae 6029 II, XXX | vivet' cum dialectici sic statuant, omne, quod ita diiunctum 6030 I, XI | rebantur, non adhiberet. Statuebat enim ignem esse ipsam naturam, 6031 II, XXXIV | inquit, ipsum impediet, quod statuet, ne id quidem, quod probet, 6032 Not, 2 | would make omnibus = om. statuis. Alexandros: Lysippus alone 6033 Int, IV | first few days of Cicero's stay at Arpinum, so he employed 6034 Int, II | it from Antiochus who, in stealing the doctrines of Zeno, ever 6035 Not, 1 | famous lines of Empedocles στεινοποι μεν γαρ παλαμαι κ.τ.λ. R. 6036 Not, 1 | indiscriminately in the acc. plur. of i stems. I shall write i everywhere, 6037 Not, 2 | degrees" (cf. προυμαθον στεργειν κακοις), not, as the lexica 6038 Not, 2 | esse ... vel genere humano stertente verum sit, also ib. III. 6039 Not, 2 | A.M. VII. 416 (‛ο σοφος στησεται και ‛ησυχασει). The same 6040 II, I | tanta aequitas, ut hodie stet Asia Luculli institutis 6041 Not, 2 | δ' αν τις Παρμενιδου την στιχοποιιαν. Quamquam: on the proper 6042 Not, 2 | ουθεν (Sext. P.H. III. 39), στιγμη = το αμερες (A.M. IX. 283, 6043 Not, 1 | person meant is L. Aelius Stilo or Praeconinus, the master 6044 Int, IV | proceeded185. In order to stimulate his friend, Atticus affirmed 6045 Int, II | while the Stoic dares not stir a foot's breadth away from 6046 Not, 1 | virtutis elidere, III. 83 stirpis aegritudinis elidere. (In


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