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6047 Not, 2 | vetus Academia, and never stirs a step from Chrysippus. 6048 Not, 1 | being αναλογον τω των αστρων στοιχειω (De Gen. An. II. 3, qu. 6049 Not, 2 | on the same subject) ‛οι Στωικοι και αλλοι τινες. For other 6050 Int, II | ignoble craftsman of words, stole them from the Old Academy. 6051 II, IV | poterat fieri illo mitius—stomachari tamen coepit. Mirabar: nec 6052 I, I | Academicorum lib. I.: quid autem stomachatur Menesarchus? quid Antipater 6053 Not, 2 | Our sapiens is not made of stone; many things seem to him 6054 Not, 2 | which with the ordinary stopping expresses Cic.'s needless 6055 Not, 2 | meant that knowledge which stops at the superficial appearances 6056 Int, IV | the senate218. In him no storm of danger, no favouring 6057 Int, II | doctrines of Zeno, ever stoutly maintained that Zeno had 6058 Not, 2 | mentioned here was called Strabo—a misnomer surely. Octingenta: 6059 Not, 2 | we have power to see is a straight staff bent in a pool". Manent 6060 Int, IV | Atticus are in the same strain. Cicero had to be pressed 6061 Not, 1 | use, in the Greekυλη the strangeness had had time to wear off. 6062 Not, 1 | D.F. I. 39, T.D. I. 70. The strangest ellipse with nihil ad elsewhere 6063 Not, 2 | αισθησεις ... ‛ης στασεως ηρξε Στρατον. All powers of sensation 6064 II, XXXVIII | ne id iure evenerit? Nec Stratoni tamen adsentior, nec vero 6065 Not, 2 | period of Metrodorus (of Stratonice), Philo, and Antiochus, 6066 II, VI | Bene autem nosse Carneadem Stratoniceus Metrodorus putabatur. 17. 6067 Int, I | and Cicero27, which was strengthened by the fact that many friends 6068 Not, 2 | 148). That επιστημη in the strict sense is impossible, is 6069 Not, 2 | appear that there was a strife between it and the New. 6070 Int, III | wished at the same time to strike a blow at the ascendency 6071 Int, I | in arguing with himself a string of abstract philosophical 6072 Not, 2 | following two assertions they strive to prove, (1) sensations 6073 Int, I | at the same time in the strongest language his loathing for 6074 Int, IV | stadia distant281.~Cicero strove to give vividness to the 6075 Not, 2 | Nitamur ... percipi: "let us struggle to prove the proposition, 6076 I, V | ingeni. Morum autem putabant studia esse et quasi consuetudinem: 6077 Not, 1 | see Boscher in Curtius' Studien II. 1, p. 145. In the case 6078 II, III | volumus, idque summa cura studioque conquirimus. Etsi enim omnis 6079 I, II | adhuc docuerat nec erat unde studiosi scire possent, ea, quantum 6080 I, III | cum miserrimum, tum etiam stultissimum dixerit?~13. Nonius p. 65. 6081 II, XX | philosophiam me applicavi, non modo stultitiam meam, sed etiam mores et 6082 Not, 1 | esp Goer.) could have so stumbled over quandam and quasi used 6083 Int, II | Orators, politicians, and stylists had ever found their best 6084 | suas 6085 II, VI | eloquentiae, in Melanthio Rhodio suavitatis. Bene autem nosse Carneadem 6086 II, XLV | verum tamen video quam suaviter voluptas sensibus nostris 6087 Not, 1 | doctrine of the infinite subdivisibility of matter had become so 6088 Not, 1 | and space are infinitely subdivisible (27). Force or form acts 6089 Not, 2 | fere semper coniunctivus subicitur praesentis—futuri et perfecti 6090 Not, 2 | universae sententiae exempla subiciuntur per figuram omissionis. 6091 II, XXIII | esse ad ea, quae sub eos subiecta sunt, iudicanda? Parmenides, 6092 II, XXII | audirent habere. 70. Unde autem subito vetus Academia revocata 6093 Pre | escaped errors, but after submitting my views to repeated revision 6094 Not, 1 | sharply and decisively to subordinate to Ethics all else in philosophy. 6095 Int, II | Socratic107. Again, Antiochus subscribed to the Stoic theory that 6096 II, XL | quidque cesserit aliud ilico subsequatur? aut atomos ullas, e quibus 6097 Int, IV | completed200, and often subsequently, when he most markedly mentioned 6098 Int, I | intimate connection [iv] which subsisted between the rhetorical and 6099 Not, 1 | and highest of material substances. He always guards himself 6100 Not, 2 | n. on 81). As aliquis is substantival, aliqui adjectival, aliquis 6101 Not, 2 | cogitatio" pro "cognitio" substituitur quam contra, also M.D.F 6102 II, XIV | XIV. 43. Hanc ego subtilitatem philosophia quidem dignissimam 6103 II, VII | perceptionibus constat? Quam si subtraxeris, qui distingues artificem 6104 II, XIV | depellamur. Nam qui voluit subvenire erroribus Epicurus iis, 6105 Not, 1 | avoided by the immediate succession of a neuter relative pronoun, 6106 Not, 1 | ethical standard is then succinctly stated, in which virtue 6107 Not, 2 | i.e. se putat. For the sudden change from oratio recta 6108 Int, I | busily engaged, and then suddenly left Rome for a tour in 6109 Not, 2 | although the doctrines had suffered in the discussion of the 6110 Int, II | criterion such as would suffice to distinguish the true 6111 Not, 1 | Indeed if it is kept I suggest quasi for cum sic. The use 6112 Not, 2 | Ακαδημαικους, mentioned by Suidas.~§58. Contra nos: the sense 6113 Not, 2 | The talk about freedom suits a sceptic better than a 6114 II, XXXI | suspicetur: a Clitomacho sumam, qui usque ad senectutem 6115 Not, 1 | Cic. means mediis, and not sumendis, about which he had intended 6116 II, XXII | sumpsisset, ex eo ceteri sumerent. Sed cum hoc alio loco plura, 6117 II, XXXIV | maxime perturbatum. Cum enim sumeretur, unum, esse quaedam falsa 6118 II, XVI | si possit? quo modo autem sumis, ut, si quid cui simile 6119 Not, 2 | the senses must have been summed up in the phrase cuncta 6120 II, XLIII | ratio vitae definitione summi boni continetur, de qua 6121 I, V | quadam societate. Ac de summo quidem atque naturali bono 6122 Not, 2 | of whom had the right to summon them, the right of the tribune 6123 II, XLVIII | de dissensionibus tantis summorum virorum disseramus, de obscuritate 6124 II, XLII | qua de re est igitur inter summos viros maior dissensio? Omitto 6125 I, V | Sed quid ago? inquit, aut sumne sanus, qui haec vos doceo? 6126 I, II | studium mihi quidem ipse sumo et ad vitae constantiam 6127 II, XIV | nihil interesse. At primum sumpseras, tamquam interesset: ita 6128 II, XXI | quod percipi possit a me sumpsero et, quod tu mihi das, accepero, 6129 Int, IV | that of Philo (partes mihi sumpsi Philonis275), he merely 6130 II, XXII | argumentum ex Dionysio ipse sumpsisset, ex eo ceteri sumerent. 6131 Not, 2 | separately λημμα and προσληψις (sumptio et adsumptio De Div II. 6132 II, XXX | verum aut falsum sit'? Rebus sumptis adiungam ex his sequendas 6133 Int, IV | Catulus, whose praises were sung in the fervid language which 6134 Not, 2 | I. 508) treats it as a superabundance of negation arising from 6135 I, IIII | Exanclare est perpeti vel superare. Cic. Academicorum lib. 6136 Not, 2 | writes facis superbe, Orelli superbis, which verb is hardly found 6137 Not, 2 | line treated of after the superficies, which has induced some 6138 Pre | though in every way far superior to that of Goerenz, is very 6139 Int, III | classes of a belief in the supernatural, accompanied as it was by 6140 Int, III | it was by an increase of superstition among the masses, prepared 6141 I, II | qui urinantur, aut nihil superum aut obscure admodum cernimus.~ 6142 II, VIII | conservandae causa nullum supplicium recuset, nisi iis rebus 6143 Int, II | naturally look upon Cicero as a supporter of their "Vetus Academia," 6144 Not, 2 | famous old philosophers as supporters of scepticism (13), Those 6145 Not, 2 | Diss. I. 27, 15) quietly suppresses a sceptic by saying ουκ 6146 Int, IV | had given up all hope of suppressing the first edition. If he 6147 Int, IV | the measures taken for the suppression of the Catilinarian conspiracy, 6148 Not, 2 | described the point and surface negatively. This latter 6149 Int, IV | care which nothing could surpass190." The binding and adornment 6150 Int, IV | man of universal merit, of surpassing worth, a second Laelius229. 6151 Int, IV | near Cumae. It is rather surprising that under these circumstances 6152 Int, I | swept from his mind, and he surrendered himself wholly, as he tells 6153 Int, IV | Balbus had managed to obtain surreptitiously a copy of the fifth book 6154 Not, 2 | which these phenomena are surrounded, (2) their faith is shaken 6155 Not, 2 | Zeller. The difficulties surrounding the opinion are treated 6156 Int, IV | city137.~It was amid such surroundings that the Academica was written. 6157 Int, I | in showing from a minute survey of his works, and a comparison 6158 II, XLVII | irasci: ne nobis quidem suscenserent, cum didicissent id tollere 6159 II, XXXIX | vocatis: cur mihi magis suscensetis, qui ista non aspernor, 6160 I, IX | rationem auctoritatemque susceperant, et post eos Polemo et Crates 6161 Not, 2 | and even without ει) is susceptible of the same explanation. 6162 II, VIII | sapientiae? deinde quo modo suscipere aliquam rem aut agere fidenter 6163 II, IX | incogniti: quam rationem quoniam susciperent docereque vellent quae visa 6164 II, VI | oratio contra Academiam suscipitur a nobis, ut retineamus eam 6165 Not, 2 | Livy certainly has the suspected use of tantum non. Tribunus: 6166 Not, 1 | proper course to take was to suspend judgment entirely (45). 6167 II, VII | Andromacham, quum id nos ne suspicemur quidem. Nihil necesse est 6168 II, XXV | oculis sunt neque ipsi nos suspicere possunt. Ergo ut illis aqua, 6169 II, XXXI | dicam, ut quisquam id fingi suspicetur: a Clitomacho sumam, qui 6170 Not, 1 | III. 65, will remove all suspicion from the text. Verbis quoque 6171 I, XI | ignorantiam et opinationem et suspicionem et uno nomine omnia, quae 6172 Int, IV | any cultivated man might sustain who had not definitely committed 6173 Int, IV | treatise is more liberally sustained than his; a charge which 6174 Not, 2 | prefers long forms like sustentatus, which occurs with labefactatus 6175 II, XXIX | quam ad finem veniam, equos sustinebo, eoque magis, si locus is, 6176 II, XXXI | quattuor eius libri sunt de sustinendis adsensionibus. Haec autem, 6177 II, XXIX | erit. Sic me, inquit, ante sustineo nec diutius captiose interroganti 6178 II, XVII | nihil interesset, aut semper sustineret aut numquam. Sed ex hoc 6179 I, XII | ab utraque parte adsensio sustineretur. 46. Hanc Academiam novam 6180 II, XIX | animorum et actionem rerum sustulerunt: quod non modo recte fieri, 6181 II, XIV | opinionis errorem nullo modo sustulit.~ 6182 | suum 6183 Not, 2 | cuiusque: for this use of suus quisque as a single word 6184 Not, 2 | should prefer sui for sibi (SVI for SIBI). B is very frequently 6185 Int, III | include the great poet in his sweeping condemnation, and being 6186 Int, I | pronouncing that nothing is sweeter than universal knowledge. 6187 Int, IV | fear or hope, or cause to swerve from his own course219. 6188 Not, 2 | βιον), VIII. 372 (‛ολην συγχεει την φιλοσοφον ζητησιν), 6189 Int, IV | while συνταγμα157, and συγγραμμα158, designate definite portions 6190 Not, 2 | αισθητικων μετα ειξεως και συγκαταθεσεως γινονται ['αι φαντασια]; 6191 Not, 2 | Percipiendi notam: = χαρακτηρα της συγκταθεσεως in Sext. P.H. I. 191. For 6192 Not, 2 | fraudulent use of litigation, συκοφαντια. The chief enemy was the 6193 II, XXXVIII | tuus iste Stoicus sapiens syllabatim tibi ista dixerit, veniet 6194 Not, 1 | iam comprises the last two syllables of Academiam, which he reads. 6195 Not, 2 | use this word like ratio (συλλογισμος), cf. De Leg. I. 48 conclusa 6196 Not, 1 | conclusae: speech drawn up in a syllogistic form which becomes oratio 6197 Not, 2 | Concludendi: του συμπεραινειν or συλλογιζεσθαι. Locum: τοπον in the philosophical 6198 Not, 2 | a ψιλον παθος. For this symbolic action of Zeno cf. D.F. 6199 Not, 1 | Euseb. Praep. Ev. XIV. 5, συμφοιτωντες παρα Πολεμωνι εφιλο τιμηθησαν. 6200 Int, II | inclined him very strongly to sympathize with the Stoic views about 6201 Not, 2 | although the Greeks used συμπερασμα instead of επιφορα sometimes 6202 Not, 2 | so Sext. often opposes συμπλοκη or συνημμενον to διεζευγμενον, 6203 Not, 2 | likely to be a trans. of συναγειν, and conclusum argumentum 6204 Not, 2 | λημματων (premisses) κατα συναγωγην επιφοραν (conclusion) εκκαλυπτων 6205 Not, 2 | conclusum argumentum of συνακτικος λογος, which terms are of 6206 Not, 2 | διαρτησις, which is opposed to συναρτησις and explained in Sext. A.M. 6207 Not, 2 | subject has always other synchronous sensations which are able 6208 Not, 1 | Heraclitus, εν μεταβολη γαρ συνεχει τα οντα. Laberentur et fluerent: 6209 Not, 2 | ψευδες εν τοις πραγμασι συνεχωρει (Numen in Euseb. Pr. Eu. 6210 Not, 2 | 250. Praecide: συντομος or συνελων ειπε, cf. Cat. Mai. 57, 6211 Not, 2 | πραξιν ταυτηι τη φαντασιαι συνηψεν. ακολουθον δε ην το τους 6212 Not, 2 | εργον εστιν επιβαλλειν ... συνεσεως τε δει και μνημης. Ille 6213 Not, 2 | on I. 15, and the word συνεσκιασμενος Sext. Adv. Math. VII. 26. 6214 Not, 2 | wrote both for and against συνηθεια; cf. R. and P. 360 and 368. 6215 Not, 1 | words with which they are syntactically connected, by just one small 6216 Not, 1 | Greek terms are ‛απλα and συνθετα, see Arist. De Coelo, I. 6217 Not, 2 | Zeller 250. Praecide: συντομος or συνελων ειπε, cf. Cat. 6218 II, XXXIX | vos arbitrantur? Hicetas Syracusius, ut ait Theophrastus, caelum, 6219 II, XIX | etiam adseverantius, in Syria cum esset mecum, paulo ante 6220 Int, I | exception [v] of Demetrius Syrus, there were no eminent rhetorical 6221 Not, 1 | number of coordinated or systematised perceptions (καταληψεις 6222 Not, 2 | goes on with Luna innixans. Taber strangely explains luna 6223 Not, 2 | MSS. sub nubes. The Novae Tabernae were in the forum, and are 6224 Not, 2 | Pro Flacc. 18 opifices et tabernarios quid neqoti est concitare? 6225 Not, 2 | Veteribus, points to a "tabula" which hangs sub Novis. 6226 II, XLIV | Lycurgi, Solonis, duodecim tabulas nostras non esse leges? 6227 Int, IV | know he is~δεινος ανηρ, ταχα κεν και αναιτιον αιτιοωιτο.~ 6228 II, XXXII | visa.' Quid sequitur? ut taceam, conclusio ipsa loquitur: ' 6229 II, XXIX | insistis. Si id tantum modo, ut taceas, nihil adsequeris. Quid 6230 II, XXIX | qui te captare volt, utrum tacentem irretiat te an loquentem? 6231 II, XXXII | posse sensibus. Ita nobis tacentibus ex uno Epicuri capite, altero 6232 II, XIX | memoriter, accurate, copiose, taceo neque te quo minus, si tibi 6233 Not, 1 | Hauniae, 1825, p. 108) tacitly reads continentur without 6234 II, II | vero clarorum virorum aut tacitos congressus esse oporteat 6235 Not, 2 | Libertas = παρρησια as often in Tacitus. Abditis rebus et obscuris: 6236 Not, 2 | Permotiones intimas: cf. 20 tactus interior, also 76. Epicuri: 6237 II, XXVIII | circumstant~cum ardentibus taedis.'~Num dubitas quin sibi 6238 Int, I | philosophers of the time, both for talent and acquirement 23; as a 6239 Not, 2 | αισθησεσι μεν ουν μοναις λαβειν ταληθες (which resides only in the 6240 II, II | 5. Ac vereor interdum ne talium personarum cum amplificare 6241 Not, 1 | texts; αμαθια is very seldom talked of there. Opinio: δοξα, 6242 Not, 2 | I. 42. Sextus constantly talks about ‛η ονειροπολουμενη 6243 II, XXV | amplius non desideramus. Quid? talpam num desiderare lumen putas? 6244 II, VIII | quaedam lux lumenque vitae, tamenne in ista pravitate perstabitis? 6245 II, XXXVIII | Negatis haec tam polite tamque subtiliter effici potuisse 6246 II, XXXV | exsultare possit oratio, cur eam tantas in angustias et in Stoicorum 6247 II, V | nominibus tot virorum atque tantorum expositis eorum se institutum 6248 II, XXXVIII | undique aptum, ut nulla vis tantos queat motus mutationemque 6249 II, XVII | aliqua forte gravitas aut tarditas aut obscuriora sunt quae 6250 II, I | inimicorum calumnia triennio tardius quam debuerat triumphavit. 6251 I, VIII | Sensus autem omnis hebetes et tardos esse arbitrabantur, nec 6252 Not, 2 | Antipater: the Stoic of Tarsus, who succeeded Diogenes 6253 Not, 2 | μεν τοον θερμον ταττει, θατερον δε κατα το μη ον. Heraclitus: 6254 Not, 2 | μεν κατα μεν τοον θερμον ταττει, θατερον δε κατα το μη ον. 6255 Not, 2 | with which Cic. was often taunted. See Ad Fam. V. 5, 2, Ad 6256 Not, 1 | of Cicero's fondness for tautology, cf. D.F. I. 22 quaerendi 6257 Not, 2 | Ευρυσθεος, την ακολουθον πραξιν ταυτηι τη φαντασιαι συνηψεν. ακολουθον 6258 Not, 2 | drunkards see double he says ταυτο τουτο γιγνεται και εαν τις 6259 Int, II | display, ought to lead men to teach one another with all gentleness 6260 Not, 2 | being "to appeal to with tears," see Corss. I. 361. Philonis: 6261 Not, 2 | who adds a third class of τεχναι called αποτελεσματικαι to 6262 Not, 2 | the finest fire, and πυρ τεχνικον is one of the definitions 6263 Not, 2 | be thinking of the word τεκμηριον, which, however, the Stoics 6264 II, XXIX | illa ars, quasi Penelope telam retexens, tollit ad extremum 6265 Not, 1 | development from the βιος τελειος of Aristotle. The τριας 6266 Not, 1 | et Plat. c. 5, ‛η αρετη τελειοτης εστι της ‛εκαστου φυσεος. 6267 Not, 2 | in the Psalms, God only "telleth the number of the stars;" 6268 Not, 2 | explanation of the καταληψις, temeritas being as much deprecated 6269 Int, II | prudent course74. Cicero's temperament also, apart from his experience 6270 II, I | prudentia fuit in constituendis temperandisque civitatibus, tanta aequitas, 6271 II, XXVI | Lysippus eodem aere, eadem temperatione, eodem caelo atque ceteris 6272 II, III | quamcumque sunt disciplinam quasi tempestate delati, ad eam tamquam ad 6273 Not, 1 | Philosophice would be a tempting alteration, but that the 6274 Not, 2 | our whole argument must tend to show that perception 6275 Int, II | generally [xxv] treats it tenderly for the sake of its great 6276 Not, 2 | Cic. always has a kind of tenderness for Democritus, as Madv. 6277 I, XI | visum appellemus licet, et teneamus hoc verbum quidem: erit 6278 II, XXXI | sensibus probanda multa sunt, teneatur modo illud, non inesse in 6279 I, III | implicatum et constrictum tenebat, haec inclusa habebam et, 6280 Not, 2 | the joke of Aug. II. 29 tenebrae quae patronae Academicorum 6281 II, VII | asperum.' Animo iam haec tenemus comprehensa, non sensibus. ' 6282 II, XXXIX | natura sit, quae venarum? tenemusne quid sit animus, ubi sit? 6283 Not, 1 | VIII. 8. Tuendum: most MSS. tenendum, but tuendum corresponds 6284 II, XX | directius gubernant, quod eam tenent,~'Quae cursu interiore, 6285 II, III | Nam ceteri primum ante tenentur adstricti quam quid esset 6286 I, II | qui de nostris eius studio tenerentur, si essent Graecis doctrinis 6287 Not, 2 | Infracto remo: n. on 19. Tennyson seems to allude to this 6288 Not, 2 | compare the cry "to your tents, O Israel" in the Bible. 6289 II, XX | has latiore specie, non ad tenue elimatas. Eo fit ut errem 6290 II, XIV | dissimilitudinesque et earum tenuis et acuta distinctio fidentium 6291 II, XXII | illudne, quod multos annos tenuisset Zenonique magistro credidisset, 6292 Not, 2 | αποτελεσματικαι to the usual θεωρητικαι and πρακτικαι, also Quint. 6293 Not, 2 | than man (of Aristotle's η θεος η θηριον), if he can do 6294 Not, 2 | 1 risi nivem atram ... teque hilari animo esse et prompto 6295 Not, 2 | Aug. Contra Ac. III. 25 ter terna novem esse ... vel 6296 Not, 2 | brother was adopted by a M. Terentius Varro, and was a man of 6297 Not, 2 | of Aristotle's η θεος η θηριον), if he can do without other 6298 Not, 2 | on the legal words finis terminus possessio in De Leg. I. 6299 Not, 2 | Contra Ac. III. 25 ter terna novem esse ... vel genere 6300 II, XIX | Hoc, quaeso, cave ne te terreat. De causa autem ipsa malim 6301 II, XV | mentis aliquo vel obiecta terribili re extrinsecus, nihil ut 6302 I, VII | caelestia maxime, deinde in terris ea, quae pertinent ad homines: 6303 Not, 2 | with impersonal nouns like terror (T.D. IV. 35, V. 62), dolor ( 6304 Int, IV | be more brilliant, more terse, and altogether better than 6305 II, XLVI | 142. Venio enim iam ad tertiam partem philosophiae. Aliud 6306 Not, 2 | probabilia is a sort of tertiary predicate after efficere (" 6307 Not, 2 | which may be a mistake for Tertilius, a name formed like Pompilius, 6308 Not, 2 | Tetrinius, and the name Tertinius is found on Inscr. One good 6309 Not, 2 | VII. 373 μνημη is called θησαυρισμος φαντασιων. Similitudinibus: 6310 Not, 2 | Iudicium: κριτηριον, a test to distinguish between the 6311 II, XLV | voltis. Quid consilii datis? Testatur saepe Chrysippus tres solas 6312 II, XXV | verum esse, confidere suis testibus et importune insistere! 6313 Int, IV | Academica was published, testify to this approximation300. 6314 II, I | privabo illum potius debito testimonio quam id cum mea laude communicem.~ 6315 Not, 1 | not impervious to logical tests; see Sext. Adv. Math. VII. 6316 Not, 2 | περι τον δια παντος πολον τεταμενον. Quid tu, Epicure: the connection 6317 II, XLIV | Xenocrates, ubi Aristoteles ista tetigit? hos enim quasi eosdem esse 6318 Not, 2 | some MSS. are said to have Tetrinius, and the name Tertinius 6319 Not, 1 | recently by Riese (published by Teubner). Imitati non interpretati: 6320 Pre | the notes, questions of textual criticism, I may say that 6321 II, XLVIII | plagas ipsi contra se Stoici texuerunt. 148. Tum Lucullus: Non 6322 Pre | only to add that I shall be thankful for notices of errors and 6323 Int, IV | write Varro a letter of thanks for supposed exertions in 6324 Not, 1 | mere possession. So Plato, Theaetet. 197 B, uses the wordεξις, 6325 Pre | some difficulty or want of theirs. My plan has been, first, 6326 II, I | praestantior, quam fuisse in Themistocle, quem facile Graeciae principem 6327 II, I | adiunxerat etiam illam, quam Themistocles spreverat, disciplinam. 6328 Int, I | there for a few days56. From thence they went to Athens, where 6329 Not, 1 | Minervam: a Greek proverb, cf. Theocr. Id. V. 23, De Or. II. 233, 6330 Not, 2 | hands of Xenoph. mainly theological. Neque natum unquam: cf. 6331 I, III | imitentur, Aristotelem, Theophrastum? Oratores quidem laudari 6332 Int, I | memoirs after the fashion, of Theopompus40.~The years from 5957 6333 Not, 2 | contrast is drawn between a theoretical dogma and a practical belief. 6334 Not, 2 | and gets into difficulty thereby, but multa. This is shown 6335 Not, 1 | etc., which are scattered thickly over the Theaet. and the 6336 Int, I | the lectures of that clear thinker and writer, as Diogenes 6337 Int, II | a long series of English thinkers from Milton to Mill, to 6338 Not, 1 | a Philosopher (trans. by Thirlwall), and Zeller's Socrates 6339 Int, I | caused an almost unquenchable thirst for reading at this time. 6340 Int, IV | flitting now hither, now thither!" Atticus on his part "shuddered" 6341 Not, 2 | treated in books on logic, cf. Thomson's Laws of Thought, pp 201— 6342 Not, 2 | doctrine as a living one, not throwing it back to Antiochus time 6343 Not, 2 | 14, 3, where ut opinor is thrown in as here, and by Ac. II. 6344 Int, IV | to Varro. He frequently throws the whole responsibility 6345 Int, II | unimpaired even if he were thrust into the bull of Phalaris103. 6346 Not, 1 | technically used for dates, Thuc. V. 20, etc. Tu sacerdotum: 6347 Not, 2 | hadst thou but kept to thy word, Alban!" Here the condition " 6348 Not, 2 | pontifex, consul in the year Tib. Gracchus was killed, when 6349 II, VII | exercitati! qui primo inflatu tibicinis Antiopam esse aiunt aut 6350 Int, IV | linked to Cicero by other ties. During all the most brilliant 6351 II, XXXIX | Atque hoc etiam Platonem in Timaeo dicere quidam arbitrantur, 6352 II, VI | id ipsum se induit, quod timebat. Cum enim ita negaret, quicquam 6353 II, XLIV | num etiam illa, numquam timere, numquam dolere? Sapiensne 6354 Not, 1 | συμφοιτωντες παρα Πολεμωνι εφιλο τιμηθησαν. Dates are against the theory, 6355 II, XXXVIII | opere magno liberat et me timore. Quis enim potest, cum existimet 6356 Not, 2 | as opposed to λοιδορειν τινα implies mutual recrimination, 6357 Not, 2 | contemptuous; απονενοημενους τινας. Cf. Parad. 33 agrestis 6358 I, II | purpurascit: et quidem aquae tinctum quodam modo et infectum....~ 6359 Not, 1 | αναστηναι, εκπιπτειν ‛υπο τινος.~§29. Quam vim animum: there 6360 Not, 2 | hateful," but simply means "tiresome," "annoying." Non comprehensa: 6361 Int, I | Hortensiusthat he was a mere tiro in philosophy, by the assertion 6362 Not, 1 | Adv. Math. VIII. 397). Tironum causa I note that the Stoics 6363 Not, 2 | controversy between Corax and Tisias, for which see Cope in the 6364 Not, 2 | ανθρωπος εστι ζωον λογικον θνητον, νου και επιστημης δεκτικον. 6365 Int, I | before he had assumed the toga virilis. The pupil seems 6366 Int, IV | deep grief by incessant toil. First the book De Consolatione 6367 Not, 2 | τουτο γλυκυ εστιν." τωι δε τοιουτωι πραγματι ουκετι της αισθησεως 6368 Not, 2 | αμφισβητει, περι δε του ει τοιουτον εστιν ‛οποιον φαινεται ζητειται. 6369 Not, 2 | εις φαντασιαν αχθηναι του τοιουτου πραγματος "τουτο λευκον 6370 Int, IV | Varro can be gathered with tolerable accuracy from Augustine, 6371 Not, 2 | Academy? (113) I cannot tolerate your assumption that it 6372 Int, II | inclined him to charity and toleration, and repelled him from the 6373 II, XXXIII | tolli autem omnia, si visa tollantur.~ 6374 II, XXXI | nisi probet, omnis vita tollatur. 100. Quid enim? conscendens 6375 II, XVII | appareant? Sed, si satis est ad tollendam cognitionem similia esse 6376 II, XXXIV | esset, si nos verum omnino tolleremus. Non facimus. Nam tam vera 6377 I, X | animi illi ex homine non tollerent, naturaque et condolescere 6378 II, XIX | fecerat, ut etiam manus saepe tolleret, nec mirum: nam numquam 6379 II, VI | possit? hoc cum infirmat tollitque Philo, iudicium tollit incogniti 6380 Not, 2 | not γλυφειον, a graving tool. Faber and other old edd. 6381 Int, III | bring within its scope every topic which Greek philosophers 6382 Not, 2 | or συλλογιζεσθαι. Locum: τοπον in the philosophical sense. 6383 Not, 1 | Stob. Phys. περι κενου και τοπου και χωρας, ch. XVIII. 1. 6384 Not, 2 | διαστηματα (intervalla) και τους τοπους. Multaque facimus usque 6385 II, XXXIX | celeritate convertat et torqueat, eadem effici omnia, quae, 6386 Not, 2 | alive awhile in order to torture him. Hercules: cf. Eur. 6387 Not, 2 | feels it to be caused by a totally different thing, (2) it 6388 I, I | eo excellas et id studium totaque ea res longe ceteris et 6389 II, I | oppugnationibus, navalibus pugnis totiusque belli instrumento et apparatu, 6390 I, IX | et moribus, reliquisset totumque se ad investigationem naturae 6391 | totus 6392 Int, I | suddenly left Rome for a tour in Eastern Hellas. It is 6393 Not, 2 | Cimmerii, to show that the town or village of Cimmerium 6394 Not, 2 | τουτου σμικρωι τινι αυτωι τουτωι σοφωτερος ειναι, ‛οτι α 6395 Not, 2 | Plat. Apol. 21 εοικα γουν τουτου σμικρωι τινι αυτωι τουτωι 6396 Not, 1 | Madv. complains (p. 821) is traceable to Antiochus, who, as will 6397 Not, 1 | division itself cannot be traced farther back than Xenocrates 6398 Not, 2 | κεκλασμενη and περιστερας τραχηλος are frequently mentioned, 6399 I, VII | qualitate—faciamus enim tractando usitatius hoc verbum et 6400 I, IV | te veterem illam, inquit, tractari autem novam. Quid? ergo, 6401 II, II | philosophia laudata, profecto eius tractatio optimo atque amplissimo 6402 II, XXIII | Illi cum res non bonas tractent, similes bonorum videri 6403 II, XXVIII | primo progressu festive tradit elementa loquendi et ambiguorum 6404 I, VIII | illis disciplina a Platone tradita: cuius quas acceperim mutationes, 6405 II, XXX | primum concludendi modum traditis. Aut quidquid igitur eodem 6406 Not, 1 | Lucretius' lampada vitai tradunt, etc.? In profundo: Dem. 6407 Not, 2 | μαινομενος, see Ribbeck Trag. Lat. rel. p. 205. Cic. 6408 Not, 2 | video te: evidently from a tragedy whose subject was Αιας μαινομενος, 6409 I, III | Nonius p. 419. Vindicare, trahere, liberare ... Cicero Academicorum 6410 II, XXXVI | disputationibus huc et illuc trahuntur, nullam adhibent persuadendi 6411 Int, IV | his fish-ponds287. In his train when he went to Sicily was 6412 Pre | is depriving a Classical training of a great deal of its old 6413 Not, 2 | αμεταπτωτου. Artem vivendi: "tralaticium hoc apud omnes philosophos" 6414 Not, 2 | 258 παντα ποιει μεχρις αν τρανην και πληκτικην σπαση φαντασιαν. 6415 Not, 1 | the philosophic world is tranquil. Cf. Ad Att. I. 20, 6, D.F. 6416 II, XXXI | navigio, bono gubernatore, hac tranquillitate, probabile videatur se illuc 6417 Not, 2 | taken adverbially, like tranqullo. Indocilem: this is simply 6418 Int, IV(276)| XIII. 25, §3: Ad Brutum transeamus.~ 6419 II, XXXVII | per omnia ea permanet et transeat, fore tamen aliquando ut 6420 Not, 2 | appears to account for its transference to Varro I prefer to regard 6421 Not, 1 | D.F. III. 4. Transferenda: transferre = μεταφερειν, which is technically 6422 Not, 1 | cf. Cic. Tim. ch. VII., a transl. of Plat. Tim. 35 A. Prima 6423 Not, 2 | might appear that Cic. is translating either παθος or κινησις. 6424 Not, 1 | here a Stoic view of him transmitted through Antiochus. In II. 6425 Not, 2 | not as = "because." This transposition certainly gives increased 6426 II, XXII | illa sensisse? Cur non se transtulit ad alios et maxime ad Stoicos? 6427 II, XXXVIII | posse quicquam. Ecce tibi e transverso Lampsacenus Strato, qui 6428 Not, 2 | Flaminium: the general at lake Trasimene. Aliquot annis: one good 6429 Not, 2 | who made the disgraceful treaty with Numantia repudiated 6430 Int, IV | Caelius, Paetus, Plancus, and Trebatius. They all show a fear of 6431 II, XV | intersit omnino: ut si qui tremerent et exalbescerent vel ipsi 6432 II, XV | esset, qui distingueretur tremor ille et pallor, neque ut 6433 I, IIII | haesitatione et confusione trepidare, Cic. Academicorum lib. 6434 II, XXXIX | sit quidem ullus? Si est, tresne partis habeat, ut Platoni 6435 Not, 2 | Inscr. One good MS. has Tretilius, which may be a mistake 6436 II, XLIII | ille vereor ne virtuti plus tribuat quam natura patiatur, praesertim 6437 Not, 2 | use violence against the tribunes. The only connection these 6438 II, XLVII | et quidem, ut seditiosi tribuni solent, occludi tabernas 6439 Not, 2 | 20, who both mention this trick of style, and laud it for 6440 II, I | revertisset, inimicorum calumnia triennio tardius quam debuerat triumphavit. 6441 Not, 2 | silent or to talk about trifles? I, in applying myself to 6442 II, XXXI | proficiscatur Puteolos stadia triginta, probo navigio, bono gubernatore, 6443 I, V | gloriam, ut gratiam. Ita tripartita ab iis inducitur ratio bonorum.~ 6444 Not, 1 | notable that Xenocrates, tripping over the old αντιφασις of 6445 Not, 2 | so common in Ovid, e.g. Trist. IV. 4, 14. I take of course 6446 Not, 2 | by Ovid, Fasti III. 107, Tristia IV. 3, 1. Sed Helicen: the 6447 Not, 2 | that Cic. clipped these trite sophisms as he does verses 6448 I, VII | usitatius hoc verbum et tritiusmateriam quandam, ex qua 6449 II, I | triennio tardius quam debuerat triumphavit. Nos enim consules introduximus 6450 Not, 2 | Plato (Tim. 40 B) are γην δε τροφον μεν ‛ημετεραν, ειλλομενην 6451 Not, 2 | λογος (i.e. the 5th sceptic τροπος for showing sense to be 6452 Int, IV | many political and private troubles which were pressing upon 6453 Int, I | achievements in philosophy, without troubling themselves to inquire too 6454 Not, 2 | What I owed to him in those troublous times I cannot now tell ( 6455 Not, 2 | show that the senses were trustworthy, in the course of which 6456 | Tuae 6457 Not, 2 | Panaetius: he had addressed to Tubero a work de dolore; see D.F. 6458 II, XLIV | magnus, verum aureolus et, ut Tuberoni Panaetius praecipit, ad 6459 II, XLV | nullum habeamus, corpus solum tuetur, Zeno, quasi corporis simus 6460 Not, 2 | Platonicus Antiochus (that tulchan Platonist). Gloriae causa: 6461 II, V | popularis de provocationibus tulerint, cum consules essent; tum 6462 II, V | Punicum bellum tribunus plebis tulerit invito senatu et postea 6463 Not, 2 | refers to Wopkens Lect. Tull. p. 55 ed. Hand. Incedunt 6464 I | M. TULLII CICERONIS~ACADEMICORUM POSTERIORUM~ 6465 I, Inc | Dei VI. 2. Denique et ipse Tullius huic (i.e. M.T. Varroni) 6466 Not, 2 | takes), Dav. verum. Inflatus tumore: cf. De Off. I. 91 inflati 6467 II, IV | erant adlati Alexandriam tumque primum in Antiochi manus 6468 Not, 2 | mania of the copyists for turning indicatives into subjunctives, 6469 II, XVIII | aut cur celatis, quasi turpe aliquid, sententiam vestram? 6470 II, XLIV | honestatem multa bona, praeter turpitudinem multa mala videntur, quae 6471 Int, IV | merely an imitation of the Tusculanae Quaestiones, which was supported 6472 II, XLVIII | congredientes nos, et maxime in Tusculanis nostris, si quae videbuntur, 6473 II, XIV | firma et certa esse quae tutentur, non eorum qui clament nihilo 6474 Int, IV | of Lucullus289. Cato was tutor to Lucullus' son, with Cicero 6475 Int, I | see that before Cicero was twenty years of age, he had been 6476 Not, 2 | Stellarum numerus: this typical uncertainty is constantly 6477 Not, 1 | III. 23, just as he uses tyrannus (De Rep. III. 45), and anapaestus ( 6478 Int, I | philosophical propositions about tyranny63. Nothing could more clearly 6479 Int, I | Plato's description of the tyrant is present to [xiii] his 6480 Int, I | the misrule of the thirty tyrants61. It is curious to find 6481 Not, 1 | had long ceased. Krische Uber Cicero's Akademika p. 51, 6482 II, XXXVII | Democritus huic in hoc similis, uberior in ceteris: Empedocles haec 6483 II, XLII | sed, opinor, explicata uberius et ornatius. 130. Hos si 6484 Not, 1 | Quintilian's "illa Livii lactea ubertas." Plenum ac refertam: n. 6485 | ubicumque 6486 | ubique 6487 Int, IV(149)| Über Cicero's Akademika, p. 4.~ 6488 II, XXVIII | Video, video te. Vive, Ulixes, dum licet,'~nonne etiam 6489 II, XXIII | et Platonem. Cur? an de ullis certius possum dicere? Vixisse 6490 Not, 2 | MSS., but the best have ullos, whence Klotz conj. multos, 6491 II, XXXIX | visum est, ne sit quidem ullus? Si est, tresne partis habeat, 6492 Not, 2 | Pliny (see Forc.) often uses umbra and lumen, to denote background 6493 Not, 1 | hicque, sicque, would be un-Ciceronian. Voluptatibus: a side blow 6494 Int, II | the latter treated it as un-Socratic, looking upon Socrates as 6495 | unam 6496 Not, 2 | sensation was an ultimate unanalysable unit, a ψιλον παθος. For 6497 I, IX | post eos Polemo et Crates unaque Crantor, in Academia congregati, 6498 Int, II | enriched by virtue, but unattended by other advantages, might 6499 Not, 1 | eulogise himself quite so unblushingly, Goer. feebly replies that 6500 Int, IV | philosophical discussions. It is not uncharacteristic of Cicero that his first 6501 I, IIII | 120.~28. Nonius p. 189. Uncinatum ab unco. Cic. Academicorum 6502 Not, 2 | Metellus Numidicus, who was the uncle of Lucullus by marriage. 6503 I, IIII | Nonius p. 189. Uncinatum ab unco. Cic. Academicorum lib. 6504 Not, 1 | division, either consciously or unconsciously, though it was generally 6505 Int, III | xxviii] by Cicero for their uncouth style of writing116. He 6506 I, II | nonne caeruleum? at eius unda, cum est pulsa remis, purpurascit: 6507 Int, IV | second edition was still undecided199. From this fact we may 6508 Int, IV | speculation in Italy236. The undefiled purity of his Latin style 6509 Int, III | substance of the doctrines had undergone a momentous change, which 6510 Pre | shape will be of use to undergraduate students of the Universities, 6511 Not, 1 | Aristotle added a fifth (26). Underlying all formed entities is the 6512 Int, III | addition to his desire to undermine Epicureanism in Italy, Cicero 6513 Int, I | health, which was being undermined by his passionate style 6514 Not, 2 | proficis, but Madv. rightly understands τοησυχαζειν (Em. 184), 6515 Int, IV | has made in his literary undertakings141. During the whole of 6516 Int, III | centuries are therefore undeserving of our study, for the spirit, 6517 Not, 2 | former meant by them "the undestructibly true and false." This being 6518 Int, II | Aristotelian views passed undetected, owing to the strange oblivion 6519 Not, 1 | Paria momenta: this is undiluted scepticism, and excludes 6520 Not, 1 | whole of this section is undilutedly Stoic, one can only marvel 6521 Not, 2 | are those "probable and undisturbed" sensations they profess 6522 Not, 2 | The art you admire really undoes itself, as Penelope did 6523 Int, IV | at Rome, Cicero was still uneasy as to the reception it would 6524 Not, 1 | is often repeated by the unemphatic is, cf. T.D. III. 71, and 6525 Not, 2 | construction is, I believe, unexampled so that I suspect hoc, or 6526 Not, 2 | glory in the forum (1). He unexpectedly proved a great general. 6527 Int, I | but there is one piece of unfairness which I shall have no better 6528 Not, 1 | quasi marks rerum nota as an unfamiliar trans. of συμβολον. Davies 6529 Not, 1 | joined below) simply mark the unfamiliarity of the Latin word in its 6530 Int, IV | but it was still in an unfinished state when Cicero began 6531 Not, 2 | of Catulus' speech which unfolded the doctrine of the probabile 6532 Not, 1 | contrasted with materia, unformed matter. Qualitas is here 6533 Int, IV | that Rome had never been so unfortunate as to have two bad consuls 6534 Not, 2 | necessarily good fortune is quite unfounded; see Tischer on T.D. III. 6535 Not, 2 | I. 5, 33 homo factus ad unguem, Cic. De Or. III. 184, In 6536 I, II | quibus etiam alabaster plenus unguenti puter esse videtur.~ 6537 Not, 1 | the healthy reason, the unhealthy may refuse assent.~§41. 6538 II, XIX | potest. Provide etiam ne uni tibi istam sententiam minime 6539 Int, III | ultimately exercised no unimportant influence on society and 6540 Int, II | their system was grossly unintellectual, and they discarded mathematics. 6541 Not, 2 | an ultimate unanalysable unit, a ψιλον παθος. For this 6542 Not, 1 | humanitarianism of the Stoics readily united with the φυσει ανθρωπος 6543 Not, 2 | and you cannot be sure of uniting each appearance to the thing 6544 Not, 1 | universe much more of a unity than any other school, the 6545 Not, 2 | huius modi orationis ubi universae sententiae exempla subiciuntur 6546 Not, 2 | admissions, they say, are universally made, (1) false sensations 6547 II, XXVII | clariora sunt, veniam, res iam universas profundam, de quibus volumina 6548 I, V | partem quandam civitatis et universi generis humani, eumque esse 6549 II, XXIII | ordiri: 'Haec loquor de universis.' Nihil excipit de quo non 6550 Pre | is so prevalent in this University, and causes more than anything 6551 Not, 2 | to singular (perceptio in universum) cf. n. on I. 38, Madv.


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