Chapter

 1       X|         account of his exceeding virtue, and judged him worthy to
 2   XXXII|      name it the Holy Ghost, but virtue. For so in the dialogue
 3   XXXII|         many questions regarding virtue, whether it could be taught
 4   XXXII|   inquiry and discussion aright, virtue must be neither a natural
 5   XXXII|     transferred to what he calls virtue. For as the sacred prophets
 6   XXXII|       naming it one and the same virtue, says this is divided into
 7   XXXII| reasoning, Meno, it appears that virtue comes to those to whom it
 8   XXXII|        this, in what kind of way virtue comes to men, when, as a
 9   XXXII|        independent inquiry, what virtue itself is." You see how
10   XXXII|        calls only by the name of virtue, the gift that descends
11   XXXII|       that this [gift] be called virtue or some other thing, fearing
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