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1501 Not, 2 | an epitome of this work of Fannius (Ad Att. XII. 5, 1502 Not, 2 | Veteribus: Bentley's em. of MSS. vetera: C.F. Hermann ( 1503 Not, 2 | let us suppose, for sake of argument, that the doctrines 1504 Not, 2 | argument, that the doctrines of the ancients were not knowledge, 1505 Not, 2 | mere opinion." The conj. of Kayser veri nota for vetera ( 1506 Not, 2 | sentence cannot be the subj. of the verb, he rashly ejects 1507 Not, 2 | and Arist. on the progress of philosophy as there quoted. 1508 Not, 2 | Colotem p. 1121 F, want of novelty is charged against 1509 Not, 2 | by Plut. The scepticism of Arcesilas was often excused 1510 Not, 2 | notes on fragm. 2 and 35 of the Academica Posteriora. 1511 Not, 2 | obfundere), also the joke of Aug. II. 29 tenebrae quae 1512 Not, 2 | probata: cf. the passage of Polybius qu. by Zeller 533. 1513 Not, 2 | Lacydes became the source of information about his teacher' 1514 Not, 2 | doctrines. Tenuit: cf. the use of obtinere in De Or. I. 45. 1515 Not, 2 | was wanting in the time of Arcesilas (16). Faciendum 1516 Not, 2 | Antipatrum: cf. fragm. 1 of Book I. Verbum e verbo: 1517 Not, 2 | Graeci: for the ellipse of the verb cf. I. 44 ut Democritus. 1518 Not, 2 | advocate for the Latinisation of Greek terms (D.F. III. 15). 1519 Not, 2 | Pertinaciam: the exact meaning of this may be seen from D.F. 1520 Not, 2 | refuses to see the force of an opponent's reasoning. 1521 Not, 2 | reasoning. For the application of the term to the Academics, 1522 Not, 2 | N.D. I. 13, in the last of which passages the Academy 1523 Not, 2 | below,—a common sequence of particles in Cic., cf. 19. 1524 Not, 2 | Ακαταληπτον: the conj. of Turnebus καταληπτον is unnecessary, 1525 Not, 2 | unnecessary, on account of the negative contained in 1526 Not, 2 | Visum igitur: the Greek of this definition will be 1527 Not, 2 | alteration (‛ετεροιωσις) of the material substance of 1528 Not, 2 | of the material substance of the soul through the action 1529 Not, 2 | soul through the action of some external thing, which 1530 Not, 2 | given by Sextus in four out of the six passages referred 1531 Not, 2 | gives a clipt form like that of Sextus in the two passages 1532 Not, 2 | Petrus Valentia did, p. 290 of Orelli's reprint of his 1533 Not, 2 | 290 of Orelli's reprint of his Academica) that Cic. 1534 Not, 2 | he based the possibility of knowledge on a ground quite 1535 Not, 2 | that he distorted the views of Carneades to suit his own. 1536 Not, 2 | substituted no other mode of curing the defects alleged 1537 Not, 2 | fairly open to the retort of Antiochus given in the text. 1538 Not, 2 | towards dogmatism. A glimpse of his position is afforded 1539 Not, 2 | position is afforded in 112 of this book, where we may 1540 Not, 2 | be expressing the views of Philo, and not those of 1541 Not, 2 | of Philo, and not those of Clitomachus as he usually 1542 Not, 2 | to the δηλον or πιθανον of Carneades, hence he eagerly 1543 Not, 2 | pressed the doubtful statement of the latter that the wise 1544 Not, 2 | judgments on phenomena. (See 78 of this book.) The scarcity 1545 Not, 2 | this book.) The scarcity of references to Philo in ancient 1546 Not, 2 | authorities does not allow of a more exact view of his 1547 Not, 2 | allow of a more exact view of his doctrine. Modern inquiry 1548 Not, 2 | entitled Academica (pp. 313—316 of the reprint by Orelli). 1549 Not, 2 | denied the popular view of Arcesilas and Carneades, 1550 Not, 2 | that they were apostles of doubt, to be correct (12). 1551 Not, 2 | add that from the mention of Philo's ethical works at 1552 Not, 2 | ethical works at the outset of Stobaeus' Ethica, he would 1553 Not, 2 | made himself the defender of the new Philonian dialectic. 1554 Not, 2 | dialectic. By him the dialectic of Carneades is treated as 1555 Not, 2 | De Div. II. 13, also 148 of this book. Eam definitionem: 1556 Not, 2 | waged over the definition of the single sensation. Knowledge, 1557 Not, 2 | was a homogeneous compound of these sense atoms, if I 1558 Not, 2 | possibility depends on the truth of the individual perception 1559 Not, 2 | the individual perception of sense.~§§19—29. Summary. 1560 Not, 2 | that I maintain the truth of every sensation, Epicurus 1561 Not, 2 | which impede the action of the senses must always be 1562 Not, 2 | power the cultivated senses of painters and musicians have! 1563 Not, 2 | have! How keen is the sense of touch! (20). After the perceptions 1564 Not, 2 | After the perceptions of sense come the equally clear 1565 Not, 2 | equally clear perceptions of the mind, which are in a 1566 Not, 2 | certain way perceptions of sense, since they come through 1567 Not, 2 | logic memory, and all kinds of arts are at once rendered 1568 Not, 2 | impossible (25). The doctrines of the New Academy would put 1569 Not, 2 | an end to all processes of reasoning. The fleeting 1570 Not, 2 | be a certain perception of their minds. This, Carneades 1571 Not, 2 | means two things, (1) one of the five senses, (2) an 1572 Not, 2 | senses, (2) an individual act of sensation. Deus: for the 1573 Not, 2 | numerous other instances of the deceptiveness of sense, 1574 Not, 2 | instances of the deceptiveness of sense, by Sext. Emp., e.g. 1575 Not, 2 | 414. Cicero, in his speech of the day before, had probably 1576 Not, 2 | Sui cuiusque: for this use of suus quisque as a single 1577 Not, 2 | and αναβολη. Antiopam: of Pacuvius. Andromacham: of 1578 Not, 2 | of Pacuvius. Andromacham: of Ennius, often quoted by 1579 Not, 2 | without necessity, as a study of the passages referred to 1580 Not, 2 | inter: for the repetition of inter cf. T.D. IV. 32 and 1581 Not, 2 | interesse: if the doctrine of the Academics were true, 1582 Not, 2 | are αξιωματα, judgments of the mind, in which alone 1583 Not, 2 | deinceps is really out of place; cf. 24 quomodo primum 1584 Not, 2 | which affirms the existence of an abstract quality, is 1585 Not, 2 | which affirms the existence of a concrete individual. I 1586 Not, 2 | uses as a translation both of προληψις and εννοια, for 1587 Not, 2 | especially rare at the end of a clause. Memoria falsorum: 1588 Not, 2 | perceptionibus: the same definition of an art occurs in N.D. II. 1589 Not, 2 | comments on similar complaints of the Stoics. Aliud eiusmodi 1590 Not, 2 | Plato and Arist., and is of constant occurrence in the 1591 Not, 2 | 197 who adds a third class of τεχναι called αποτελεσματικαι 1592 Not, 2 | corresponds to the αποτ. of Sext. Continget: "will be 1593 Not, 2 | Germ. lehre, the branch of learning which concerns 1594 Not, 2 | taking it to be a trans. of καταληψις here. In quibus: 1595 Not, 2 | III. 250) the existence of which he disproves to his 1596 Not, 2 | Epicurean, the happiness of the sapiens must be proof 1597 Not, 2 | the similar description of the σοφος in Plato's Gorgias. 1598 Not, 2 | 12 who says the sapiens of the Academy must be desertor 1599 Not, 2 | possibility as present to the mind of the supposed vir bonus. 1600 Not, 2 | Gram. 368.~§24. Primum: out of place, see on 21. Agere: 1601 Not, 2 | this use cf. 39, 81 and 122 of this book. Videri at the 1602 Not, 2 | book. Videri at the end of this section has the weak 1603 Not, 2 | expression dux vitae is of course frequent (cf. N.D. 1604 Not, 2 | the luminary and the lamp of life," and cf. Sext. Adv. 1605 Not, 2 | Finis: so in the beginning of the Nicom. Eth. Aristot. 1606 Not, 2 | that the actual existence of human exertion is a sufficient 1607 Not, 2 | Aperta: a reminiscence of the frequently recurring 1608 Not, 2 | 27. Notio: another trans. of εννοια. Conclusisse: although 1609 Not, 2 | used συμπερασμα instead of επιφορα sometimes for the 1610 Not, 2 | sometimes for the conclusion of the syllogism, they did 1611 Not, 2 | more likely to be a trans. of συναγειν, and conclusum 1612 Not, 2 | and conclusum argumentum of συνακτικος λογος, which 1613 Not, 2 | συνακτικος λογος, which terms are of frequent occurrence. Rationibus 1614 Not, 2 | D.F. II. 79, and cf. 96 of this book. Lex veri rectique: 1615 Not, 2 | veri and the determination of what is rectum in morals 1616 Not, 2 | morals are the two main tasks of philosophy. Sapientique 1617 Not, 2 | for the sapientisque sit of the MSS. Halm after Dav. 1618 Not, 2 | gives the exact opposite of the sense required. Ratum: 1619 Not, 2 | must be provable. Cf. 109 of this book. Postulanti: making 1620 Not, 2 | mocked in 109. Decretum: of course the Academics would 1621 Not, 2 | elsewhere) accuses them of making it in reality what 1622 Not, 2 | depended on the probabile of course, with the Academics. 1623 Not, 2 | Halm after Ernesti for sit of the MSS. I think it very 1624 Not, 2 | expression is an imitation of the Greek ‛ικανος ειοησθω 1625 Not, 2 | formed for the attainment of knowledge (30). For this 1626 Not, 2 | which is the perfection of the reason. Those then who 1627 Not, 2 | senses, throw the whole of life into confusion (31). 1628 Not, 2 | between the absolute absence of certainty, and the denial 1629 Not, 2 | certainty, and the denial of its absolute presence. Let 1630 Not, 2 | after careful pondering of the circumstances, we reply 1631 Not, 2 | in Cicero. Primum is out of position, as in 24. Appetitio 1632 Not, 2 | ηρξε Στρατον. All powers of sensation with the Stoics, 1633 Not, 2 | says he can produce 50 exx. of the usage, he forbears however, 1634 Not, 2 | are the conscious product of the reason, in the Stoic 1635 Not, 2 | this and other inaccuracies of Cic. in treating of the 1636 Not, 2 | inaccuracies of Cic. in treating of the same subject, also Zeller 1637 Not, 2 | terms in the expositions of Antiocheanism found in Cic. 1638 Not, 2 | exposition treated as the result of the exercise of the reason. 1639 Not, 2 | the result of the exercise of the reason. Evertunt: cf. 1640 Not, 2 | sceptics, is here put by way of retort. So in Sext. Adv. 1641 Not, 2 | autem: note the ellipse of the verb, and cf. I. 2. 1642 Not, 2 | from Carneades), also 54 of this book. Docere: "to prove," 1643 Not, 2 | distinguunt: the followers of Carneades rather than those 1644 Not, 2 | Carneades rather than those of Arcesilas; cf. n. on I. 1645 Not, 2 | only "telleth the number of the stars;" cf. 110. Aliquos: 1646 Not, 2 | probably refers to the speech of Catulus; see Introd. p. 1647 Not, 2 | do away with the notion of true and false altogether." 1648 Not, 2 | really turns on the use of terms. If it is fair to 1649 Not, 2 | allow the absolute certainty of this distinction than of 1650 Not, 2 | of this distinction than of the other. Communis: the 1651 Not, 2 | Communis: the απαραλλακτος of Sextus; "in whose vision 1652 Not, 2 | 175. Notam: the σημειον of Sextus; cf. esp. P.H. II. 1653 Not, 2 | Visionem: Simply another trans. of φαντασια. Ut Carneades: 1654 Not, 2 | and P. 411). As the trans. of the latter phrase in Zeller 1655 Not, 2 | is the immediate object of his attention. This last 1656 Not, 2 | is a misleading trans. of the term. The διεξωδευμενη (" 1657 Not, 2 | mere apparent agreement of the concomitant sensations 1658 Not, 2 | continue; the condition of the space within which they 1659 Not, 2 | and the objects; the state of the air; the disposition 1660 Not, 2 | the air; the disposition of the person's mind, and the 1661 Not, 2 | soundness or unsoundness of his eyes (Sext. 181—189).~§ 1662 Not, 2 | for nota, merely from love of variety. The in before communi, 1663 Not, 2 | means "within the limits of," and is so used after notare 1664 Not, 2 | defines the Ciceronian use of the word, "Non unum maledictum 1665 Not, 2 | retains the barbarous ac of the MSS. before the guttural. 1666 Not, 2 | two verbs are both trans. of καταλαμβανεσθαι; Cic. proceeds 1667 Not, 2 | Cic.'s constant trans. of ακριβως or κατ' ακριβειαν ( 1668 Not, 2 | constantly used as the opposite of αναιρειν (tollere).~§35. 1669 Not, 2 | statements without any mark of certainty. Primo quasi adspectu: 1670 Not, 2 | i.e. if you have a number of things, emitting a number 1671 Not, 2 | things, emitting a number of appearances, and you cannot 1672 Not, 2 | and you cannot be sure of uniting each appearance 1673 Not, 2 | Cic. seems to be thinking of the word τεκμηριον, which, 1674 Not, 2 | Summary The distinction of an animal is to act. You 1675 Not, 2 | either therefore deprive it of sensation, or allow it to 1676 Not, 2 | nostra: Walker's insertion of non before est is needless, 1677 Not, 2 | I. 40. It is the impact of the sensation from without, 1678 Not, 2 | are supposed to rob people of their senses. Cedere: cf. 1679 Not, 2 | αι φαντασια]; also 66 of this book. Οικειον: cf. 1680 Not, 2 | throw light on fragm. 15 of the Ac. Post., which see.~§ 1681 Not, 2 | action depend on the freedom of the will; see n. on I. 40. 1682 Not, 2 | 25, for the passive use of videri, n. on 25. Adsentiatur: 1683 Not, 2 | Madv. Em. 131, the change of construction from infin. 1684 Not, 2 | give a general definition of sensation, and then lay 1685 Not, 2 | down the different classes of sensations. Then they put 1686 Not, 2 | cannot be partly capable of being perceived, partly 1687 Not, 2 | sensations must be assumed to be of the same form if our faculties 1688 Not, 2 | false, the false cannot of course be real perceptions, 1689 Not, 2 | while the true are always of a form which the false may 1690 Not, 2 | fundamenta: a trans. probably of θεμελιος or the like; cf. ‛ 1691 Not, 2 | genera the different classes of φαντασιαι. Totidem verbis: 1692 Not, 2 | φαντασιαι. Totidem verbis: of course with a view to showing 1693 Not, 2 | that the person who has one of the sensations cannot tell 1694 Not, 2 | sensations cannot tell from which of the two things it comes. 1695 Not, 2 | the absolute similarity of the two sensations which 1696 Not, 2 | unreality) could be affirmed of things, though not of sensations. 1697 Not, 2 | affirmed of things, though not of sensations. If we could 1698 Not, 2 | done, the actual existence of things which cause sensations, 1699 Not, 2 | granting the existence of the things, our sensations 1700 Not, 2 | 41. Neque enim: a remark of Lucullus' merely. Quod sit 1701 Not, 2 | auro. Possit: for the om. of esse cf. n. on I. 29.~§42. 1702 Not, 2 | explanari volebant; the em. of Dav. obscurare is against 1703 Not, 2 | against Cic.'s usage, that of Christ quam observari nolunt 1704 Not, 2 | definition cannot be a definition of two things, (2) if the definition 1705 Not, 2 | that thing must be capable of being thoroughly known and 1706 Not, 2 | others (43). For the purposes of reasoning their probabile 1707 Not, 2 | farther. The innate clearness of visa, aided by reason, can 1708 Not, 2 | constantly in the mouths of sceptics, see e.g. Sext. 1709 Not, 2 | point out that the ‛ορος of the Academics was merely 1710 Not, 2 | mocking repetition like that of veri et falsi in 33. In 1711 Not, 2 | Occurretur: not an imitation of εναντιουσθαι as Goer. says, 1712 Not, 2 | εναντιουσθαι as Goer. says, but of απανταν, which occurs very 1713 Not, 2 | faculties were incapable of distinguishing those visa 1714 Not, 2 | a correct representation of the things, from those which 1715 Not, 2 | iungitur: a supposed case of διαρτησις, which is opposed 1716 Not, 2 | participial sense, "in the class of things passed over," cf. 1717 Not, 2 | 150. For Epicurus' view of sensation see n. on 79, 1718 Not, 2 | 48. Summary. The refusal of people to assent to the 1719 Not, 2 | to the innate clearness of some phenomena (εναργεια) 1720 Not, 2 | Confuse loqui: the mark of a bad dialectician, affirmed 1721 Not, 2 | bad dialectician, affirmed of Epicurus in D.F. II. 27. 1722 Not, 2 | Nulla sunt: on the use of nullus for non in Cic. cf. 1723 Not, 2 | given by Stoics to all forms of divination see Zeller 166, 1724 Not, 2 | and with the general plan of the Academics expounded 1725 Not, 2 | from the true (this meaning of inter quae nihil sit omnino 1726 Not, 2 | have only a slight degree of resemblance to the true, 1727 Not, 2 | word probabilia is a sort of tertiary predicate after 1728 Not, 2 | this section placed out of harmony with 50. Plane proxime: = 1729 Not, 2 | proxime: = quam proxime of 36.~§48. Ipsa per sese: 1730 Not, 2 | i.e. without the approach of any external object. Cogitatione: 1731 Not, 2 | ut here is a repetition of the ut used several times 1732 Not, 2 | times in the early part of the sentence, all of them 1733 Not, 2 | part of the sentence, all of them alike depend on sic. 1734 Not, 2 | παθων, and the two classes of falsa visa mentioned in 1735 Not, 2 | faulty (49). The admission of a certain amount of similarity 1736 Not, 2 | admission of a certain amount of similarity between true 1737 Not, 2 | lead to the impossibility of distinguishing between the 1738 Not, 2 | the dream, we make light of the sensations we had while 1739 Not, 2 | quotes him in the discussion of this and similar subjects. 1740 Not, 2 | sorites was always in the form of a series of questions, cf. 1741 Not, 2 | in the form of a series of questions, cf. De Div. II. 1742 Not, 2 | II. 112, and an instance of proximus quisque in De Off. 1743 Not, 2 | Div. II. 86. For the line of argument here cf. De Div. 1744 Not, 2 | but merely that when one of them is present, it cannot 1745 Not, 2 | and you get the real view of the Academic, who would 1746 Not, 2 | etc.: this famous dream of Ennius, recorded in his 1747 Not, 2 | the usage. In three out of the five passages where 1748 Not, 2 | Primum interest: for om. of deinde cf. 45, 46. Imbecillius: 1749 Not, 2 | Alcmaeonis: the Alcmaeon of Ennius is often quoted by 1750 Not, 2 | Aliquando sustinere: the point of the Academic remark lay 1751 Not, 2 | the fact that in the state of madness the εποχη of the 1752 Not, 2 | state of madness the εποχη of the sapiens becomes habitual; 1753 Not, 2 | by Madv. on D.F. II. 35 of the subj. used to denote " 1754 Not, 2 | have died," or something of the kind. Such a condition 1755 Not, 2 | 78 and Mayor's n. The use of the Greek optative to express 1756 Not, 2 | without ει) is susceptible of the same explanation. The 1757 Not, 2 | subj. has many such points of similarity with the Gk. 1758 Not, 2 | optative, having absorbed most of the functions of the lost 1759 Not, 2 | absorbed most of the functions of the lost Lat. optative. [ 1760 Not, 2 | he prefers the hypothesis of a suppressed protasis, but 1761 Not, 2 | friends, and Delian breeders of fowls could tell from the 1762 Not, 2 | tell from the appearance of an egg which hen had laid 1763 Not, 2 | but not between classes of sensations (58). Equally 1764 Not, 2 | to the unqualified εποχη of Arcesilas (59). What nonsense 1765 Not, 2 | about the bad influence of authority! (60). Can you, 1766 Not, 2 | Cicero, the panegyrist of philosophy, plunge us into 1767 Not, 2 | impossible you weaken the force of your famous oath that you " 1768 Not, 2 | amid the continued wonder of Hortensius (62, 63). Then 1769 Not, 2 | surprised if the speech of Lucullus were to induce 1770 Not, 2 | quite destroys the point of the sentence. Quod nolunt: 1771 Not, 2 | 84—86. The impossibility of distinguishing between twins, 1772 Not, 2 | twins, eggs, the impressions of seals, etc. was a favourite 1773 Not, 2 | second, especially at the end of a clause. Cur eo non estis 1774 Not, 2 | which concerned the amount of similarity. The dogmatists 1775 Not, 2 | cf. the nihil differens of 99, the substitution of 1776 Not, 2 | of 99, the substitution of which here would perhaps 1777 Not, 2 | The words are a trans. of the common Gk. term απαραλλακτος ( 1778 Not, 2 | returning to the reading of Lamb. nulla after the fine 1779 Not, 2 | nulla after the fine note of Madv. (Em. 154), approved 1780 Not, 2 | subjunctive. The change of ulla into nulla is in no 1781 Not, 2 | by the latter on p. 854 of Bait. and Halm's ed of the 1782 Not, 2 | 854 of Bait. and Halm's ed of the philosophical works, 1783 Not, 2 | repeated in the second vol. of his Adversaria. Lamb. reads 1784 Not, 2 | intentional misconception of the sceptic position; see 1785 Not, 2 | supplies Sext. with one of the sceptic τροποι, see 1786 Not, 2 | Irridentur: the contradictions of physical philosophers were 1787 Not, 2 | were the constant sport of the sceptics, cf. Sext. 1788 Not, 2 | undique. For this opinion of Democr. see R. and P. 45. 1789 Not, 2 | quite untenable reading of the MSS., for which no satisfactory 1790 Not, 2 | Potiusque: this adversative use of que is common with potius, 1791 Not, 2 | the ιδιοτητες or ιδιωματα of Sextus, the doctrine of 1792 Not, 2 | of Sextus, the doctrine of course involves the whole 1793 Not, 2 | denotatas. Artem: τεχνην, a set of rules. In proverbio: so 1794 Not, 2 | Gallinas: cf. fragm. 19 of the Acad. Post. The similarity 1795 Not, 2 | Acad. Post. The similarity of eggs was discussed ad nauseam 1796 Not, 2 | internoscere: this is the reading of all the MSS., and is correct, 1797 Not, 2 | Adsentiri: for the passive use of this verb cf. 39. Par est: 1798 Not, 2 | with one MS. Quasi: the em. of Madv. for the quam si of 1799 Not, 2 | of Madv. for the quam si of the MSS. Transversum digitum: 1800 Not, 2 | 110. Natura tolletur: this of course the sceptics would 1801 Not, 2 | refused to discuss the nature of things in themselves, and 1802 Not, 2 | are correct the assertion of Krebs and Allgayer (Antibarbarus, 1803 Not, 2 | as in the famous passage of Cic Ad Quintum Fratrem, 1804 Not, 2 | perabsurdum: note the omission of est, which often takes place 1805 Not, 2 | rebus be meant, it is wide of the mark. Id est ... retentio: 1806 Not, 2 | Contra Ac. III. 37, 38 speaks of various doctrines, which 1807 Not, 2 | in the reactionary period of Metrodorus (of Stratonice), 1808 Not, 2 | reactionary period of Metrodorus (of Stratonice), Philo, and 1809 Not, 2 | may perhaps from a passage of Augustine, C. Ac. III. 41 ( 1810 Not, 2 | attributed to the first of the three (cf. Zeller 534, 1811 Not, 2 | the constant form in Cic. of the pres., must be read. 1812 Not, 2 | that the town or village of Cimmerium lay close to Bauli, 1813 Not, 2 | probably induced this mention of the legendary people. Deus 1814 Not, 2 | Off. III. 33). In the case of personal nouns the best 1815 Not, 2 | 1), anularius aliqui (86 of this book), magistratus 1816 Not, 2 | throw light on fragm. 15 of the Acad. Post., which see.~§ 1817 Not, 2 | actio ullius rei (108 of this book), and the similar 1818 Not, 2 | book), and the similar use of actus in Quintilian (Inst. 1819 Not, 2 | Comperisse: this expression of Cic., used in the senate 1820 Not, 2 | Licebat: this is the reading of the best MSS., not liquebat, 1821 Not, 2 | respect to Catulus, in most of which Lucullus is also mentioned.~§ 1822 Not, 2 | refers simply to the fact of Lucullus' admiration, which 1823 Not, 2 | Iocansne an: this use of ne ... an implies, Madv. 1824 Not, 2 | more doubt than the use of ne alone as in vero falsone. 1825 Not, 2 | before Madv., seeing no way of taking modo exc. with non, 1826 Not, 2 | certainly has the suspected use of tantum non. Tribunus: a 1827 Not, 2 | thus begins. The strength of Lucullus argument has affected 1828 Not, 2 | Antiochus deny the first of these statements, on the 1829 Not, 2 | it be so the mere habit of assenting is full of peril. 1830 Not, 2 | habit of assenting is full of peril. Still, our whole 1831 Not, 2 | converted, what proof had he of the doctrine he had so long 1832 Not, 2 | longer bear the opposition of all other schools to the 1833 Not, 2 | Respondere posse: for the om. of me before the infin, which 1834 Not, 2 | Iurarem: Cic. was thinking of his own famous oath at the 1835 Not, 2 | own famous oath at the end of his consulship.~§66. Turpissimum: 1836 Not, 2 | etc.: these lines are part of Cic.'s Aratea, and are quoted 1837 Not, 2 | applied to the same course of action in D.F. III. 31. 1838 Not, 2 | Div. I. 7, and the charge of προπετεια constantly brought 1839 Not, 2 | Aliquando ... opinabitur: this of course is only true if you 1840 Not, 2 | back to the second premiss of Arcesilas' argument. But 1841 Not, 2 | difficulty vanishes. The argument of Carneades would then run 1842 Not, 2 | praecipiti: for the position of in cf. n. on I. 25. The 1843 Not, 2 | autem, etc.: cf. the passage of Lactantius De Falsa Sapientia 1844 Not, 2 | by P. Valentia (p. 278 of Orelli's reprint) si neque 1845 Not, 2 | nihil.~§69. Non acrius: one of the early editions omits 1846 Not, 2 | acutius and puts a note of interrogation at defensitaverat. 1847 Not, 2 | points out the absurdity of making Cic. say that the 1848 Not, 2 | say that the old arguments of Antiochus in favour of Academicism 1849 Not, 2 | arguments of Antiochus in favour of Academicism were weaker 1850 Not, 2 | introduced by a particle of any kind see Madv. Gram. 1851 Not, 2 | on the subject in hand, of course. Taken without this 1852 Not, 2 | II. 266 a story is told of Caesar, who, while speaking 1853 Not, 2 | sub Novis. The excellence of Faber's em. may be felt 1854 Not, 2 | be felt by comparing that of Manut. sub nube, and that 1855 Not, 2 | Manut. sub nube, and that of Lamb. nisi sub nube. I have 1856 Not, 2 | distinguished from the use of utrum ... ne ... an, which 1857 Not, 2 | etc.: for the conversion of Dionysius (called ‛ο μεταθεμενος) 1858 Not, 2 | often prefix h to parts of the pronoun is, and Goer. 1859 Not, 2 | Summary. You accuse me of appealing to ancient names 1860 Not, 2 | Metrodorus, philosophers of the highest position, protest 1861 Not, 2 | protest against the truth of sense knowledge, and deny 1862 Not, 2 | and deny the possibility of knowledge altogether (72, 1863 Not, 2 | themselves. The sincerity of Arcesilas may be seen thus ( 1864 Not, 2 | impossible. Knowledge consists of perceptions. Arcesilas therefore 1865 Not, 2 | therefore demanded a definition of perception. This definition 1866 Not, 2 | perception, and the εποχη of Arcesilas follows at once ( 1867 Not, 2 | philosophis: on account of the somewhat awkward constr. 1868 Not, 2 | nigram: this deliverance of Anaxagoras is very often 1869 Not, 2 | quotes it as an instance of the refutation of φαινομενα 1870 Not, 2 | instance of the refutation of φαινομενα by means of νοουμενα, " 1871 Not, 2 | refutation of φαινομενα by means of νοουμενα, "Αναξαγορας τωι 1872 Not, 2 | treated as the demagogue of philosophy. Ostentationis: = 1873 Not, 2 | always exaggerates the merits of Democr. in order to depreciate 1874 Not, 2 | here to the σκοτιη γνωσις of Democr., by which he meant 1875 Not, 2 | superficial appearances of things as shown by sense. 1876 Not, 2 | dealing with the realities of material existence, the 1877 Not, 2 | 61, and for the belief of Empedocles about the possibility 1878 Not, 2 | Empedocles about the possibility of επιστημη see the remarks 1879 Not, 2 | επιστημη see the remarks of Sextus A.M. VII. 123—4 qu. 1880 Not, 2 | Quamquam: on the proper use of quamquam in clauses where 1881 Not, 2 | Quasi irati: for the use of quasi = almost cf. In Verr. 1882 Not, 2 | Aiebas removendum: for om. of esse see n. on I. 43. Perscripti 1883 Not, 2 | upon Plato. The dialogues of search as they are called, 1884 Not, 2 | Halm nullum unquam in place of numquam. Bait. prints the 1885 Not, 2 | Bait. prints the reading of Man., which I think harsher 1886 Not, 2 | think harsher than that of the MSS. Minutos: for the 1887 Not, 2 | porticum: "to be the pillar of the Stoic porch". Cf. the 1888 Not, 2 | Nisi videret: for the tense of the verb, see Madv. Gram. 1889 Not, 2 | philosophi: my reading is that of Durand approved by Madv. 1890 Not, 2 | requires the alteration of Cyrenaei into Cyrenaici ( 1891 Not, 2 | that Cyrenaeus is a citizen of Cyreno, Cyrenaicus a follower 1892 Not, 2 | Cyreno, Cyrenaicus a follower of Aristippus) and the insertion 1893 Not, 2 | Aristippus) and the insertion of tibi. I see no difficulty 1894 Not, 2 | ancient authorities as a term of the Cyrenaic school; their 1895 Not, 2 | κινησις. For a clear account of the school see Zeller's 1896 Not, 2 | Socrates, for the illustration of the present passage pp 293— 1897 Not, 2 | implying the mechanic exercise of utterance, the former the 1898 Not, 2 | the moulding and shaping of the utterance by conscious 1899 Not, 2 | and Allgayer. The conj. of Dav. exposuerat is therefore 1900 Not, 2 | to be"—the two meanings of falsum indeed, see n. on 1901 Not, 2 | additum est, an ellipse of excessive rarity in Cic., 1902 Not, 2 | made." For the omission of esse in that case cf. Madv. 1903 Not, 2 | Cic.'s needless approval of Arcesilas' conduct would 1904 Not, 2 | note the subj., "which is of such a nature as to have 1905 Not, 2 | the argument in defence of εποχη given in 67; by nihil ... 1906 Not, 2 | connection. Cf. the use of pertinere in D.F. III. 55. 1907 Not, 2 | upholding your cause in spite of my arguments yesterday against 1908 Not, 2 | 79, 80). I wish the god of whom you spoke would ask 1909 Not, 2 | question lies in a nutshell; of four propositions which 1910 Not, 2 | have no infallible mode of recognising Cotta. You say 1911 Not, 2 | How about the impressions of signet rings? (85) Can you 1912 Not, 2 | rival your chicken rearer of Delos? But, you say, art 1913 Not, 2 | What an idea this gives us of the art with which nature 1914 Not, 2 | said that the sensations of dreamers, drunkards and 1915 Not, 2 | were feebler than those of the waking, the sober and 1916 Not, 2 | and the sane. The cases of Ennius and his Alcmaeon, 1917 Not, 2 | Ennius and his Alcmaeon, of your own relative Tuditanus, 1918 Not, 2 | own relative Tuditanus, of the Hercules of Euripides 1919 Not, 2 | Tuditanus, of the Hercules of Euripides disprove your 1920 Not, 2 | about the saner moments of such people; the question 1921 Not, 2 | is, what was the nature of their sensations at the 1922 Not, 2 | Communi loco: τοπω, that of blinking facts which cannot 1923 Not, 2 | iacet: this is my correction of the reading of most MSS. 1924 Not, 2 | correction of the reading of most MSS. maneant ... lacerat. 1925 Not, 2 | 176 in combating the conj. of Goer. si maneant ... laceratis 1926 Not, 2 | think the whole confusion of the passage arises from 1927 Not, 2 | passage arises from the mania of the copyists for turning 1928 Not, 2 | indicatives into subjunctives, of which in critical editions 1929 Not, 2 | which in critical editions of Cic. exx. occur every few 1930 Not, 2 | true quotha!" (For this use of dicit cf. inquit in 101, 1931 Not, 2 | approves the odd reading of the ed. Cratandriana of 1932 Not, 2 | of the ed. Cratandriana of 1528 latrat. Dav. conjectured 1933 Not, 2 | conj. habet. The change of person, however, (from dicit 1934 Not, 2 | does not suit the sense of the passage. Negat ... torsisset: 1935 Not, 2 | A.M. VII. 210 on behalf of Epicurus. Sed hic: Bait. 1936 Not, 2 | agerent. As the insertion of n in the imp. subj. is so 1937 Not, 2 | difficult to define the uses of the two expressions as to 1938 Not, 2 | expressions as to define those of aliquis and aliqui, on which 1939 Not, 2 | not know what light is. Of course all the ancients 1940 Not, 2 | will show the insipidity of the sense given by Halm' 1941 Not, 2 | for the tamen quaereretur of the MSS. is due to Manut. 1942 Not, 2 | etc.: cf. 105. For the om. of te before habere, which 1943 Not, 2 | duodetriginta. The reff. of Goer. at least do not prove 1944 Not, 2 | sun at 28 times the size of the earth. Quasi pedalis: 1945 Not, 2 | preserves the very words of Epicurus, in which however 1946 Not, 2 | which however no mention of a foot occurs, also Lucr. 1947 Not, 2 | affirmed to be the opinion of Heraclitus and Hecataeus. 1948 Not, 2 | incurring the reprehension of Madv. D.F. p. 814, ed 2. 1949 Not, 2 | D.F. V. 59, the correction of Orelli, therefore, aut non 1950 Not, 2 | for the in parvulis sitis of the MSS., which Goer. alone 1951 Not, 2 | Nota: cf. 58 and the speech of Lucullus passim. Ne sit ... 1952 Not, 2 | etc.: a strong expression of this belief is found in 1953 Not, 2 | word Stoicum; Lucullus is of course not Stoic, but Antiochean. 1954 Not, 2 | or Lat. to express both of two related things when 1955 Not, 2 | important in the making of statues. For aqua Orelli 1956 Not, 2 | privileged to make statues of Alexander, as Apelles alone 1957 Not, 2 | in reading the arguments of Chrysippus against the senses, 1958 Not, 2 | senses, quoted the address of Andromache to Hector: δαιμονιε 1959 Not, 2 | and I. 13. The omission of a verb in the subjunctive 1960 Not, 2 | impossible; for other ellipses of the verb see M.D.F. V. 63. 1961 Not, 2 | his extraordinary power of supplying. Halm conj. somnia 1962 Not, 2 | difficulties supply Sextus with one of his τροποι, i.e. ‛ο περι 1963 Not, 2 | also for the treatment of dreams, ib. I. 104. Si modo, 1964 Not, 2 | dum, etc.: from the Iliona of Pacuvius; a favourite quotation 1965 Not, 2 | 89. Quisquam: for the use of this pronoun in interrogative 1966 Not, 2 | with the FileOutputStreams of Wagner and Conington. Tam 1967 Not, 2 | 921—1015. The mad visions of this hero, like those of 1968 Not, 2 | of this hero, like those of Orestes, are often referred 1969 Not, 2 | corrected. The subject of the verb is evidently Furiae. 1970 Not, 2 | mention in the next line of Diana, usually identified 1971 Not, 2 | as it is the utterance of a maniac. For my part, I 1972 Not, 2 | applicable to a large number of philosophical questions ( 1973 Not, 2 | so, refute it. The plan of Chrysippus to refrain from 1974 Not, 2 | exceptions to the rules of Dialectic. You must go to 1975 Not, 2 | the very first postulate of your Dialectic (97). In 1976 Not, 2 | into the special function of Dialectic cf. the inquiry 1977 Not, 2 | C. Sol quantus sit: this of course is a problem for 1978 Not, 2 | with footnotes. An instance of a coniunctio (hypothetical 1979 Not, 2 | si lucet, lucet" below, of a disiunctio (disjunctive 1980 Not, 2 | similar arguments to this of Cic. occur in Sext., cf. 1981 Not, 2 | 510, 511. The true ground of attack is that Logic always 1982 Not, 2 | always assumes the truth of phenomena, and cannot prove 1983 Not, 2 | seen by Aristotle alone of the ancients; see Grote' 1984 Not, 2 | Grote's essay on the Origin of Knowledge, now reprinted 1985 Not, 2 | now reprinted in Vol II. of his Aristotle.~§92. Nata 1986 Not, 2 | absolute limits; the fallacy of the sorites and other such 1987 Not, 2 | entirely in the treatment of purely relative terms as 1988 Not, 2 | there will be a difference of one grain between heap and 1989 Not, 2 | logic, cf. Thomson's Laws of Thought, pp 201—203, ed 1990 Not, 2 | easily seen that the process of questioning above described 1991 Not, 2 | these are. For the omission of any connecting particle 1992 Not, 2 | particle between the members of each pair, cf. 29, 125, 1993 Not, 2 | there is a strange ellipse of some such words as id efficiatur, 1994 Not, 2 | treats it as a superabundance of negation arising from a 1995 Not, 2 | negation arising from a sort of anacoluthon, comparing In 1996 Not, 2 | Erunt ... cavetis: this form of the conditional sentence 1997 Not, 2 | caves, cf. also 127, 140 of this book. The present is 1998 Not, 2 | this book. The present is of course required by the instantaneous 1999 Not, 2 | the instantaneous nature of the action. Chrysippo: he 2000 Not, 2 | finitor acervi. The titles of numerous distinct works