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 1     Int,       I|       year 88 B.C. the celebrated Philo of Larissa, then head of
 2     Int,       I|       during the Mithridatic war. Philo, like Diodotus, was a man
 3     Int,       I|          city14. By the advice of Philo himself15, Cicero attended
 4     Int,       I|        was in controversy between Philo and Antiochus, Cicero still
 5     Int,      II|            the new Academicism of Philo as well as that of Arcesilas
 6     Int,      II|      never recanted the doctrines Philo had taught him? Simply thus.
 7     Int,      II|         Arcesilas, Carneades, and Philo had been too busy with their
 8     Int,      IV|        direct intercourse between Philo and Catulus can have taken
 9     Int,      IV|       seems to imply it245. Still Philo had a brilliant reputation
10     Int,      IV|     doctrine. The famous books of Philo were probably not known
11     Int,      IV|        introduced by a mention of Philo's books249. Some considerable
12     Int,      IV|           the innovations made by Philo upon the genuine Carneadean
13     Int,      IV|       great warmth, even charging Philo with wilful misrepresentation
14     Int,      IV|      prooemium the innovations of Philo were mentioned; Catulus
15     Int,      IV|          which both Carneades and Philo had wrongly abandoned. Thus
16     Int,      IV|           wrongly abandoned. Thus Philo becomes the central point
17     Int,      IV|         how far did Cicero defend Philo against the attack of Catulus?
18     Int,      IV|      elsewhere as the defender of Philo's reactionary doctrines273.
19     Int,      IV|           his own part as that of Philo (partes mihi sumpsi Philonis275),
20     Int,      IV|                he merely attaches Philo's name to those general
21     Int,      IV|          Catulus were, doubtless, Philo himself and Clitomachus.~
22       I,      IV|        Quamquam Antiochi magister Philo, magnus vir, ut tu existimas
23      II,      VI|     putabatur. 17. Iam Clitomacho Philo vester operam multos annos
24      II,      VI|     quibuscum disseratur, putant. Philo autem, dum nova quaedam
25      II,      VI|        hoc cum infirmat tollitque Philo, iudicium tollit incogniti
26      II,      VI| retineamus eam definitionem, quam Philo voluit evertere. Quam nisi
27     Not,       1|           himself, and appeals to Philo for the statement that the
28     Not,       1|  difference between Antiochus and Philo. Varro agrees, and promises
29     Not,       2|          pupil of Clitomachus and Philo, and Antiochus. At that
30     Not,       2|        made by the latter against Philo (12).~§1. Luculli: see Introd.
31     Not,       2|        revocatur: sc. a Cicerone. Philo's only notable pupils had
32     Not,       2|         the change of prep. "from Philo's lips," "from his copy."
33     Not,       2|         discussion with sceptics. Philo in his innovations was induced
34     Not,       2|        things are clear, (1) that Philo headed a reaction towards
35     Not,       2|          things to be ακαταληπτα, Philo held them to be καταληπτα,
36     Not,       2|      about them. Unless therefore Philo deluded himself with words,
37     Not,       2|           its real being, if then Philo did away with the καταλ.
38     Not,       2|           expressing the views of Philo, and not those of Clitomachus
39     Not,       2|         scarcity of references to Philo in ancient authorities does
40     Not,       2|          difficult to see wherein Philo's "lie" consisted. He denied
41     Not,       2|          that from the mention of Philo's ethical works at the outset
42     Not,       2|        112, 148. The nonnulli are Philo and Metrodorus, see 78.
43     Not,       2|       Metrodorus (of Stratonice), Philo, and Antiochus, and may
44     Not,       2|           we have here a trace of Philo's teaching, as distinct
45     Not,       2|        see n. Aliter Philoni: not Philo of Larissa, but a noted
46     Not,       2|      dispute between Diodorus and Philo is mentioned in Sext. A.M.
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