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   Liber, Caput     grey = Comment text

 1     Int,       I|       books half understood. In truth, his appetite for every
 2     Int,      II| indestructible and irrefragable truth. One requisite of a philosophy
 3     Int,      II|        claiming to seek for the truth, has no truth to follow89.
 4     Int,      II|      seek for the truth, has no truth to follow89. The probable
 5     Int,      II|        the investigation of the truth110. At the same time, while
 6     Int,      IV|         xxxvi] ~Whatever be the truth on this point, it cannot
 7     Int,      IV|        gave their assent to the truth of phenomena. To this a
 8     Int,      IV|       refusing to assent to the truth of each class270. The whole
 9     Not,       1|         senses the criterion of truth, but the mind, because it
10     Not,       1|    senses, not the criterion of truth, which is the mind itself;
11     Not,       1|         proved irrefragably the truth of a sensation he called
12     Not,       1|      the sole ultimate basis of truth. Rashness in giving assent
13     Not,       1|     while Epicurus defended the truth of all sensations, Zeno
14     Not,       1|    Ipsum per se: i.e. its whole truth lies in its own εναργεια,
15     Not,       1|       be urged in favour of the truth or falsehood of phenomena,
16     Not,       1|     Translate: "Yet I think the truth to be ... that it is to
17     Not,       2|      possibility depends on the truth of the individual perception
18     Not,       2|         Not that I maintain the truth of every sensation, Epicurus
19     Not,       2|        the mind, in which alone truth and falsehood reside; see
20     Not,       2|     says Carneades allowed that truth and falsehood (or reality
21     Not,       2|     probability, just as their "truth" was (cf. n. on 29). An
22     Not,       2|       about inquiring after the truth, and about the bad influence
23     Not,       2|       passionate inquirer after truth, and on that very account
24     Not,       2|   position, protest against the truth of sense knowledge, and
25     Not,       2|        Logic always assumes the truth of phenomena, and cannot
26     Not,       2|         stress on the necessary truth of disjunctive propositions.
27     Not,       2|       your sapiens swear to the truth of any geometrical result
28     Not,       2|         which seems to resemble truth. Before I proceed to Ethics,
29     Not,       2|     uses, will not swear to the truth of the elaborate conclusions
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