Tusculan Disputations |
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Page viii
... thought fit according to his own judgment and choice . For the setting of the composition with its elaborate introduction , as well as for the episodes and illustrations taken from Roman history and literature he was himself responsible ...
... thought fit according to his own judgment and choice . For the setting of the composition with its elaborate introduction , as well as for the episodes and illustrations taken from Roman history and literature he was himself responsible ...
Page x
... did with Scipio Africanus . Gradually philosophy be- came recognized as a part of liberal education . 2 II . § 35 . 1 IV . § 2 . 3 IV . § 5 .. 4 IV . § 5 . Like Neoptolemus , 1 the Romans thought that a little X INTRODUCTION.
... did with Scipio Africanus . Gradually philosophy be- came recognized as a part of liberal education . 2 II . § 35 . 1 IV . § 2 . 3 IV . § 5 .. 4 IV . § 5 . Like Neoptolemus , 1 the Romans thought that a little X INTRODUCTION.
Page xi
... thought it led to the luxury , indifference , and idleness which he de- plored in many of the nobles of the day , like Lucullus , and which paved the way for the coming of the Empire . Besides schooling his own soul in his troubles he ...
... thought it led to the luxury , indifference , and idleness which he de- plored in many of the nobles of the day , like Lucullus , and which paved the way for the coming of the Empire . Besides schooling his own soul in his troubles he ...
Page xii
... thought and study as well as by personal ac- quaintance with the leaders of different schools for the task which he set himself at the age of sixty . At the beginning of Bk . V. Cicero sketches the history of philosophy , in a passage ...
... thought and study as well as by personal ac- quaintance with the leaders of different schools for the task which he set himself at the age of sixty . At the beginning of Bk . V. Cicero sketches the history of philosophy , in a passage ...
Page xiii
... - state with its ideals of liberty and in- dependence . The conquests of Alexander the Great 3 V. § 26 . 1 I. § 22 . I. § 104 . 2 I. § 104 . 5 II . § 15 . But under the Romans the old Men's thoughts spread Greek xiii INTRODUCTION.
... - state with its ideals of liberty and in- dependence . The conquests of Alexander the Great 3 V. § 26 . 1 I. § 22 . I. § 104 . 2 I. § 104 . 5 II . § 15 . But under the Romans the old Men's thoughts spread Greek xiii INTRODUCTION.
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Common terms and phrases
aegritudine aegritudo alii aliquid animi animo animus apud Aristotle atque autem beata body bonis bonum Carneades Chrysippus Cicero corporis Cyrenaics death dicere disorders distress dolore dolorem eius enim Ennius eorum Epicurus ergo esset etiam etsi Eurypylus evil fear fortuna Graeci Greek haec happy homines idem igitur illa illi illud inquit ipsa ipse ipsi ipsum ista Itaque libido lust malis malum melius metus mihi modo modum mortem multa nature neque nihil nisi nobis nulla numquam nunc omnes omni omnia omnino omnium pain Panaetius paullo Peripatetics perturbationes philosophers Plato pleasure posse possit potest Pythagoras quae quam quia quibus quid quidem quidquam quis quod rebus rerum saepe sapiens sapientem satis semper sine sint Socrates solum soul Stoics sunt tamen Theophrastus things vero videtur virtue vita vitam wise wretched Xenocrates δὲ καὶ τὸ
Popular passages
Page 8 - Latini dicuntur scripti inconsiderate ab optimis illis quidem viris, sed non satis eruditis. fieri autem potest, ut recte quis sentiat et id, quod sentit, polite eloqui non possit.
Page xxviii - Words, and more words, and nothing but words, had been all the fruit of all the toil of all the most renowned sages of sixty generations.
Page 186 - Anon they move In perfect phalanx to the Dorian mood Of flutes and soft recorders...
Page 76 - Animorum nulla in terris origo inveniri potest; nihil enim est in animis mixtum atque concretum, aut quod ex terra natum atque fictum esse videatur, nihil ne aut umidum' quidem aut flabile aut igneum. His enim in naturis nihil inest, quod vim memoriae, mentis, cogitationis habeat, quod et praeterita teneat et futura provideat et complecti possit praesentia.
Page 432 - ... quaererent, sed visendi causa venirent studioseque perspicerent, quid ageretur et quo modo, item nos quasi in mercatus quandam celebritatem ex urbe aliqua sic in hanc vitam ex alia vita et natura...
Page 370 - Etenim ipsae se impellunt, ubi semel a ratione discessum est, ipsaque sibi imbecillitas indulget in altumque provehitur imprudens nee reperit locum consistendi.
Page 2 - Graecis et litteris 10 et doctoribus percipi non posset : sed meum semper judicium fuit, omnia nostros aut invenisse per se sapientius quam Graecos : aut accepta ab illis fecisse meliora, quae quidem digna statuissent in quibus elaborarent. Nam mores et instituta vitae, resque domesticas ac familiares, nos profecto et melius tuemur et lautius ; rem vero publicam nostri majores certe melioribus temperaverunt et institutis et legibus.
Page xxviii - Hortensius. But this book altered my affections, and turned my prayers to Thyself, O Lord ; and made me have other purposes and desires.
Page 78 - Nee vero deus ipse, qui intelligitur a nobis, alio modo intelligi potest, nisi mens soluta quaedam et libera, segregata ab omni concretione mortali, omnia sentiens et movens, ipsaque praedita motu sempiterno.