M. Tulli Ciceronis Laelius de amicitiaCambridge U.P., 1893 - 174 pages |
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Page 14
... philosophical works ( the Tusculan Disputations forms an exception more apparent than real ) avoids the quick interchange of question and answer which is characteristic of Plato . Aristotle's dialogues1 were more popular too than those ...
... philosophical works ( the Tusculan Disputations forms an exception more apparent than real ) avoids the quick interchange of question and answer which is characteristic of Plato . Aristotle's dialogues1 were more popular too than those ...
Page 17
... philosophers Carneades the Academic , Diogenes the Stoic , and Critolaus the Peripatetic . After this time all the Greek systems struck root at Rome , but by far the greatest influence was exerted by Stoicism , of which nearly all the ...
... philosophers Carneades the Academic , Diogenes the Stoic , and Critolaus the Peripatetic . After this time all the Greek systems struck root at Rome , but by far the greatest influence was exerted by Stoicism , of which nearly all the ...
Page 21
... philosophies , I believe , with our forefathers and with Socrates , that the soul lives after death . Scipio believed so too , and as though he felt death coming , treated of the matter at the end of a three days ' discourse on the best ...
... philosophies , I believe , with our forefathers and with Socrates , that the soul lives after death . Scipio believed so too , and as though he felt death coming , treated of the matter at the end of a three days ' discourse on the best ...
Page 22
... philosophers who deduce everything from the desire for pleasure are wrong . True friendships are eternal , which they would not be if they sprang from so shifting a thing as utility . ' C. 3. §33 . ' Scipio said that it was very hard ...
... philosophers who deduce everything from the desire for pleasure are wrong . True friendships are eternal , which they would not be if they sprang from so shifting a thing as utility . ' C. 3. §33 . ' Scipio said that it was very hard ...
Page 81
... philosophical questions except as a relaxation from more serious business . Cf. the exordia of Academica I and II and also of Fin . III , also n . on Lael . 10 , 1. 6. In Acad . 2 , 6 Cicero says restat ut eis respondeam qui sermonibus ...
... philosophical questions except as a relaxation from more serious business . Cf. the exordia of Academica I and II and also of Fin . III , also n . on Lael . 10 , 1. 6. In Acad . 2 , 6 Cicero says restat ut eis respondeam qui sermonibus ...
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Common terms and phrases
Acad Africanus aliquid amici amicitia amicos amicum Aristotle asyndeton atque autem benevolentia bonis Brut Cato causa chiasmus Cicero clause consul dicam dicere eius enim erit esset etiam Fannius fere friendship fuit Gracchus Greek haec homines idem igitur illa illud inter ipsa ipse Iwan Müller Laelius LAELIUS DE AMICITIA Latin Livy Madvig magis mihi modo multa multis natura nemo neque nihil nisi nulla numquam nunc omnia omnibus omnis oratio passage phrase Plato Plutarch potest potius praetor protasis publica quae quam quibus quid quidem quis quisque quod quotes rebus recte rerum Roman saepe Sallust sapiens says Scaevola Scipio sense sentence Seyffert sibi Stoic subjunctive sunt tamen tamquam Theophrastus Third Punic War Tusc verb veriora vero verum virtus vita words γὰρ δὲ καὶ τὸ