Hellenistic Philosophy Introductory
126 //-6 to //-9 Cicero Academica 2.144-5 [11-6] 144 .... First I shall expound those odious theories, in which you [i.e., Stoic ...
32 /-5 Ancient Collections of Maxims The Principal Doctrines: Diogenes Laertius 10.139-154 [I-5] I What is blessed and indestruc ...
Logic and Theory of Knowledge 127 than the first problem. 230. [Chrysippus] himself speculated, therefore, that "impression" was ...
Ancient Collections of Maxims 33 and pains and, moreover, if they taught us the limit of our desires, then we would not have rea ...
128 //-9 to //-13 presentations to exist in the leading part [of the soul] since different impressions are conceived in it at di ...
34 /-5 one's whole life perfect. So there is no need for things which involve struggle. XXII One must reason about the real goal ...
Logic and Theory of Knowledge 129 say one has experience. For experience is the plurality of presentations similar in kind. Of ...
Ancient Collections of Maxims 35 produced by a groundless opinion and they fail to be dissolved not because of their own nature ...
130 l/-13 to l/-19 groundless attraction. This occurs in the melancholic^17 and in mad men; at any rate when Orestes in the trag ...
36 /-5 to /-6 about external threats is he who has made the manageable things akin to himself, and has at least made the unmanag ...
Logic and Theory of Knowledge Plutarch Stoic Self-Contradictions 1037b (SVF 2.129) 131 [11-17] Having said in his book On the Us ...
Ancient Collections of Maxims 37 secured the goods about which he was previously not confident by means of his secure sense of g ...
132 l/-20 Physics Diogenes Laertius 7.132-160 [11-20] They divide the account of physics into topics on bodies and on principle ...
38 /-6 One should not spoil what is present by desiring what is absent, but rather reason out that these things too [i.e., what ...
Physics 133 According to Apollodorus in his Physics, body is that which is extended in three [dimensions], length, breadth and ...
Ancient Collections of Maxims 39 56-57. The wise man feels no more pain when he is tortured <than when his friend is tortured ...
134 l/-20 some as a condition [hexis], for example, bones and sinews, and others as mind, for example, the leading part of the s ...
40 1-6 to 1-7 This utterance is ungrateful for past goods: look to the end of a long life. As you grow old, you are such as I w ...
Physics 135 destruction in his On the Universe, Chrysippus in book one of the Physics, Posidonius in book one of his On the Cosm ...
Doxographical Reports 41 in the epitome addressed to Herodotus and in the Principal Doctrines. "For," he says, "every sense-perc ...
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