Hellenistic Philosophy Introductory
156 l/-23 and, as I think I said before, things which have this shape are least susceptible to harm. 118. The stars, moreover, a ...
62 /-26 to /-27 periods of antiquity, you could hardly find three pairs of [true] friends, starting with Theseus and finishing u ...
Physics 157 caring for the young they have produced, until such time as the young can defend themselves? Although fish are said ...
The Testimony of Lucretius 63 they are afraid that if we believe that friendship is to be pursued for the sake of our own pleasu ...
158 l/-23 prove that everything in this cosmos is wonderfully governed by the intelligence and deliberative ability of the gods ...
64 /-27 to /-28 must find something with greater authority which could all on its own refute what is false by means of what is t ...
Physics 159 this topic, I wish, Cotta, that I had your eloquence. How [wonderfully] you could describe, first of all, human unde ...
The Polemic of Plutarch 65 is necessary that the atoms swerve slightly-but not more than the minimum; otherwise, we would seem t ...
160 l/-23 to l/-24 and Spartans and everything in these cities is properly said to belong to those peoples, in the same way one ...
66 Plutarch Against Colotes 1109a-1121e, excerpts /-29 [1-29] (1109a) ... Anyway, he [Colotes] who even held that nothing is any ...
Physics 161 is well-suited for feeding humans, no other type of animal is more prolific of offspring .... 161. ... You can scan ...
162 l/-24 to l/-25 too. For it has a bluish colour, which is darker than purple but has a shining quality. And for this reason i ...
The Polemic of Plutarch 67 experience, but that different people have different experiences according to the differing qualities ...
Physics 163 because she receives these [seeds] and bears [offspring]. And seeing that the heavenly bodies are always moving and ...
164 l/-25 to l/-32 by themselves when a presentation occurs which stimulates the impulse. ... 3. But the rational animal has rea ...
68 /-29 bright, on the grounds that nothing (lllOc) has its own independent quality or power when it is in bodies, nor is it act ...
Physics 165 Sextus M 8.263 (SVF 2.363) [11-28] According to them, the incorporeal can neither do anything nor have anything done ...
The Polemic of Plutarch 69 aggregated, as water, fire, a plant, or a man; and that everything is what he calls atomic 'forms' an ...
166 Alexander of Aphrodisias Comm. on Arisotle's Topics 121a10, 127a26 (CIAG 2.2, p. 301.19-25, 359.12-16 = SVF 2.329) l/-33 to ...
70 /-29 instance, he is in the habit of calling the void itself 'the nature of void' and, by Zeus, the totality [of things] the ...
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