Philosophic Classics From Plato to Derrida
650 GEORGEBERKELEY of atoms; how anything at all, either sensible or imaginable, can exist independent of a mind, and he need go ...
242 EPICTETUS you, and others will steal from you. And thus you will undertake the affair more securely if you say to yourself f ...
THREEDIALOGUES(2) 651 produced by, anything but a mind or spirit? This indeed is inconceivable. And to assert that which is inco ...
HANDBOOK(ENCHIRIDION) 243 being free of troubles. Nothing can be had without paying the price.” And when you call your slave-boy ...
652 GEORGEBERKELEY PHILONOUS: And, has it not been made evident that no such substance can possibly exist? And, though it should ...
244 EPICTETUS Theater at Hieropolis,Phrygia, Asia Minor (present-day Turkey). Built during Epictetus’s lifetime—in his hometown— ...
THREEDIALOGUES(2) 653 HYLAS: I do not pretend to have any notion of it. PHILONOUS: And what reason have you to think this unknow ...
HANDBOOK(ENCHIRIDION) 245 Chapter 24: [1] Do not be troubled by thoughts such as these: “I will be valued by no one my whole lif ...
654 GEORGEBERKELEY HYLAS: I will no longer maintain that matter is an instrument. However, I would not be understood to give up ...
246 EPICTETUS [5] Do you have nothing, then, in place of the banquet? You have this—you have not had to praise the person you di ...
THREEDIALOGUES(2) 655 PHILONOUS: Those things which you say are present to God, without doubt he perceives. HYLAS: Certainly; ot ...
HANDBOOK(ENCHIRIDION) 247 ruling principle or external things, seek to improve things inside or things outside. That is, you mus ...
656 GEORGEBERKELEY HYLAS: We have already argued on those points. I have no more to say to them. But, to prevent any farther que ...
248 EPICTETUS diviner should happen to tell you that the omens are unfavourable, that death is foretold, or mutilation to some p ...
THREEDIALOGUES(2) 657 the most inadequate or faint idea pretended to—I will not indeed thence conclude against the reality of an ...
HANDBOOK(ENCHIRIDION) 249 Chapter 34: When you get an impression of some pleasure, as in the case of other impressions, guard ag ...
658 GEORGEBERKELEY PHILONOUS: I deny it to be possible; and have, if I mistake not, evidently proved, from your own concessions, ...
250 EPICTETUS he is your brother, that you were raised up together, and you will take hold of it using the handle by which it ma ...
THREEDIALOGUES(3) 659 THETHIRDDIALOGUE PHILONOUS: Tell me, Hylas, what are the fruits of yesterday’s meditation? Has it confirme ...
HANDBOOK(ENCHIRIDION) 251 When I find someone to explain them, what remains is my putting his principles into prac- tice; this i ...
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