The Thoughts of the Emperor M. Aurelius AntoninusG. Bell, 1901 - 216 pages |
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Page 38
... things which are , and to make new things like them . For everything that exists is in a manner the seed of that which will be . But thou art thinking only of seeds which are cast into the earth or into a womb : but this is a very ...
... things which are , and to make new things like them . For everything that exists is in a manner the seed of that which will be . But thou art thinking only of seeds which are cast into the earth or into a womb : but this is a very ...
Page 41
... Things . All that we know is phaenomena , as the Greeks called them , or appearances which follow one another in a regular order , as we conceive it , so that if some one phaenomenon should fail in the series , we conceive that there ...
... Things . All that we know is phaenomena , as the Greeks called them , or appearances which follow one another in a regular order , as we conceive it , so that if some one phaenomenon should fail in the series , we conceive that there ...
Page 42
... things and of the economy of the universe , I am convinced that his sense of Nature and Natural is the same as that which I have stated ; and as he was a man who knew how to use words in a clear way and with strict con- sistency , we ...
... things and of the economy of the universe , I am convinced that his sense of Nature and Natural is the same as that which I have stated ; and as he was a man who knew how to use words in a clear way and with strict con- sistency , we ...
Page 43
... things , as they appear to us , must be contemplated in time , that is in suc- cession , and we conceive or suppose intervals between one state of things and another state of things , so that there is priority and sequence , and ...
... things , as they appear to us , must be contemplated in time , that is in suc- cession , and we conceive or suppose intervals between one state of things and another state of things , so that there is priority and sequence , and ...
Page 50
... things , that man can only have an imperfect knowledge of his nature , and he must attain this imperfect knowledge by reverencing the divinity which is within him , and keeping it pure . From all that has been said it follows that the ...
... things , that man can only have an imperfect knowledge of his nature , and he must attain this imperfect knowledge by reverencing the divinity which is within him , and keeping it pure . From all that has been said it follows that the ...
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Common terms and phrases
2nd Edition according to nature Antoninus Pius Apology art thou Avidius Cassius body Christians Commodus conformable consider constitution death deity Dion Cassius divinity dost thou Edited by Temple emperor English Engravings Epictetus Eusebius evil exist G. A. Aitken Gataker give gods Greek Hadrian happens to thee harm Heraclitus History Illustrations intelligence Julius Cæsar justice Justinus kind let thy letter look manner matter meaning Melitene notion observe opinion Orosius pain passage philosophy Plato pleasure Portraits praise principles Quadi rational animal reason religion Rescript Roman ruling faculty says shavings and cuttings social Socrates soul speaks Stoic substance Temple Scott things thou art thou didst thou dost thou hast thou shalt thou shouldst thou wilt thou wish thy mind thy power thyself tion Trajan Trans Translated truth universal nature Verus virtue whole wickedness William Hazlitt Woodcuts word wouldst wrong Zeus
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