the discourses of epictetus: with the encheiridion and fragments1888 |
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Page 44
... Carter " principles . " I don't understand either . I have rendered the word by thoughts , " which is vague , but I can do no better . It was the Stoic doctrine that the human intelligence is a particle of the divine . Mrs. Carter names ...
... Carter " principles . " I don't understand either . I have rendered the word by thoughts , " which is vague , but I can do no better . It was the Stoic doctrine that the human intelligence is a particle of the divine . Mrs. Carter names ...
Page 46
... Carter compares Job xxxi . 15 : " Did not he that made me in the womb make him ( my man - servant ) ? And did not one fashion us in the womb ? " 2 I suppose he means human laws , which have made one man a slave to another ; and when he ...
... Carter compares Job xxxi . 15 : " Did not he that made me in the womb make him ( my man - servant ) ? And did not one fashion us in the womb ? " 2 I suppose he means human laws , which have made one man a slave to another ; and when he ...
Page 49
... Carter ) . The flowers of a fig are inside the fleshy receptacle which becomes the fruit . Schweig . prints μὴ δ ̓ ἂν , ἐγώ σοι λέγω , προσδόκα : and in his Latin version he prints : " Id vero , ego tibi dico , ne expectes . " I neither ...
... Carter ) . The flowers of a fig are inside the fleshy receptacle which becomes the fruit . Schweig . prints μὴ δ ̓ ἂν , ἐγώ σοι λέγω , προσδόκα : and in his Latin version he prints : " Id vero , ego tibi dico , ne expectes . " I neither ...
Page 56
... Carter says : " The most ignorant persons often practise what they know to be evil : and they , who voluntarily suffer , as many do , their inclinations to blind their judgment , are not justified by fol- lowing it . ( Perhaps she means ...
... Carter says : " The most ignorant persons often practise what they know to be evil : and they , who voluntarily suffer , as many do , their inclinations to blind their judgment , are not justified by fol- lowing it . ( Perhaps she means ...
Page 57
... the plain and certain meaning of Epictetus which Mrs. Carter in her zeal has not seen . Here the text , 9 , 10 , 11 is defective . See Schweighaeuser's note . Consider the matter thus : you have fine clothes ; EPICTETUS . 57.
... the plain and certain meaning of Epictetus which Mrs. Carter in her zeal has not seen . Here the text , 9 , 10 , 11 is defective . See Schweighaeuser's note . Consider the matter thus : you have fine clothes ; EPICTETUS . 57.
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Common terms and phrases
able animal Antisthenes Antoninus appearances Arrian assent aversion avoid beautiful belongs blame Caesar Carter CHAPTER choose Chrysippus Cicero Compare conformable to nature consider contrary Cynic death desire Diogenes Diogenes Laertius Discourses divine doctrine Domitian duty edition Encheiridion endure Epictetus Epicurus Euripides evil exercise external faculty father fear fever free from hindrance give gods Greek Gyara happen happy hear hindered Iliad kind labour lament live look man's matter means Memoir mind Musonius Rufus never Nicopolis notion obolus opinion passage person perturbation philosopher Plato Polemon poor body Portrait possess purpose rational reason receive Roman Rome rule Schweig Schweig.'s note Schweighaeuser Schweighaeuser's seek slave Socrates sophism soul speak Stobaeus Stoic suppose syllogisms teaching tell things thou tion Trans translated true tyrant understand Upton vols wise wish Woodcuts word wretched write Xenophon Zeus καὶ
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