Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, 第 2 巻C.C. Little and J. Brown, 1867 |
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... whole in elegiac verse , extending collectively to ten lines . IX . Protreptica . The title seems to indicate that this was a collection of precepts exhorting the reader to the practice of virtue . We cannot , how- tell much about it ...
... whole in elegiac verse , extending collectively to ten lines . IX . Protreptica . The title seems to indicate that this was a collection of precepts exhorting the reader to the practice of virtue . We cannot , how- tell much about it ...
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... whole philosophy . He had little his doctrines with the most scrupulous conscien- esteem for logic and dialectics , but as he could not tiousness : they were attached and devoted to their altogether do without them , he prefixed to his ...
... whole philosophy . He had little his doctrines with the most scrupulous conscien- esteem for logic and dialectics , but as he could not tiousness : they were attached and devoted to their altogether do without them , he prefixed to his ...
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... whole is greater than its part- & c . Modern editors have put the last three postulates at the end of the common notions , and applied the term axiom ( which was not used till after Euclid ) to them all . The in- tention of Euclid seems ...
... whole is greater than its part- & c . Modern editors have put the last three postulates at the end of the common notions , and applied the term axiom ( which was not used till after Euclid ) to them all . The in- tention of Euclid seems ...
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... whole to be absolutely due to Theon , propositions as well as demonstrations , false , quis negat ? the third , that of Buteo of Dauphiny , a geometer of merit , who attributes the whole to 13. Περὶ Ψευδαρίων , On Fallacies . On this ...
... whole to be absolutely due to Theon , propositions as well as demonstrations , false , quis negat ? the third , that of Buteo of Dauphiny , a geometer of merit , who attributes the whole to 13. Περὶ Ψευδαρίων , On Fallacies . On this ...
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... whole of Euclid in giving the enunciations . From this edition another Greek text , Florence , 1545 , was invented by another mistake . All the Greek and Latin editions which Fabricius , Mur- hard , & c . , attribute to Dasypodius ...
... whole of Euclid in giving the enunciations . From this edition another Greek text , Florence , 1545 , was invented by another mistake . All the Greek and Latin editions which Fabricius , Mur- hard , & c . , attribute to Dasypodius ...
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according afterwards ancient Apollod appears Appian Arian army ascribed Athenaeus Athenian Athens Basil battle Bibl bishop brother Caesar called Carthage Carthaginian Cassius celebrated century church Cicero Claudius command comp Constantine Constantinople consul consulship daughter death defeated Diod Diog Dion Cass Eccles edition emperor enemy Euclid Evagrius extant Fabric Fabricius father favour Flaccus Flamininus Fragm fragments Fulvius Gaius Galba Galen Gallus Gaul gens Gracchus Graec Greek Gregory Hadrian Hamilcar Hannibal Hasdrubal Hephaestion Heracles Hippocrates Hist honour Italy king Laërt Latin latter lived Macedonia ment mentioned Orat Paris passage Paus Pausanias person Plin Pliny Plut Plutarch poem poet Polyb praetor probably province reign Roman Rome Schol Scipio seems senate sent Sicily Strab Suidas surname temple Theodosius Tiberius tion took translation treatise tribune troops viii writers wrote Zeus Zonar Περὶ
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52 ページ - ecclesial consciousness" is the result of the work of the Holy Spirit, whose person and work is inseparable from the risen Christ. Boff interprets the creedal doctrine of the procession of the Holy Spirit from the Father and the Son as an affirmation of this point.
127 ページ - Are we not thus, under the guise of orthodoxy, mocked in our belief that we have a High Priest who can be touched with a feeling of our infirmities...
295 ページ - But in the first place, it must be borne in mind, that C. Gracchus did not give away the grain for nothing, but only sold it at so low a price that the poor, with some labour, might be enabled to support themselves and their children ; and secondly, that Rome was a republic with immense revenues, which belonged to the sovereign, that is, to the people ; and a large class of this sovereign people was suffering from want and destitution. There was no other remedy ; the state was obliged to support...
115 ページ - Wherefore henceforth know we no man after the flesh ; yea though we have known Christ after the flesh, yet now henceforth know we him no more.
346 ページ - Periplus itself Hanno says that he was sent out by his countrymen to undertake a voyage beyond the Pillars of Hercules, and to found Libyphoenician towns, and that he sailed accordingly with sixty pentecontores, and a body of men and women, to the number of 30,000, and provisions and other necessaries.
210 ページ - ... theoretical principles. These principles he indeed professed to deduce from experience and observation, and we have abundant proofs of his diligence in collecting experience, and his accuracy in making observations. But still, in a certain sense at least, he regards individual facts and the detail of experience as of little value, unconnected with the principles which he laid down as the basis of all medical reasoning. In this fundamental point, therefore, the method pursued by Galen appears...
105 ページ - He could not bring his philosophical convictions, with regard to the nature of God and his relation to mankind, into harmony with the contents of these legends, nor could he pass over in silence their incongruities. Hence it is that he is driven to the strange necessity of carrying on a sort of polemical discussion with the very materials and subjects of which he had to treat.
368 ページ - A similar story is related of Hegesias, whose gloomy descriptions of human misery were so overpowering, that they drove many persons to commit suicide, in consequence of which he received the surname of Peisithanatos. In the city of Wesali there was a priest, who one day, on going with the alms-bowl, sat down upon a chair that was covered with a cloth, by which he killed a child that was underneath. About the same time there was a priest who received food mixed with poison...
67 ページ - This book has a completeness which none of the others (not even the fifth) can boast of: and we could almost suspect that Euclid, having arranged his materials in his own mind, and having completely elaborated the 10th book, wrote the preceding books after it, and did not live to revise them thoroughly.
127 ページ - the word was made flesh " implies, according to Eutyches, that He so took human nature upon Him, that His own nature was not changed. From this it follows that His body is not a mere human body, but a body of God. There can be no doubt that this doctrine, if pushed to...