text stringlengths 40 256 |
|---|
"it is my words, senators, which are condemned, so innocent am i of any guilty act; yet these do not touch the emperor or the emperor's mother, who are alone comprehended under the law of treason. |
coercion and ignorance of relevant circumstances render acts involuntary and exempt their doer from responsibility, otherwise the act is voluntary and the agent responsible, choice or preference of what is done, and inner consent to the deed, are to be |
vii.); this idea will therefore be in god, in so far as he is regarded as affected by the ideas of very many particular things. |
to which, if, besides accidental harms, we add the fantastical uneasiness (as itch after honour, power, or riches, c.) which acquired habits, by fashion, example, and education, have settled in us, and a thousand other irregular desires, which custom has |
and may we say that this has been proven? |
for, though men uniting into politic societies, have resigned up to the public the disposing of all their force, so that they cannot employ it against any fellow-citizens any further than the law of the country directs: yet they retain still the power of |
the base fc is equal to gb, the angle afc is equal to agb, and the angle acf is equal to the angle abg. |
but of these, of course, some limit must be fixed: for if one extends it to parents and descendants and friends' friends, there is no end to it. |
callicles: my good fellow, never mind me, but get on. |
some also add a fourth kind, namely, the friendship of love. |
and under all the superstructure of specialised and instrumental consciousness that may subsequently be added to it, the individuality always remains this single-souled inner life. |
what it thinks must be in it just as characters may be said to be on a writingtablet on which as yet nothing actually stands written: this is exactly what happens with mind. |
eleven. how many dimensions has a surface? |
cato entreated him to go away, as he was a noted enemy to caesar, but without success. |
in all subsumptions of an object under a conception, the representation of the object must be homogeneous with the conception; in other words, the conception must contain that which is represented in the object to be subsumed under it. |
he took the three elements of the same, the other, and the essence, and mingled them into one form, compressing by force the reluctant and unsociable nature of the other into the same. |
the megarians, however, still contending, and both sides having received considerable losses, they chose the spartans for arbitrators. |
heracles as far as egypt, and of europe as far as tyrrhenia. |
the name of peace is sweet, the thing itself is most salutary. but between peace and slavery there is a wide difference. peace is liberty in tranquillity, slavery is the worst of all evils,--to be repelled, if need be, not only by war, but even by death. |
and what shall i say, not only that he made you, but also entrusted you to yourself and made you a deposit to yourself? will you not think of this too, but do you also dishonor your guardianship? |
note.--this is made more clear by what was said in the note to two. vii., namely, that mind and body are one and the same thing, conceived first under the attribute of thought, secondly, under the attribute of extension. |
in its own properties, the properties in question being opposed to one another either as contraries or as intermediates. the body, e.g. |
together, i.e. 'associates', homogeneous and heterogeneous things alike. |
which otherwise would decay, if directed entirely to distant and immaterial objects. |
seventy seven. they then were making their preparations thus in the night without having taken any sleep at all: and with regard to oracles, i am not able to make objections against them that they are not true, for i do not desire to attempt to overthrow |
demosthenes prepared to march with his army against them, and meanwhile sent on at once a strong division to beset the roads and occupy the strong positions. |
for having hopes at their first sally to retake the whole city, when beyond their expectation they found themselves engaged with bold and practiced fighters, they fell back towards the castle. |
but in germany there was a considerable amount of investigations and hypotheses into these mystical phenomena, though rarely by the ordinary routine workers in the scientific field. |
interval of relaxed energy and self-command might so easily be fatal, that they could not afford to wait for the salutary permanent effects of freedom. |
composite frame of man and introduces rheums; and the nature of this phenomenon is not understood by most professors of medicine, who ascribe it to the opposite of the real cause. |
law. and this is a cause of many unnecessary processes. |
if two triangles (abc, cde) which have two sides of one proportional to two sides of the other (ab : bc :: four hundred : de), and the contained angles (b, five hundred) equal, be joined at an angle (one hundred), so as to have their homologous sides |
magistrate, others by another: and thus at carthage certain magistrates determine all causes. |
went himself, with two thousand seven hundred corinthian heavy infantry, four hundred phliasians, six hundred sicyonians, and such troops of his own as he had already levied, expecting to find nisaea not yet taken. |
camillus himself was struck with compassion, and perceiving the soldiers weeping, and commiserating their case, while the sutrians hung about and clung to them, resolved not to defer revenge, but that very day to lead his army to sutrium; conjecturing |
wang-sun chia asked, saying, 'what is the meaning of the saying, "it is better to pay court to the furnace than to the south-west corner?"' two. the master said, 'not so. he who offends against heaven has none to whom he can pray.' |
all, which is enough to my present purpose; and sufficiently shows that the notice we take of the ideas of our own minds, appearing there one after another, is that which gives us the idea of succession and duration, without which we should have no such |
to praise, magnifie, or call happy, is to honour; because nothing but goodnesse, power, and felicity is valued. to revile, mock, or pitty, is to dishonour. |
fifteen poiesas : some authorities have eipas . |
and if, nevertheless, our honesty should one day grow weary, and sigh, and stretch its limbs, and find us too hard, and would fain have it pleasanter, easier, and gentler, like an agreeable vice, let us remain hard, we latest stoics, and let us send to |
thirteen. his writings on natural philosophy and his purifications extend to five thousand verses; and his medical poem to six hundred; and his tragedies we have spoken of previously. |
you return to your trifling, for you do not remove what made me uneasy. i know that pain is not vice--you need not inform me of that: but show me that it makes no difference to me whether one am in pain or not. |
community, and make one body politic; other promises, and compacts, men may make one with another, and yet still be in the state of nature. the promises and bargains for truck, c. |
then let us choose two triangles, out of which fire and the other elements have been constructed, one isosceles, the other having the square of the longer side equal to three times the square of the lesser side. |
and which is the only motion that can be eternal: and we have pronounced the first movent to be unmoved. |
nor would they harbor, so i stood assured, a godless parricide, a reprobate convicted of incestuous marriage ties. |
yet even in beginners, to adhere so moderately, as he be a man of the one faction, which is most passable with the other, commonly giveth best way. |
the extrusion of the largest atoms is a process that will in time exhaust the supply; and it is by such a process that they account for the generation of water, air, and earth from one another. |
the chiefs about the son of atreus chose their men and marshalled them, while minerva went among them holding her priceless aegis that knows neither age nor death. |
as ready therefore must a sound understanding be for whatsoever shall happen. but he that saith, o that my children might live! and, o that all men might commend me for whatsoever i do! |
before. alcibiades now manned nine more ships, and levied large sums of money from the halicarnassians, and fortified cos. after doing this and placing a governor in cos, he sailed back to samos, autumn being now at hand. |
cato the consul, to secure some cities of spain from revolt, only interdicting the inhabitants from wearing arms, a great many killed themselves: |
in the timaeus, as well as in the laws, he also regards vices and crimes as simply involuntary; they are diseases analogous to the diseases of the body, and arising out of the same causes. |
you are indeed wonderfully like him about the head and eyes, for we were close friends before he set sail for troy where the flower of all the argives went also. since that time we have never either of us seen the other." |
for the best part of his men, though they had great experience and showed an irresistible courage in all engagements, yet by their frequent marches, changing their camps, attacking fortifications, and keeping long night-watches, were getting worn-out and |
the god or hero of the sculptor is always represented in a transition from that which is representable to the senses, to that which is not. then first it ceases to be a stone. the same remark holds of painting. |
so it is evident also that that that which has become must previously have been in process of becoming, and that which is in process of becoming must previously have become, everything (that is) that is divisible and continuous: though it is not always |
one. ts'ao ts'ao or ts'ao kung, afterwards known as wei wu ti a.five hundred. one hundred fifty five-two hundred twenty . |
wherever state intervention is for the best, the state has a right to intervene; but it has no moral right, though it must have a legal right, to intervene where it is not for the best. |
next came one who mourned in earnest, when the captive ark maimed his brute image, head and hands lopt off, in his own temple, on the grunsel-edge, where he fell flat and shamed his worshippers: dagon his name, sea-monster, upward man and downward fish; |
interpreted in a different sense. but the disjunctive definition of 'touching' must include and distinguish (a) 'contact in general' as the relation between two things which, having position, are such that one is able to impart motion and the other to be |
anything therefore which is generated or destructible must be intermediate. now let a be that which always is and b that which always is not, one hundred the generated, and five hundred the destructible. |
one case we say so because what was air is now water, in the other because where air formerly was there a is now water. but the matter, as we said before, is neither separable from the thing nor contains it, whereas place has both characteristics. |
now these courses, detained as in a vast river, neither overcame nor were overcome; but were hurrying and hurried to and fro, so that the whole animal was moved and progressed, irregularly however and irrationally and anyhow, in all the six directions of |
"near the ceraunian rocks our course we bore; the shortest passage to th' italian shore. |
grant, o all-seeing jove, that victory may go with him; put your courage into his heart that hector may learn whether my squire is man enough to fight alone, or whether his might is only then so indomitable when i myself enter the turmoil of war. |
which is nothing but the true knowledge of things, was thought unfit or incapable to be brought into well-bred company and polite conversation. |
hence one c b is less than one c- a, that is, b c is less than a- c. hence, multiplying each by c, we get |
kwan had also such a stand. if kwan knew the rules of propriety, who does not know them?' chap. thirty two. the master instructing the grand music-master of lu said, 'how to play music may be known. |
twenty. after this the milesians who had been taken prisoner were conducted to susa; and king dareios did to them no other evil, but settled them upon the sea called erythraian, in the city of ampe, by which the tigris flows when it runs out into the sea. |
some thinkers suppose that the motion of bodies of that size must produce a noise, since on our earth the motion of bodies far inferior in size and in speed of movement has that effect. |
system. and these are the things which, when newly introduced, give reputation and grandeur to a new prince. this opportunity must not, therefore, be allowed to pass, for letting italy at length see her liberator. |
recollect such anxiety and such fear being manifested? certainly in no one's. |
between the judicial system of the laws and that of athens there was very great similarity, and a difference almost equally great. plato not unfrequently adopts the details when he rejects the principle. |
"behold, zarathustra! even the people learn from thee, and acquire faith in thy teaching: but for them to believe fully in thee, one thing is still needful-thou must first of all convince us cripples! |
upon this subject of letters, i will add this more to what has been already said, that it is a kind of writing wherein my friends think i can do something; and i am willing to confess i should rather have chosen to publish my whimsies that way than any |
two preliminary distinctions will prepare us to grasp the cause of growth. |
the others laughed, but theodotus the prophet forbade pyrrhus to swear, declaring that heaven by that portended the death of one of the three kings, upon which he refused to ratify the peace. |
we may see him with the eye of the mind in the groves of the academy, or on the banks of the ilissus, or in the streets of athens, alone or walking with socrates, full of those thoughts which have since become the common possession of mankind. |
such is the case, according to some, with contact and motion, since there is no process of coming to be in contact or in motion. |
division of the world, nearly equal in greatness to that we knew before. the geographers of our time stick not to assure us that now all is found; all is seen:-- |
commerce of good will. even those to whom old age denies the practice of their desire, still tremble, neigh, and twitter for love; we see them, before the act, full of hope and ardour, and when the body has played its game, yet please themselves with the |
such is the will of jove, who has laid many a proud city in the dust, as he will yet lay others, for his power is above all. |
the triangles (acd, bcd) into which a right-angled triangle (acb) is divided, by the perpendicular (four hundred) from the right angle (one hundred) on the hypotenuse, are similar to the whole and to one another. |
moreover the result at which we have arrived, that rotatory motion is single and continuous, and rectilinear motion is not, is a reasonable one. |
leaving these quarters, they marched the whole of the next day over snow, and many of the men were afflicted with "boulimia" (or hunger-faintness). |
this can be proved as follows:-let there be two right lines ab, four hundred, and two perpendiculars to them, namely, ef, gh, then if ab, four hundred be made to coincide by superposition, so that the point e will coincide with g; then since a right angle |
chorus. say of what stock thou comest, what man's son- |
moreover, it is a certainty that promptitude in execution diminishes as more people are put in charge of it: where prudence is made too much of, not enough is made of fortune; opportunity is let slip, and deliberation results in the loss of its object. |
have deprived of a child or of a brother. and he who is impious and disobedient in such a case shall be brought to trial for impiety by any one who pleases. |
it is apparent that there are bodies which, when smaller in bulk than others, yet exceed them in weight. |
i. things which are equal to the same, or to equals, are equal to each other. |
declared such an intention, and so has exposed his life to the other's power to be taken away by him, or any one that joins with him in his defence, and espouses his quarrel; it being reasonable and just, i should have a right to destroy that which |
"consuetudine oculorum assuescunt animi, neque admirantur, neque requirunt rationes earum rerum, quas semper vident." |
speculative are those which are generally viewed in their extension as a practical result or effect of the former; such for instance, as health and strength. |
augustus meanwhile, as supports to his despotism, raised to the pontificate and curule aedileship claudius marcellus, his sister's son, while a mere stripling, and marcus agrippa, of humble birth, a good soldier, and one who had shared his victory, to two |
those in which no worthless man can succeed, for such things bring greater praise: and those which we do in fact desire, for what we desire is taken to be not only pleasant but also better. |
this gentleman had been sent to excuse his master to his majesty about a thing of very great consequence, which was this: the king, still to maintain some intelligence with italy, out of which he had lately been driven, and particularly with the duchy of |
triumphant chariot drawn with four elephants, (having brought over several which belonged to the african kings,) but the gates of the city being too narrow, he was forced to desist from that project, and be content with horses. |
my own name is eperitus; heaven drove me off my course as i was leaving sicania, and i have been carried here against my will. |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.