The Conflict of Religions in the Early Roman Empire. Glover Terrot Reaveley

The Conflict of Religions in the Early Roman Empire - Glover Terrot Reaveley


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13, 757 C. horâs dépou tòn upolambánonta búthon hemâs atheótetos, an eis pathe kaì dynameis kaì aretàs diagraphômen ekaston tôn theôn.

263

Amatorius, 13, 756 A, D; 757 B. The quotation is from Euripides, Bacchæ, 203.

264

Non suaviter, 21, 1101 E-1102 A.

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de Iside, 68, 378 A.

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de def. orac. 8, 414 A.

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Mahaffy, Silver Age of Greek World, p. 45.

268

Horace is the best known of Athenian students. The delightful letters of Synesius show the hold Athens still retained upon a very changed world in 400 A.D.

269

Life of Antony, 68.

270

Symp. i, 5, 1.

271

Symp. iv, 4, 4.

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v. Ant. 28.

273

Symp. iii, 7, 1.

274

Symp. ii, 8, 1.

275

Symp. viii, 6, 5, hubristès òn kaì philogelôs physei. Symp. ix, 15, 1.

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de fraterno amore, 16, 487 E. Volkmann, Plutarch, i, 24, suggests he was the Timon whose wife Pliny defended on one occasion, Epp. i, 5, 5.

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de frat. am. 7, 481 D.

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de E. 1, 385 B.

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v. Them. 32, end.

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Zeller, Eclectics, 334.

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de E. 17, 391 E. Imagine the joys of a Euclid, says Plutarch, in non suaviter, 11, 1093 E.

282

Symp. ix, 15.

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Symp. viii, 3, I.

284

Pericles 13.

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Dio Chr. Rhodiaca, Or. 31, 117.

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Cf. the Nigrinus.

287

Gellius, N.A. ii, 21, 1, vos opici, says Gellius to his friends – Philistines.

288

Symp. v, 5, 1.

289

Polit. præc. 20, 816 D.

290

de curiositate, 15.

291

Demosthenes, 2.

292

See Volkmann, i, 35, 36; Rom. Qu. 103; Lucullus, 37, end.

293

Demosthenes, 2.

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de sera, 15, 559 A.

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de Stoic. rep. 2, 1033 B, C.

296

Pol. Præc. 15, 811 C.

297

Symp. ii, 10, 1; vi, 8, 1.

298

Reference to Polemo's hand-book to them, Symp. v, 2, 675 B.

299

de E. 384 F.

300

Demosthenes, 2; and 1.

301

Timoleon, pref.

302

Alexander, 1.

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de tranqu. animi, i, 464 F, ouk akroáseôs héneka therôménês kalligraphían– a profession often made, but in Plutarch's case true enough as a rule.

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See, e. g., variety of possible explanations of the E at Delphi, in tract upon it.

305

Stapfer, Shakespeare and Classical Antiquity (tr.), p. 299. "It may be safely said he followed Plutarch far more closely than he did even the old English chroniclers."

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Cons. ad Ux. 2-3, 608 C, D.

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Cons. ad Ux. 11, 612 A, B. Cf. non suaviter, 26, 1104 C, on the loss of a child or a parent.

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de coh. ira. 11, 459 C; cf. Progress in Virtue, 80 B, 81 C, on epieíkeia and praotês as signs of moral progress.

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Cf. Sen. Ep. 47; Clem. Alex. Pæd. iii, 92.

310

A curious parallel to this in Tert. de Patientia, 15, where Tertullian draws the portrait of Patience – perhaps from life, as Dean Robinson suggests – after Perpetua the martyr.

311

Gellius, N.A. i, 26.

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Solon, 32.

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Artemidorus, Oneirocritica, iv, 72. On this author see chapter vii.

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See non suaviter, 17, 1098 D, on the unspeakably rich joy of such a life of friendly relations with gods and men.

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Progress in Virtue, 4, 77 C, Love of Philosophy compared to a lover's passion, to "hunger and thirst."

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Plato, Apology, 38 A, ho dè anexétastos bíos ou biôtos anthrópô.

317

Pensées, Art. xxiv, 5.

318

Adv. Coloten (foe Epicurean), 31, 1125 D, E. For this argument from consensus, see Seneca, Ep. 117, 6, Multum dare solemus præsumptioni omnium hominum et apud nos veritatis argumentum est aliquid omnibus videri: tanquam deos esse inter alia hoc colligimus, quod omnibus insita de dis opinio est, nee ulla gens usquam est adeo extra leges moresque projecta ut non aliquos deos credat. This consensus rests (with the Stoics) on the common preconceptions of the mind, which are natural. For ridicule of the doctrine of consensus, see Lucian, Zeus Tragædus, 42.

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Amatorius, 18, 763 C. Cf. view of Celsus ap. Orig. c. Cels. vii, 41.

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Consol. ad Apoll. 34, 120 B.

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Quomodo Poetas, 1, 15 E, F, poetry a preliminary study to philosophy, prophilosophêtéon toîs poiémasin.

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de Pyth. orac. 29, 408 F. Cf. the pagan's speech in Minucius Felix, 7, 6, pleni et mixti deo vates futura præcerpunt … etiam per guietem deos videmus

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So Volkmann, Plutarch, ii, 290 n. Cf. a passage of Celsus, Orig. c. Cels. viii, 45.

324

de def. or. 14, 417 C, empháseis and diaphásei


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