Ancilla to the Pre-Socratic Philosophers: A Complete Translation of the Fragment in Diels, Fragmente Der Vorsokratiker |
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Page 39
... divine Logos . But the human Logos is sprung from the divine Logos , and it brings to each man his means of life , and his mainten- ance . The divine Logos accompanies all the arts , itself teaching men what they must do for their ...
... divine Logos . But the human Logos is sprung from the divine Logos , and it brings to each man his means of life , and his mainten- ance . The divine Logos accompanies all the arts , itself teaching men what they must do for their ...
Page 67
... divine thoughts , but wretched the man in whose mind dwells an obscure opinion about the gods ! 133. It is not possible to bring God near within reach of our eyes , nor to grasp him with our hands , by which route the broadest road of ...
... divine thoughts , but wretched the man in whose mind dwells an obscure opinion about the gods ! 133. It is not possible to bring God near within reach of our eyes , nor to grasp him with our hands , by which route the broadest road of ...
Page 130
... divine wrath , shunning human envy ! For the courage these men possessed was divine , and the mortal part ( alone ) was human . Often , indeed , they preferred mild reasonableness to harsh justice , often also correctness of speech to ...
... divine wrath , shunning human envy ! For the courage these men possessed was divine , and the mortal part ( alone ) was human . Often , indeed , they preferred mild reasonableness to harsh justice , often also correctness of speech to ...
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Common terms and phrases
ABDÊRA Aether Anaxagoras animals Antiphon Aphrodite ARISTOTLE ATHENS attributed B.C. He wrote barbarians beauty become blood-vessels body called cause CHIOS Cleinias created creatures Critias Cronos Damon daughter death Demeter Democritus Diels Diels-Kranz divine drink earth elements Empedocles Epimenides everlasting everything existing things Fate fifth century B.C. Fire forms fourth century B.C. fragments friends give gods Gorgias Greece Greeks Hades harmony Hate Heaven Hecataeus Heracleitus Heracles Hesiod Homer honour immortal infinite intelligence justice Leucippus limbs live Logos Love mankind means MILÊTUS mind mixed moon mortals Musaeus nature night Non-Limited Not-Being Ocean one's Oration Orpheus Orphic pain Philolaus PLATO pleasure poem prime Prodicus Protagoras Pythagoras Pythagorean rain round separated soul Spartan speech Spurious Stobaeus TARENTUM thought Thrasymachus Title treatise Truth universe virtue whole wind wisdom wise wish word writings survive wrong Xenophanes XENOPHILUS Zeus