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The Project Gutenberg eBook <strong>of</strong> ...<br />

words and clauses in slightly altered forms. The reason here is partly the intense desire to flatter<br />

Varro. Si qui ... si essent: the first si has really no conditional force, si qui like e?t??e? merely<br />

means "all who," for a strong instance see Ad Fam. I. 9, 13, ed Nobbe, si accusandi sunt, si qui<br />

pertimuerunt. Ea nolui scribere, etc.: very similar expressions occur in the prologue to D.F. I.,<br />

which should be compared with this prologue throughout.<br />

§5. Vides ... didicisti: MSS. have vides autem eadem ipse didicisti enim. My reading is that <strong>of</strong><br />

Dav. followed by Baiter. Halm, after Christ, has vides autem ipse—didicisti enim eadem—non<br />

posse, etc. Similis: Halm, in deference to MSS., makes Cic. write i and e indiscriminately in the<br />

acc. plur. <strong>of</strong> i stems. I shall write i everywhere, we shall thus, I believe, be far nearer Cicero's<br />

real writing. Though I do not presume to say that his usage did not vary, he must in the vast<br />

majority <strong>of</strong> instances have written i, see Corss. I. 738—744. Amafinii aut Rabirii: cf. Introd. p.<br />

26. Definiunt ... partiuntur: n. on 32. Interrogatione: Faber saw this to be right, but a number <strong>of</strong><br />

later scholars alter it, e.g. Bentl. argumentatione, Ernesti ratione. But the word as it stands has<br />

exactly the meaning these alterations are intended to secure. Interrogatio is merely the conclusio<br />

or syllogism put as a series <strong>of</strong> questions. Cf. Paradoxa 2, with T.D. II. 42 which will show that<br />

interrogatiuncula and conclusiuncula are almost convertible terms. See also M.D.F. I. 39. Nec<br />

dicendi nec disserendi: Cic.'s constant mode <strong>of</strong> denoting the Greek ???t????? and d?a?e?t???;<br />

note on 32. Et oratorum etiam: Man., Lamb. om. etiam, needlessly. In Ad Fam. IX. 25, 3, the two<br />

words even occur without any other word to separate them. For oratorum Pearce conj. rhetorum.<br />

Rhetor, however is not thus used in Cic.'s phil. works. Utramque vim virtutem: strange that<br />

Baiter (esp. after Halm's note) should take Manutius' far-fetched conj. unam for virtutem. Any<br />

power or faculty (vis, d??aµ??) may be called in Gk. a?et?, in Lat virtus. Two passages, D.F. III.<br />

72, De Or. III. 65, will remove all suspicion from the text. Verbis quoque novis: MSS. have<br />

quanquam which however is impossible in such a place in Cic. (cf. M.D.F. V. 68). Ne a nobis<br />

quidem: so all the MSS., but Orelli (after Ernesti) thinking the phrase "arrogantius dictum"<br />

places quidem after accipient. The text is quite right, ne quidem, as Halm remarks, implies no<br />

more than the Germ. auch nicht, cf. also Gk. ??de. Suscipiatur labor: MSS. om. the noun, but it<br />

is added by a later hand in G.<br />

§6. Epicurum, id est si Democritum: for the charge see D.F. I. 17, IV. 13, N.D. I. 73. Id est <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

introduces in Cic. a clause which intensifies and does not merely explain the first clause, exx. in<br />

M.D.F. I. 33. Cum causas rerum efficientium sustuleris: cf. D.F. I. 18, the same charge is brought<br />

by Aristotle against the Atomists, Met. A, 2. Many editors from Lamb. to Halm and Baiter read<br />

efficientis, which would then govern rerum (cf. D.F. V. 81, De Fato, 33, also Gk. p???t????).<br />

But the genitive is merely one <strong>of</strong> definition, the causae are the res efficientes, for which cf. 24<br />

and Topica, 58, proximus locus est rerum efficientium, quae causae appellantur. So Faber,<br />

though less fully. Appellat: i.e. Amafinius, who first so translated at?µ??. Quae cum<br />

contineantur: this reading has far the best MSS. authority, it must be kept, and adhibenda etiam<br />

begins the apodosis. Madvig (Emendationes ad Ciceronis Libros Philosophicos, Hauniae, 1825,<br />

p. 108) tacitly reads continentur without cum, so Orelli and Klotz. Goer. absurdly tries to prop up<br />

the subj. without cum. Quam quibusnam: Durand's em. for quoniam quibusnam <strong>of</strong> the MSS.,<br />

given by Halm and also Baiter. Madv. (Em. p. 108) made a forced defence <strong>of</strong> quoniam, as<br />

marking a rapid transition from one subject to another (here from physics to ethics) like the Gk.<br />

epe?, only one parallel instance, however, was adduced (T.D. III. 14) and the usage probably is<br />

not Latin. Adducere?: The note <strong>of</strong> interrogation is Halm's; thus the whole sentence, so far,<br />

explains the difficulty <strong>of</strong> setting forth the true system <strong>of</strong> physics. If quoniam is read and no break<br />

made at adducere, all after quoniam will refer to ethics, in that case there will be a strange<br />

change <strong>of</strong> subject in passing from quisquam to haec ipsa, both which expressions will be<br />

nominatives to poterit, further, there will be the almost impossible ellipse <strong>of</strong> ars, scientia, or<br />

something <strong>of</strong> the kind after haec ipsa. On every ground the reading <strong>of</strong> Madv. is insupportable.<br />

Quid, haec ipsa: I have added quid to fill up the lacuna left by Halm, who supposes much more<br />

to have fallen out. [The technical philosophical terms contained in this section will be elucidated<br />

later. For the Epicurean ignorance <strong>of</strong> geometry see note on II. 123] Illi enim simpliciter:<br />

http://www.gutenberg.org/files/14970/14970-h/14970-h.htm[1/5/2010 10:31:57 AM]

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