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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Pliny the Elder, The Natural History (ed. John Bostock, M.D., F.R.S., H.T. Riley, Esq., B.A.). Search the whole document.
Found 15 total hits in 4 results.
Cicero (New York, United States) (search for this): book 2, chapter 5
Phil (Kentucky, United States) (search for this): book 2, chapter 5
CHAP. 5. (7.)—OF GODIt is remarked by Enfield, Hist. of Phil. ii. 131, that "with respect
to philosophical opinions, Pliny did not rigidly adhere to any sect....
He reprobates the Epicurean tenet of an infinity of worlds; favours the
Pythagorean notion of the harmony of the spheres; speaks of the universe
as God, after the manner of the Stoics, and sometimes seems to pass over
into the field of the Sceptics. For the most part, however, he leans to
the doctrine of Epicurus.".
I consider it, therefore, an indication of human weakness
to inquire into the figure and form of God. For whatever
God be, if there be any other God"Si alius est Deus quam sol," Alexandre in Lem. i. 230. Or rather,
if there be any God distinct from the world; for the latter part of the
sentence can scarcely apply to the sun. Poinsinet and Ajasson, however,
adopt the same opinion with M. Alexandre; they translate the passage,
"s'il en est autre que le soleil," i. 17 and ii. 11., and wherever he exists, he is
all s
Enfield (Connecticut, United States) (search for this): book 2, chapter 5
CHAP. 5. (7.)—OF GODIt is remarked by Enfield, Hist. of Phil. ii. 131, that "with respect
to philosophical opinions, Pliny did not rigidly adhere to any sect....
He reprobates the Epicurean tenet of an infinity of worlds; favours the
Pythagorean notion of the harmony of the spheres; speaks of the universe
as God, after the manner of the Stoics, and sometimes seems to pass over
into the field of the Sceptics. For the most part, however, he leans to
the doctrine of Epicurus.".
I consider it, therefore, an indication of human weakness
to inquire into the figure and form of God. For whatever
God be, if there be any other God"Si alius est Deus quam sol," Alexandre in Lem. i. 230. Or rather,
if there be any God distinct from the world; for the latter part of the
sentence can scarcely apply to the sun. Poinsinet and Ajasson, however,
adopt the same opinion with M. Alexandre; they translate the passage,
"s'il en est autre que le soleil," i. 17 and ii. 11., and wherever he exists, he is
all
Pliny (Ohio, United States) (search for this): book 2, chapter 5
CHAP. 5. (7.)—OF GODIt is remarked by Enfield, Hist. of Phil. ii. 131, that "with respect
to philosophical opinions, Pliny did not rigidly adhere to any sect....
He reprobates the Epicurean tenet of an infinity of worlds; favours the
Pythagorean notion of the harmony of the spheres; speaks of the universe
as God, after the manner of the Stoics, and sometimes seems to pass over
into the field of the Sceptics. For the most part, however, he leans to
the doctrine of Epicurus.".
I consider it, therefore, an indication of human weakness
to inquire into the figure and form of God. For whatever
God be, if there be any other God"Si alius est Deus quam sol," Alexandre in Lem. i. 230. Or rather,
if there be any God distinct from the world; for the latter part of the
sentence can scarcely apply to the sun. Poinsinet and Ajasson, however,
adopt the same opinion with M. Alexandre; they translate the passage,
"s'il en est autre que le soleil," i. 17 and ii. 11., and wherever he exists, he is
all