Page:Discourses of Epictetus.djvu/503

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INDEX.
449
  • Philosophers' rules applied to practice, 328
  • Piety and a man's interest must be in the same thing, 81
  • ———, and sanctity are good things, 170
  • ——— to the Gods, what it is, 392
  • ——— and a man's interest, how they are connected, 393
  • Pirate, how treated by a wise and good man, 427
  • Pittacus' teaching, that forgiveness is better than revenge, 419
  • Plato and Hippocrates, 28
  • ——— says that every soul is unwillingly deprived of the truth, 83
  • Plato's saying, 160
  • ——— doctrine that every mind is deprived of truth unwillingly, 181
  • ——— Polity read by the women in Rome, 417
  • Pleasure, nature of, 416
  • Polemon and Xenocrates, 196
  • Polybius on the Roman state, 170
  • Polynices and Eteocles, 393
  • Poor, if, be content and happy, 410
  • Poverty and wealth, 411, 430
  • Practice in hearing, necessary for those who go to hear philosophers, 189
  • Praecognitions (προλήψεις), adaptation of, to particular cases, 66, 67
  • Preconception, πρόληψις, 8
  • Preconceptions, how fitted to the several things, 131
  • ———, how to be adapted to their correspondent objects, 154
  • Principle, the ruling, of a bad man cannot be trusted, 180
  • Principles, general; and their application, 77
  • ——— ought always to be in readiness, 105
  • Principle, the, on which depends every movement of man and God, 205
  • Principles, he who has great, knows his own powers, 357
  • Procrastination dangerous, 374
  • Προαιρετική δύναμις, or προαίρεσις, in the larger sense, 183
  • Protagoras and Hippias, 211
  • Providence, 19, 41, 50, 51
  • ———, πρόνοια, 141
  • ———, on; προνοίας, περί, 238
  • Publicani, εικοστώναι, 298
  • Purity, cleanliness, a man is distinguished from other animals by, 366
  • Pyrrho, 80
  • ——— and the Academics, 81
  • Pyrrho's saying, 424
  • Pythagoras' golden verses, 222
  • Pythagoras, 344
  • Pythian God, the, 394
  •  
  • Quails, how used by the Greeks, 287
  •  
  • Reading, Bp. Butler's remarks on, 326
  • ———, what ought to be the purpose of, 326, 331
  • Reason; reasoning, the purpose of, 24, 52, 64
  • ———, power of communing with God, 30
  • ———, how it contemplates itself, 63
  • ——— not given to man for the purpose of misery, 271
  • Reasoning, 26
  • Recitations, houses lent for, 267
  • ——— at Rome, 396
  • Reformation of manners produced by the Gospel, 149
  • Relations, three, between a man and other things, 141
  • Resurrection of Christ; and Paul's doctrine of man's resurrection, 283
  • ——— of the body, various opinions of divines of the English Church on, 284
  • Riches and happiness, 409
  • Rings, golden, worn by the Roman Equites, 299
  • Rome, dependents wait on great men at, 331
  • Rufus, C. Musonius, 7, 27, 34, 212, 236, 268