< Page:Discourses of Epictetus.djvu
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CONTENTS.
ix
CHAP. | PAGE | |
XXI. | Of Inconsistency | 173 |
XXII. | Of Friendship | 176 |
XXIII. | On the Power of Speaking | 182 |
XXIV. | To (or against) a Person who was one of those who were not valued (esteemed) by him | 188 |
XXV. | That Logic is necessary | 192 |
XXVI. | What is the Property of Error | 192 |
BOOK III. | ||
I. | Of Finery in Dress | 195 |
II. | In what a Man ought to be exercised who has made Proficiency; and that we neglect the Chief Things | 201 |
III. | What is the Matter on which a Good Man should be employed, and in what we ought chiefly to employ ourselves | 204 |
IV. | Against a Person who showed his Partizanship in an unseemly way in a Theatre | 207 |
V. | Against those who on account of Sickness go away Home | 209 |
VI. | Miscellaneous | 211 |
VII. | To the Administrator of the Free Cities who was an Epicurean | 213 |
VIII. | How we must exercise ourselves against Appearances (φαντασίαι) | 218 |
IX. | To a certain Rhetorician who was going up to Rome on a Suit | 219 |
X. | In what Manner we ought to bear Sickness | 222 |
XI. | Certain Miscellaneous Matters | 225 |
XII. | About Exercise | 225 |
XIII. | What Solitude is, and what Kind of Person a Solitary Man is | 228 |
XIV. | Certain Miscellaneous Matters | 233 |
XV. | That we ought to proceed with Circumspection to Everything | 231 |
XVI. | That we ought with Caution to enter into Familiar Intercourse with Men | 236 |
XVII. | Of Providence | 238 |
XVIII. | That we ought not to be disturbed by any News | 239 |
XIX. | What is the Condition of a Common Kind of Man and of a Philosopher | 210 |
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