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Passages similar to: Stromata (Miscellanies) — Chapter III: Against the Sophists.
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Christian Mysticism
Stromata (Miscellanies)
Chapter III: Against the Sophists. (1)
There is a great crowd of this description: some of them, enslaved to pleasures and willing to disbelieve, laugh at the truth which is worthy of all reverence, making sport of its barbarousness. Some others, exalting themselves, endeavour to discover calumnious objections to our words, furnishing captious questions, hunters out of paltry sayings, practisers of miserable artifices, wranglers, dealers in knotty points, as that Abderite says: "For mortals' tongues are glib, and on them are many speeches; And a wide range for words of all sorts in this place and that." And - "Of whatever sort the word you have spoken, of the same sort you must hear."
Greek
Book VII (539)
He cannot. And from being a keeper of the law he is converted into a breaker of it? Unquestionably. Now all this is very natural in students of philos...
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Greek
Book VI (499)
Who can be at enmity with one who loves them, who that is himself gentle and free from envy will be jealous of one in whom there is no jealousy? Nay, ...
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Greek
Book VI (487)
Here Adeimantus interposed and said: To these statements, Socrates, no one can offer a reply; but when you talk in this way, a strange feeling passes...
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Greek
Book VI (498)
You are speaking of a time which is not very near. Rather, I replied, of a time which is as nothing in comparison with eternity. Nevertheless, I do no...
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Greek
Book VI (489)
Yes. And the reason why the good are useless has now been explained? True. Then shall we proceed to show that the corruption of the majority is also u...
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Christian Mysticism
Chapter 56: How they be deceived that lean more to the curiosity of natural wit, and of clergy learned in the school of men than to the common doctrine and counsel of Holy Church (1)
SOME there be, that although they be not deceived with this error as it is set here, yet for pride and curiosity of natural wit and letterly cunning...
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Greek
Book VI (498)
At present, I said, the students of philosophy are quite young; beginning when they are hardly past childhood, they devote only the time saved from...
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Greek
Book VI (495)
There can be no doubt of it. And how can one who is thus circumstanced ever become a philosopher? Impossible. Then were we not right in saying that...
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Hermetic
Section XIV (1)
[Asclepius] Who, therefore, will the men be after us ? [Trismegistus] They will be led astray by sophists’ cleverness, and turned from True...
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Greek
Book VI (494)
Falling at his feet, they will make requests to him and do him honour and flatter him, because they want to get into their hands now, the power which...
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