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INDEX.
443
  • Cynic, a, does not wish to hide anything, 250
  • ———, the true, a messenger from Zeus, 250
  • ———, the father of all men and women, 261
  • Cynic's ruling faculty must be pure, 262
  • ——— power of endurance, 263
  • Cynic, the, sent by God as an example, 355
  • Cynism, a man must not attempt it without God, 248
  • ———, on, 248
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  • Daemon, every man's, 48
  • Darkness, men seek, to conceal their acts, 249
  • Death, 81
  • ———, fear of, 54
  • ——— or pain, and the fear of pain or death, 98
  • ———, what a man should be doing when death surprises him, 209
  • ———, what it is, 230, 282
  • ———, exhortation to receive it thankfully, 310
  • ——— and birth, how viewed by a savage tribe, 335
  • ———, the resolution of the matter of the body into the things of which it was composed, 347
  • ———, a man must be found doing something when it comes; and what it should be, 361
  • ———, when it comes, what Epictetus wishes to be able to say to God, 362
  • ——— is the harbour for all, 364
  • ——— should be daily before a man's eyes, 387
  • Demetrius, a Cynic, 75
  • Demonstration, what it is; and contradiction, 183, 190
  • De Morgan's Formal Logic, 28
  • Design, 19
  • Desire of things impossible is foolish, 272
  • Desires, consequences of, 358
  • Desire and aversion, what they are, 380
  • Determinations, right, only should be maintained, 145
  • Deviation, every, comes from something which is in man's nature, 371
  • Dialectic, to be learned last, 291
  • Difficulties, our, are about external things, 360
  • Diodorus Cronus, 162
  • Diogenes, 71, 139, 203, 226, 369, 418
  • ———, when he was asked for letters of recommendation, 106
  • ——— and Philip, 250
  • ——— in a fever, 256
  • ———, a friend of Antisthenes, 257
  • ——— and the Cynics of Epictetus' time, 260
  • ———, his personal appearance, 261
  • ———, how he loved mankind, 278
  • Diogenes' opinion on freedom, 298
  • Diogenes and Antisthenes, 312
  • ———, free, 317, 318
  • ——— and Heraclitus, 385
  • Dion of Prusa, 266
  • Dirty persons, not capable of being improved, 370
  • Disputation or discussion, 133
  • Divination, 116, 393
  • Diviner, internal, 116
  • Doctors, travelling, 280
  • Domitian banishes philosophers from Rome, 71
  • Door, the open, 72, 99
  • Duty, what is a man's, 112 410
  • ——— to God and to our neighbour,
  • Duties of life discovered from names, 127
  • ——— of marriage, begetting children and other, 216
  • ——— are measured by relations (σχέσεσι), 392
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  • Education, Epictetus knew what it
  • ——— ought to be, 53, 58
  • ———, what it is, 67
  • ———, what ought to be the purpose of, 245