Page:Discourses of Epictetus.djvu/504

450 *Rule, a, the value of, 86
 * Rules, by which things are tried, must be fixed; and then the rules may be applied, 133
 * Rules, certain, should be in readiness, 373
 * Sacred are the words by themselves, men say, 246
 * Sarpedon, son of Zeus, 81
 * Saturnalia, 74, 80, 302.
 * Savigny on free will, 55
 * Sceptics, the, deny the knowledge and certainty of things, 81
 * Scholasticus, a, 41
 * School, who come to the, for the purpose of being improved? 174
 * , the, with what mind it ought to be entered, 175
 * , philosopher's, a surgery, 268
 * Secret matters require fidelity and corresponding opinions, 377
 * Seeming to be is not sufficient, 132
 * Self-knowledge,, 256
 * Self-love, self-regard, 61
 * Sickness, how we ought to bear, 222, 223
 * Signal to quit life, God's, 89
 * , the, to retire, 99
 * , the, to retreat, 293
 * Simplicius, 1
 * , commentary of, on the Encheiridion, 390, 404
 * Slave, a, why he wishes to be set free, 298
 * , a, does not secure happiness by being made free, 298, 299
 * Socrates, 12, 30, 33, 41, 53, 76, 99, 101, 103, 104, 110, 115, 139, 160, 227, 228, 233, 237, 251, 267, 268, 284, 354, 400, 403
 * and his treatment by the Athenians, 88
 * preferred death to saying and doing things unworthy of him, 90
 * and the Phaedon of Plato, 95
 * taught that we must not do wrong for wrong, 129
 * Socrates, the method of, 134, 135
 * knew by what the rational soul is moved, 193
 * , what he says to his judges, 197
 * Socrates did not profess to teach virtue, 210
 * , imitators of, 217
 * loved his children, how, 277
 * , Diogenes, and Cleanthes, as examples, 292
 * , what he taught, 299
 * , heroic acts of, 319
 * , a brave soldier and a philosopher, 319
 * , remembrance of what he did or said in his life, even more useful now, 320
 * in his prison wrote a hymn to Apollo, 329
 * avoided quarrels, 333
 * , how he managed his household, 338
 * , why he washed seldom, 369
 * opinion on divination, 394
 * and Diogenes, 151, 247, 275, 349, 358
 * Solitary, he is not, who sees the great objects of nature, 231
 * Solitude, on, 228
 * Solon's wise sayings, 421
 * Sophists, against the, 244
 * Sorrow of another, how far Epictetus would endeavour to stop, 272
 * Souls, human, parts of God, 47
 * Soul, body and things external relate to man's, 213
 * and body, severance of, no harm in the, 224
 * , existence of the, independent of the body, perhaps not taught by Epictetus, 282
 * , the probable opinion of Epictetus on the, 347
 * , the impurity of the, is her own bad judgments (opinions), 367
 * Speaking, the power of, 182
 * Spirit,, 182
 * Sportulae, 363
 * Sportulae, 363