Plutarch's Moralia (Loeb)

Volume I

 * Preface
 * Traditional Order of the Books of the Moralia
 * The Education of Children
 * How the Young Man Should Study Poetry
 * On Listening to Lectures
 * How to Tell a Flatterer from a Friend
 * How a Man May Become Aware of His Progress in Virtue

Volume II

 * How to Profit by One's Enemies
 * On Having Many Friends
 * Chance
 * Virtue and Vice
 * A Letter of Condolence to Apollonius
 * Advice about Keeping Well
 * Advice to Bride and Groom
 * The Dinner of the Seven Wise Men
 * Superstition

Volume III

 * Sayings of Kings and Commanders
 * Sayings of Romans
 * Sayings of Spartans
 * Ancient Customs of the Spartans
 * Sayings of the Spartan Women
 * Bravery of Women

Volume IV

 * The Roman Questions
 * The Greek Questions
 * Greek and Roman Parallel Stories
 * On the Fortune of the Romans
 * On the Fortune or the Virtue of Alexander
 * Were the Athenians More Famous in War or in Wisdom?

Volume V

 * Isis and Osiris
 * On the E at Delphi
 * The Oracles at Delphi No Longer Given in Verse
 * The Obsolescence of Oracles

Volume VI

 * Can Virtue Be Taught?
 * On Moral Virtue
 * On the Control of Anger
 * On Tranquility of Mind
 * On Brotherly Love
 * On Affection for Offspring
 * Whether Vice Be Sufficient to Cause Unhappiness
 * Whether Affections of the Soul Are Worse than Those of the Body
 * Concerning Talkativeness
 * On Being a Busybody

Volume VII

 * On Love of Wealth
 * On Compliancy
 * On Envy and Hate
 * On Praising Oneself Inoffensively
 * On the Delays of Divine Vengeance
 * On Fate
 * On the Sign of Socrates
 * On Exile
 * Consolation to His Wife

Volume VIII

 * Table-Talk, Books I–VI

Volume IX

 * Table-Talk, Books VII–IX
 * The Dialogue on Love

Volume X

 * Love Stories
 * That a Philosopher Ought to Converse Especially with Men in Power
 * To an Uneducated Ruler
 * Whether an Old Man Should Engage in Public Affairs
 * Precepts of Statecraft
 * On Monarchy, Democracy, and Oligarchy
 * That We Ought Not to Borrow
 * Lives of the Ten Orators
 * Summary of a Comparison Between Aristophanes and Menander

Volume XI

 * On the Malice of Herodotus
 * Causes of Natural Phenomena

Volume XII

 * Concerning the Face Which Appears in the Orb of the Moon
 * On the Principle of Cold
 * Whether Fire or Water Is More Useful
 * Whether Land or Sea Animals Are Cleverer
 * Appendix: Zoological Terms
 * Beasts Are Rational
 * On the Eating of Flesh

Volume XIII

 * Platonic Questions
 * On the Generation of the Soul in the Timaeus
 * Epitome of 'On the Generation of the Soul in the Timaeus'
 * On Stoic Self-Contradictions
 * The Stoics Talk More Paradoxically than the Poets
 * Against the Stoics on Common Conceptions

Volume XIV

 * That Epicurus Actually Makes a Pleasant Life Impossible
 * Reply to Colotes in Defence of the Other Philosophers
 * Is 'Live Unknown' a Wise Precept?
 * On Music

Volume XV

 * Fragments

Volume XVI

 * Index