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The Essays of Michel de Montaigne Online
Aristippus
In the Essays of Michel de Montaigne
There are 15 tagged instances of Aristippus in 10 chapters.
Distribution of tagged instances of Aristippus per chapter.
- Book 1 · Chapter 25 · ¶ 35
On the Education of Children si quid Socrates aut Aristippus contra morem et consuetudinem fecerunt, idem sibi ne arbitretur licere:
- Book 1 · Chapter 25 · ¶ 82
On the Education of Children Omnis Aristippum decuit color, et status, et res.
- Book 1 · Chapter 25 · ¶ 106
On the Education of Children Or let him borrow this pleasant evasion from Aristippus:
- Book 1 · Chapter 27 · ¶ 5
On Friendship There have been great philosophers who have made nothing of this tie of nature, as Aristippus for one, who being pressed home about the affection he owed to his children, as being come out of him, presently fell to spit, saying, that this also came out of him, and that we also breed worms and lice;
- Book 1 · Chapter 40 · ¶ 19
The Taste of Good and Bad Things Depends Mostly on the Opinion We Have of Them And what about pain which Aristippus, Hieronymus, and most wise souls have agreed was the ultimate evil?
- Book 2 · Chapter 11 · ¶ 9
On Cruelty Aristippus, to one that was lamenting this death:
- Book 2 · Chapter 11 · ¶ 21
On Cruelty Aristippus instituted opinions so bold in favor of pleasure and riches as set all the philosophers against him:
- Book 2 · Chapter 12 · ¶ 627
Apology for Raymond Sebond ” but Aristippus accepted it with this answer, “That no accoutrement could corrupt a chaste courage.
- Book 2 · Chapter 12 · ¶ 627
Apology for Raymond Sebond ” to whom Aristippus replied, “And if thou knewest how to live among men, thou wouldst not be washing cabbages.
- Book 2 · Chapter 16 · ¶ 22
On Glory in quiet, not according to Metrodorus, or Arcesilaus, or Aristippus, but according to myself.
- Book 2 · Chapter 17 · ¶ 87
On Presumption Aristippus was wont to say, that the principal benefit he had extracted from philosophy was that he spoke freely and openly to all.
- Book 3 · Chapter 5 · ¶ 89
On Some Verses of Virgil Of what Aristippus in his Of Former Delights?
- Book 3 · Chapter 5 · ¶ 227
On Some Verses of Virgil For, as in the story of Aristippus, who, speaking to some young men who blushed to see him go into a scandalous house, said “the vice is in not coming out, not in going in,” let her who has no care of her conscience have yet some regard to her reputation;
- Book 3 · Chapter 9 · ¶ 172
On Vanity Aristippus loved to live as a stranger in all places.
- Book 3 · Chapter 13 · ¶ 143
On Experience Aristippus maintained nothing but the body, as if we had no soul;