[477] Lag. p. 586. 35 ff.

[478] Ib. p. 469. 7.

[479] Sextus Math. xi. 51–58. Crantor was one of the Old Academy, and wrote a commentary on the Timaeus, as well as some ethical works, of which that “On Mourning” seems to have been most in vogue. The goods of the soul were placed in the following order of merit by him:—Virtue, Health, Pleasure, Riches.—Vide Zeller, ii. 696.

[480] Lag. p. 487, 488.

[481] P. 492 (Cassiopoeia).

[482] P. 493.

[483] Vide Lag. pp. 457 ff.

[484] Vide supra, ch. 2. and cf. Cabala, Lag. 578. 35.

[485] A reminiscence of Aristotle’s φρόνησις.

[486] Lag. 458. 459.