[249] Cp. Haigh, The Attic Theatre, p. 315. In the same way Ktesilochos, the pupil of Apelles, could with impunity make Zeus ridiculous by exhibiting him pictorially in child-bed, bringing forth Dionysos (Pliny, Hist. Nat. xxxv, 40. § 15). [↑]
[251] Cp. Benn, Philos. of Greece, p. 171. [↑]
[252] Zeller, Socrates and the Socratic Schools, Eng. tr. 3rd ed. p. 227: Hegel, as there cited Grote, Plato, ed. 1885, i, 423. [↑]
[253] Cp. Owen, Evenings with the Skeptics, i, 181 sq., 291, 293, 299, etc. [↑]
[254] Grote, History, i, 334; Xenophon, Memorabilia, i, 1, §§ 6–9. [↑]
[255] Cp. Benn. The Philosophy of the Greeks, 1898, p. 160. [↑]
[256] Grote, i, 334–35; Hippocrates, De Aeribus, Aquis, Locis, c. 22 (49). [↑]
[257] Plato, Phædrus, Jowett’s tr. 3rd ed. i. 434; Grote, History, i, 393. [↑]
[258] Compare, however, the claim made for him, as promoting “objectivity,” by Prof. Drews, Gesch. des Monismus im Altertum, 1913. P. 213. [↑]