[60] See Plutarch: Adversus Coloten, 118 C; and Stobæus: Anthologion, v. 119, and iii. 84. (Vol. i. pp. 94 and 104.—Tauchnitz Edition.)

[61] Plutarch: De Exilio, 604 A.

[62] Diogenes Laertius, ii. 6.

[63] Alex. Aphrod: De Fato, ii., quoted by Ritter and Preller, p. 28. Cf. Pseudo-Plutarch: De Placitis Philosophorum, 885 C, D.

[64] Aristotle: Metaphysics, i. 3.

[65] Ritter and Preller, p. 52.—Cf. Ueberweg on Leucippus and Democritus, “The ethical end of man is happiness, which is attained through justice and culture.”

[66] Magna Moralia, i. 1, and i. 34. Cf. Aristotle: Eth. Nich., v. 5.—“The Pythagoreans defined the just to be simply retaliation—and Rhadamanthus (in Æschylus) appears to assert that justice is this: ‘that the punishment will be equitable when a man suffers the same thing as he has done.’” (Thomas Taylor’s translation of The Works of Aristotle.)

[67] Ueberweg, p. 47. See also citations in last note.

[68] How fruitful, the whole Attic Tragedy demonstrates.

[69] Ritter and Preller, p. 79 (from Clemens Alexandrinus).