[433] For relation, see vi. 1.6–9.
[434] For Aristotle says that an accident is something which exists in an object without being one of the distinctive characteristics of its essence.
[435] In this book Plotinos studies time and eternity comparatively; first considering Plato's views in the Timaeus, and then the views of Pythagoras (1), Epicurus (9), the Stoics (7), and Aristotle (4, 8, 12).
[436] The bracketed numbers are those of the Teubner edition; the unbracketed, those of the Didot edition.
[437] See ii. 9.6.
[438] As thought Plato, in his Timaeus, p. 37, Cary, 14.
[439] Stobaeus. Ecl. Phys. i. 248.
[440] A category, see vi. 2.7.
[441] See vi. 2.7.
[442] Or, with Mueller, "therefore, in a permanent future."