ἱστορίαι Historiai
D.L. 2.122-124 Lives of Eminent Philosophers, Volume I (Books I-V), Diogenes Laertius; served verbatim
Of Poetry. On Good Hating. On Love. On Philosophy. On Knowledge. On Music. On Poetry. What is the Beautiful On Teaching. On the Art of Conversation Of Judging. Of Being. Of Number. On Diligence. On Efficiency. On Greed. On Pretentiousness On the Beautiful Others are: On Deliberation. On Reason, or On Expediency. On Doing Wl. He was the first, so we are told, who introduced the Socratic dialogues as a form of conversation. When Pericles promised to support him and urged him to come to him, his reply was, “ I will not part with my free speech for money.” There was another Simon, who wrote treatises On Rhetoric ; another, a physician, in the time of Seleucus Nicanor ; and a third who was a sculptor.

The Greek stands ready in the workroom; the English is served. Both faces will read together.

← D.L. 2.121-122 contents D.L. 2.124 →

Filed here — the addresses this episode attests; counted by the house’s first pass
Nicanor — a candidate entry Pericles — a life

Lives of Eminent Philosophers, Volume I (Books I-V), Diogenes Laertius — translated by R. D. Hicks, 1925
Apparatus shelf — Diogenes Laertius, Lives of Eminent Philosophers, vol. I (R. D. Hicks translation, Loeb L184) · R. D. Hicks, Loeb Classical Library, London: William Heinemann / New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons, MCMXXV (1925)
license: public-domain (US: published 1925, pre-1930 — the MCMXXV title page verified by the 2026-07-08 acquisition lane, pin in ops/sources/MANIFEST.md; only the English rectos are served, Hicks's translation)