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Plutarch, Symposiacs ⎗←→⎘
Table of Contents
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Whether at Table It is Allowable to Philosophize?
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Whether the Entertainer Should Seat the Guests, or Let Every Man Take His Own Place.
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Upon What Account is the Place at the Table Called Consular Esteemed Honorable.
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What Manner of Man Should a Director of a Feast Be?
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Why It is Commonly Said that Love Makes a Man a Poet.
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Whether Alexander Was a Great Drinker.
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Why Old Men Love Pure Wine.
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Why Old Men Read Best at a Distance.
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Why Fresh Water Washes Clothes Better Than Salt.
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Why at Athens the Chorus of the Tribe Aeantis Was Never Determined to Be the Last.
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What, As Xenophon Intimates, are the Most Agreeable Questions and Most Pleasant Raillery at an Entertainment?
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Why in Autumn Men Have Better Stomachs Than in Other Seasons of the Year.
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Which Was First the Bird or the Egg?
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Whether or No Wrestling is the Oldest Exercise.
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Why, in Reckoning Up Different Kinds of Exercises, Homer Puts Cuffing First, Wrestling Next, and Racing Last.
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Why Fir-Trees, Pine-Trees, and the Like Will Not Be Grafted Upon.
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About the Fish Called Remora or Echeneis.
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Why They Say Those Horses Called [Greek Omitted] are Very Mettlesome.
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Why the Flesh of Sheep Bitten by Wolves is Sweeter Than that of Others, and the Wool More Apt to Breed Lice.
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Whether the Ancients, by Providing Every One His Mess, Did Best or We, Who Set Many to the Same Dish.
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Whether It is Fitting to Wear Chaplets of Flowers at Table.
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Whether Ivy is of a Hot or Cold Nature.
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Why Women are Hardly, Old Men Easily, Foxed.
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Whether the Temper of Women is Colder or Hotter Than that of Men.
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Whether Wine is Potentially Cold.
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Which is the Fittest Time for a Man to Know His Wife?
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Why New Wine Doth Not Inebriate As Soon As Other.
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Why Do Those that are Stark Drunk Seem Not So Much Debauched As Those that are But Half Foxed?
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What is the Meaning of the Saying: Drink Either Five or Three, But Not Four?
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Why Flesh Stinks Sooner When Exposed to the Moon, Than to the Sun.
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Whether Different Sorts of Food, or One Single Dish Fed Upon at Once, is More Easily Digested.
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Why Mushrooms are Thought to Be Produced by Thunder, and Why It is Believed that Men Asleep are Never Thunderstruck.
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Why Men Usually Invite Many Guests to a Wedding Supper.
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Whether the Sea or Land Affords Better Food.
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Whether the Jews Abstained From Swine's Flesh Because They Worshipped that Creature, or Because They Had an Antipathy Against It.
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What God is Worshipped by the Jews.
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Why the Days Which Have the Names of the Planets are Not Arranged According to the Order of the Planets, But the Contrary. There is Added a Discourse on the Position of the Sun.
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Why Signet-Rings are Worn Chiefly on the Fourth Finger.
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Whether We Ought to Carry in Our Seal-Rings Effigies of Gods, or Those of Wise Personages.
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Why Women Do Not Eat the Middle Part of Lettuce.
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Why We Take Delight in Hearing Those that Represent the Passions of Men Angry or Sorrowful, and Yet Cannot Without Concern Behold Those Who are Really So Affected?
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That the Prize for Poets at the Games Was Ancient.
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Why Was the Pine Counted Sacred to Neptune and Bacchus? And Why at First the Conqueror in the Isthmian Games Was Crowned With a Garland of Pine, Afterwards with Parsley, and Now Again with Pine.
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Concerning that Expression in Homer, [Greek Omitted] ("Iliad," ix. 203.)
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Concerning Those that Invite Many to a Supper.
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What is the Reason that the Same Room Which at the Beginning of a Supper Seems Too Narrow Appears Wide Enough Afterwards.
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Concerning Those that are Said to Bewitch.
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Why Homer Calls the Apple-Tree [Greek Omitted], And Empedocles Calls Apples [GREEK OMITTED].
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What is the Reason that the Fig-Tree, Being Itself of a Very Sharp and Bitter Taste, Bears So Sweet Fruit?
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What are Those that are Said to Be [Greek Omitted], And Why Homer Calls Salt Divine?
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What is the Reason that Those that are Fasting are More Thirsty Than Hungry?
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Whether Want of Nourishment Causeth Hunger and Thirst or the Change in the Figures of the Pores.
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What is the Reason that Hunger is Allayed by Drinking, But Thirst Increased by Eating?
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What is the Reason that a Bucket of Water Drawn Out of a Well, If It Stands All Night in the Air that is in the Well, Is, More Cold in the Morning Than the Rest of the Water?
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What is the Reason that Pebble Stones and Leaden Bullets Thrown Into the Water Make It More Cold?
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What is the Reason that Men Preserve Snow by Covering It with Chaff and Cloths?
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Whether Wine Ought to Be Strained or Not.
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What is the Cause of Bulimy or the Greedy Disease?
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Why Does Homer Appropriate a Certain Peculiar Epithet to Each Particular Liquid, and Call Oil Only Liquid?
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What is the Reason that Flesh of Sacrificed Beasts, After Being Hung a While Upon a Fig-Tree is More Tender Than Before?
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Against Those Who Find Fault with Plato for Saying that Drink Passeth Through the Lungs.
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What Humored Man is He that Plato Calls [Greek omitted]? And Why Do Those Seeds that Fall on the Oxen's Horns Become [Greek omitted]?
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Why the Middle of Wine, the Top of Oil, and the Bottom of Honey is Best.
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What Was, the Reason of that Custom of the Ancient Romans to Remove the Table Before All the Meat Was Eaten, and Not to Put Out the Lamp?
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That We Ought Carefully to Preserve Ourselves From Pleasures Arising From Bad Music and How It May Be Done.
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Concerning Those Guests that are Called Shadows, and Whether Being Invited by Some to Go to Another's House, They Ought To Go; and When, and to Whom.
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Whether Flute-Girls are to Be Allowed at a Feast?
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What Sort of Music is Fittest for an Entertainment?
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That It Was the Custom of the Greeks As Well As Persians to Debate of State Affairs at Their Entertainments.
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Whether They Did Well Who Deliberated Midst Their Cups.
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Concerning Those Days in Which Some Famous Men Were Born; and Also Concerning the Generation of the Gods.
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What is Plato's Meaning, When He Says that God Always Plays the Geometer?
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Why Noises are Better Heard in the Night Than the Day.
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Why, When in the Sacred Games One Sort of Garland Was Given in One, and Another in Another, the Palm Was Common to All. And Why They Call the Great Dates [Greek omitted].
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Why Those that Sail Upon the Nile Take Up the Water They are to Use Before Day.
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Concerning Those Who Come Late to an Entertainment; and From Whence These Words, [Greek omitted] and, [Greek omitted] are Derived.
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Concerning Pythagoras's Symbols, in Which He Forbids Us to Receive a Swallow Into Our House, and Bids Us As Soon As We are Risen to Ruffle the Bedclothes.
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Why the Pythagoreans Command Fish Not to Be Eaten, More Strictly Than Other Animals.
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Whether There Can Be New Diseases, and How Caused.
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Why We Give Least Credit to Dreams in Autumn.
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Concerning Verses Seasonably and Unseasonably Applied.
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What is the Reason that Alpha is Placed First in the Alphabet, and What is the Proportion Between the Number of Vowels And Semi-Vowels?
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Which of Venus's Hands Diomedes Wounded.
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Why Plato Says that Ajax's Soul Came to Draw Her Lot in the Twentieth Place in Hell.
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What is Signified by the Fable About the Defeat of Neptune? And Also, Why Do the Athenians Omit the Second Day of the Month Boedromion?
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Why the Accords in Music are Separated Into Three.
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Wherein the Intervals Melodious Differ From Those that are Harmonic.
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What is the Cause of Accord? And Also, Why, When Two Accordant Strings are Touched Together, is the Melody Ascribed to The Base?
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Why, When the Ecliptic Periods of the Sun and the Moon are Equal in Number, the Moon Appears Oftener Eclipsed Than the Sun.
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That We Continue Not Always the Same, in Regard of the Deflux of Our Substance.
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Is It More Probable that the Number of the Stars is Even or Odd?
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A Moot-Point Out of the Third Book of Homer's Iliads.
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Some Observations About the Number of the Muses, Not Commonly Known.
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That There are Three Parts in Dancing: [Greek omitted], Motion, [Greek omitted], Gesture, and [Greek omitted], Representation.
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What Each of Those is and What is Common to Both Poetry and Dancing.