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THE HYMNS OF ORPHEUS, 12mo. 2s. 6d. sewn. PLOTINUS ON THE BEAUTIFUL, 12mo. 1s. 6d.

sewn.

PROCLUS ON EUCLID, and his Elements of Theology, in which the principal Dogmas of a Theology coeval with the Universe are unfolded. 2 vols. 4to. 21. 10s. boards.

FOUR DIALOGUES OF PLATO, viz. the Cratylus, Phædo, Parmenides, and Timæus, 8vo. 7s. 6d. boards.

THE PHÆDRUS OF PLATO, 4to. 6s. boards.

SALLUST ON THE GODS AND THE WORLD. 8vo. 3s. boards.

TWO ORATIONS OF THE EMPEROR JULIAN, one to the Sovereign Sun, and the other to the Mother of the Gods. 8vo. 3s. boards.

FIVE BOOKS OF PLOTINUS, viz. on Felicity; on the Nature and Origin of Evil; on Providence; on Nature. Contemplation, and the One; and on the Descent of the Soul. 8vo. 5s. boards.

PAUSANIAS'S DESCRIPTION OF GREECE, with copious Notes, in which much of the Mythology of the Greeks is unfolded from genuine ancient sources. 3 vols. 8vo. 18s. boards.

ARISTOTLE'S METAPHYSICS, with copious Notes, in which the Platonic Doctrine of Ideas is largely unfolded. 4to. 21. 28. boards.

THE DISSERTATIONS OF MAXIMUS TYRIUS. 2 vols. 12mo. 12s. boards.

THE WORKS OF PLATO, in which the Substance is given of nearly all the existing Greek MSS., Commentaries and Scholia on Plato, and his most abstruse Dogmas are unfolded. 5 vols. 4to. 10l. 10s. boards.

THE WORKS OF ARISTOTLE, accompanied with copious Elucidations from the best of his Greek Commentators, viz. Alexander Aphrodisiensis, Syrianus, Ammonius Hermæas, Priscianus, Olympiodorus, Simplicius, &c. 9 vols. 4to. 471. 5s. boards.

THE SIX BOOKS OF PROCLUS ON THE THEOLOGY OF PLATO, to which a Seventh Book is added by the Translator, in order to supply the deficiency of another Book on this subject, which was written by Proclus, but since lost. Also Proclus's Elements of Theology. 2 vols. 4to. 5l. 10s. boards.

TRANSLATIONS, BY T. TAYLOR.

SELECT WORKS OF PLOTINUS, and Extracts from Synesius on Providence. 8vo. 18s. boards.

IAMBLICHUS' LIFE OF PYTHAGORAS, or Pythagoric Life. Accompanied by Fragments of the Ethical Writings of certain Pythagoreans, in the Doric Dialect; and a Collection of Pythagoric Sentences from Stobæus and others, which are omitted by Gale in his Opuscula Mythologica, and have not been noticed by any Editor. 8vo. 14s. boards.

THE COMMENTARIES OF PROCLUS ON THE TIMEUS OF PLATO. In the translation of this admirable work, which is most deservedly intitled A TREASURY OF ALL ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY, Upwards of eleven hundred necessary emendations of the text are given by the Translator. The mathematical also, as well as the philosophical reader, will find these Commentaries replete with information of a most interesting nature, which has hitherto escaped the notice of all modern writers; such as that the Atlantic Ocean, beyond the Straits of Gibraltar, was marshy and full of breakers in the time of Plato and Aristotle, owing to the subsidency of the Atlantic Island; that the fixed stars have periodic revolutions on their axis, unknown to us; that every planet has a multitude of satellites; and many other equally admirable and interesting particulars, 2 vols. royal 4to. 5l. 5s. boards.

IAMBLICHUS ON THE MYSTERIES OF THE EGYPTIANS, CHALDEANS, AND ASSYRIANS. 8vo. 16s.

POLITICAL PYTHAGORIC FRAGMENTS, and ETHICAL FRAGMENTS OF HIEROCLES, preserved by Stobæus. 8vo. 6s.

FROM THE LATIN.

THE FABLE OF CUPID AND PSYCHE FROM APULEIUS, with an Introduction explaining the Meaning of the Fable, and proving that it alludes to the Descent of the Soul. 8vo. 5s. boards.

PROCLUS ON PROVIDENCE AND FATE; Extracts from his Treatise entitled Ten Doubts concerning Providence; and Extracts from his Treatise on the Subsistence of Evil; as preserved in the Bibliotheca Gr. of Fabricius. See Proclus on the Theology of Plato.

Original Works.

HISTORY OF THE RESTORATION OF THE PLATONIC THEOLOGY, by the genuine Disciples of Plato. See the second vol. of Proclus on Euclid.

ELEUSINIAN

A DISSERTATION ON THE AND BACCHIC MYSTERIES, in which much new and important Information, relative to those most venerable and august Institutions, is given from Greek Manuscripts. 8vo. 5s. A Second Edition of this Work is printed in Nos. XV. and XVI. of the PAMPHLETEER.

ORIGINAL WORKS, BY T. TAYLOR.

A COMPLETE COLLECTION OF ALL THE EXISTING CHALDEAN ORACLES, with concise Explanations. See the third vol. of the Old Monthly Magazine; Nos. XXXII. XXXIII. and XXXIV. of the CLASSICAL JOURNAL.

A DISSERTATION ON NULLITIES AND DIVERGING SERIES, in which Nullities are proved to be infinitely small quantities, and the Platonic Doctrine of To ev, or the One, is illustrated. See the end of the first edition of the Translation of Aristotle's Metaphysics.

AN ANSWER to Dr. Gillies's Supplement to his Translation of Aristotle's Ethics and Politics, in which the extreme Unfaithfulness of that Translation is unfolded. 12mo. 2s. 6d. sewn.

A POETICAL PARAPHRASE on the SPEECH OF DIOTIMA ON THE BEAUTIFUL, in the Banquet of Plato. See the Translation of the Fable of Cupid and Psyche.

HYMNS. See the before-mentioned Sallust, Julian, Plotinus, and Cupid and Psyche.

A new edition of HEDERIC'S GREEK LEXICON, in which many words are inserted, not found in other modern Lexicons, and an Explanation is given of some words agreeably to the Platonic Philosophy. 4to. 1803. 2l. 2s. boards.

THE ELEMENTS OF THE TRUE ARITHMETIC OF INFINITES, in which all the Propositions in the Arithmetic of Infinites invented by Dr. Wallis, relative to the Summation of Infinite Series, and also the Principles of the Doctrine of Fluxions, are demonstrated to be false; and the Nature of Infinitesimals is unfolded. 4to.

58. sewn.

MISCELLANIES IN PROSE AND VERSE; containing the Triumph of the Wise Man over Fortune, according to the Doctrine of the Stoics and Platonists; The Creed of the Platonic Philosopher; A Panegyric on Sydenham, &c. &c. 12mo. 2s. 6d. boards. A DISSERTATION ON THE PHILOSOPHY OF ARISTOTLE, in four Books; in which his principal Physical and Metaphysical Dogmas are unfolded; and it is shown from indubitable evidence, that his Philosophy has not been accurately known since the destruction of the Greeks. The insufficiency also of the Philosophy that has been substituted by the Moderns for that of Aristotle is demonstrated. This volume was written as an Introduction to the Translation of Aristotle's Works. 4to. 51. 5s. boards.

THEORETIC ARITHMETIC, in three Books; containing the Substance of all that has been written on this Subject by Theo of Smyrna, Nicomachus, Iamblichus, and Boetius.-Together with some remarkable particulars respecting perfect, amicable, and other Numbers, which are not to be found in the writings of any ancient or modern Mathematicians. Likewise a Specimen of the manner in which the Pythagoreans philosophized about Numbers; and a Developement of their mystical and theological Arithmetic. 8vo. 14s. boards.

ORPHIC FRAGMENTS, hitherto inedited. See No. XXXIII. of the CLASSICAL JOURNAL.

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