23 LS 61. This is what Plutarch means when, in Against the Stoics on Common Conceptions (chapter 41), he writes that “in the time that is present, one part is to come, and the other past” ( Plutarch’s Moralia , trans. Harold Cherniss, Loeb Classical Library, vol. xiii , part ii [Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1976 ]). In a very simi-lar way, Diogenes Laertius claims that “in time past and future are unlimited but the present is limited” ( Lives and Opinions of Eminent Philosophers , book vii , chapter vii , 140). Both are cited in Br é hier, La th é orie des incorporels , p 58.
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