Book, Paragraph

 1   I,  38|     one of us-similar in mind, soul, body, weakness, and condition;
 2   I,  38|      perceptions are; what the soul, and whether it flew to
 3   I,  53|       since beyond a doubt the soul is a precious thing, and
 4   I,  64|      only true King to be your soul's guardian. and to bring
 5   I,  65|     long entertained about the soul's salvation, and that in
 6  II,   7|    substance? finally, why the soul also, which is said by you
 7  II,   9|   Archytas? he who divides the soul, and sets up bodiless forms,
 8  II,  13|         Does he not exhort the soul to flee froth the earth,
 9  II,  14|      on the immortality of the soul, name the rivers Acheron,
10  II,  14|         while he says that the soul is immortal, everlasting,
11  II,  14|        is only a separation of soul from body, not the last
12  II,  18|    careful thought. But if the soul had in itself the knowledge
13  II,  19| because of their discovery the soul should be believed to be
14  II,  19|      of the earth? Now, if the soul had brought these arts with
15  II,  19|    circumstances, and that the soul did not fly hither divinely
16  II,  25|       own? Is this the learned soul which you describe, immortal,
17  II,  26|        26. But when I hear the soul spoken of as something extraordinary,
18  II,  26|       be discerned whether the soul recalls to memory or learns
19  II,  28|       you how you say that the soul, on being enwrapt in an
20  II,  28|   which deprives of memory the soul which enters it, should
21  II,  29|      by very wise men that the soul is immortal, and not subject
22  II,  31|     and doubtful nature of the soul, has made room for philosophy,
23  II,  31|        as to the nature of the soul, and some say that it is
24  II,  31|        about by the law of the soul's neutral character: because,
25  II,  31|     which it is found that the soul is capable of suffering,
26  II,  31|     which it is shown that the soul is divine and immortal.
27  II,  35|        do not believe that the soul is of a neutral character,
28  II,  36|    wonder that we speak of the soul as neutral in its character,
29  II,  52|       of which he had made the soul of the universe, except
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