Book, Paragraph

 1   I,   5|        Atlantis of Neptune, as Plato tells us, and utterly ruined
 2   I,   8|  through ill-formed judgments? Plato, that sublime head and pillar
 3  II,   7|         nay rather-as to which Plato in the Theoetetus is in
 4  II,   9|     sets up bodiless forms, to Plato, the disciple of Socrates?
 5  II,  10|        spring from number? Did Plato see the bodiless forms?
 6  II,  11|  should have less? You believe Plato, Cronius, Numenius, or any
 7  II,  13|      zealously follow Mercury, Plato, and Pythagoras, and the
 8  II,  13|   hopes to Him? What does your Plato say in the Theoetetus, to
 9  II,  13|    hold it. What says the same Plato in the Politicus? Does he
10  II,  14|   enemies? What, does not your Plato also, in the book which
11  II,  21|      void, -one of the race of Plato, namely, or Pythagoras,
12  II,  24|                     24. Why, O Plato, do you in the Meno put
13  II,  34|      us also a share in it. If Plato in the Phaedrus, or another
14  II,  36|       annihilation. The divine Plato, many of whose thoughts
15  II,  36| neutral in its character, when Plato says that it is so even
16  II,  52|      we suppose that the great Plato had-a man reverent and scrupulous
17  II,  64|     your own free choice? God, Plato says, does not cause any
18  IV,  16| language I am called Neith, as Plato's Timaeus attests." What,
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA2) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2009. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License