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Dialogue
1 Charm| perfect unity in any single Dialogue. The hypothesis of a general 2 Charm| analysis to the text of each dialogue.~At the end of a long task, 3 Charm| corresponds to the Greek Dialogue; nor is the English language 4 Charm| greater readiness to the dialogue form. Most of the so-called 5 Charm| in them. But the Platonic dialogue is a drama as well as a 6 Charm| is a drama as well as a dialogue, of which Socrates is the 7 Charm| that Plato intended one dialogue to succeed another, or that 8 Charm| that he begins anew in one dialogue a subject which he has left 9 Charm| or that even in the same dialogue he always intended the two 10 Charm| speculations of Socrates.~In this Dialogue may be noted (1) The Greek 11 Charm| dramatic interest of the Dialogue chiefly centres in the youth 12 Charm| the thirty tyrants. In the Dialogue he is a pattern of virtue, 13 Charm| doing of good actions, the dialogue passes onto the intellectual 14 Charm| knowledge of good and evil. The dialogue represents a stage in the 15 Charm| particular knowledge in this dialogue may be compared with a similar 16 Charm| TEMPERANCE~PERSONS OF THE DIALOGUE: Socrates, who is the narrator,