***Indice*** | ***ParoleIM***: ***Alfabetica*** - ***Frequenza*** - ***Rovesciate*** - ***Lunghezza*** - ***Statistiche*** | ***Aiuto*** | ***BibliotecaIntraText*** | ||
***Alfabetica*** [« »] study 4 stupid 1 style 11 subject 14 subject-matter 3 subjective 2 subjects 7 | ***Frequenza*** [« »] 14 quite 14 several 14 something 14 subject 14 thing 14 why 13 able | Plato Charmides IntraText - ***Concordanze*** subject |
Dialogue
1 Charm| new view or aspect of the subject. Whereas in Plato we are 2 Charm| compared.~IV. There is another subject to which I must briefly 3 Charm| capable of understanding the subject acknowledges that his writings 4 Charm| points of view from which a subject of philosophy may be regarded, 5 Charm| Parmenides, have more than one subject. But it does not therefore 6 Charm| begins anew in one dialogue a subject which he has left unfinished 7 Charm| INTRODUCTION~The subject of the Charmides is Temperance 8 Charm| But all sciences have a subject: number is the subject of 9 Charm| a subject: number is the subject of arithmetic, health of 10 Charm| of medicine—what is the subject of temperance or wisdom? 11 Charm| inform us of any particular subject, such as medicine, building, 12 Charm| anticipations of the relation of subject and object, and of the subjective 13 Charm| Much may be said about this subject, but the results can only 14 Charm| of these sciences has a subject which is different from