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Alphabetical [« »] however 13 howls 1 hugo 1 human 50 humboldt 2 humorous 1 humour 5 | Frequency [« »] 51 cannot 51 let 51 still 50 human 50 soul 49 call 49 knowledge | Plato Cratylus IntraText - Concordances human |
Dialogue
1 Craty| somewhere in the depths of the human soul, but they were not 2 Craty| rational ground or basis in human nature on which the convention 3 Craty| endless fertility of the human mind in spinning arguments 4 Craty| that some power more than human first gave things their 5 Craty| order to fill up a lacuna in human knowledge. (Compare Timaeus.)~ 6 Craty| on the border-ground of human knowledge; they receive 7 Craty| the other creations of the human mind, there will always 8 Craty| things in language than the human mind easily conceives. And 9 Craty| entered causes which the human mind is not capable of calculating. 10 Craty| to the beginnings of the human race. How they originated, 11 Craty| we can imagine a stage of human society in which the circle 12 Craty| is the first rudiment of human speech.~After a while the 13 Craty| language the powers of the human mind were enlarged; how 14 Craty| extent the conditions of human life were different; how 15 Craty| upon a dark corner of the human mind.~In the later analysis 16 Craty| about the powers of the human mind and the forces and 17 Craty| which is the horizon of human knowledge.~The greatest 18 Craty| unconscious creation of the human mind. We can observe the 19 Craty| but more than half the human frame.~The minds of men 20 Craty| insight into the nature of human speech. Many observations 21 Craty| against the unity of the human race. Nor is there any proof 22 Craty| they survive. As in the human frame, as in the state, 23 Craty| behind the great structure of human speech and the lesser varieties 24 Craty| many degrees and kinds of human intercourse, there is also 25 Craty| like the other laws of human action, admit of exceptions. 26 Craty| conscious action of the human mind...Lastly, it is doubted 27 Craty| delights in definition: human speech, like human action, 28 Craty| definition: human speech, like human action, though very far 29 Craty| into the history of the human mind and the modes of thought 30 Craty| regarded in relation to human thought, and (3) in relation 31 Craty| great to be endured by the human race, in which the masters 32 Craty| expression of what we now call human thoughts and feelings. We 33 Craty| process or action of the human mind.~ii. Imitation provided 34 Craty| quality, accent, rhythm of human speech, trivial or serious, 35 Craty| words, as larger portions of human speech. It regulated the 36 Craty| expressiveness are given to human thoughts by the harmonious 37 Craty| expressions of the finer parts of human feeling or thought. And 38 Craty| of the upper part of the human frame, including head, chest, 39 Craty| conscious action of the human mind; nor is the force exerted 40 Craty| been a necessity of the human mind became a luxury: they 41 Craty| and upon the nature of the human mind itself. The true conception 42 Craty| insight into the nature of human speech will give us a greater 43 Craty| conventional; not a portion of the human voice which men agree to 44 Craty| more within the range of human faculties, as I am disposed 45 Craty| have been some more than human power at work occasionally 46 Craty| a good man is more than human (daimonion) both in life 47 Craty| often such that at last no human being can possibly make 48 Craty| nothing, and do but entertain human notions of them. And in 49 Craty| or of a female of the human species, when I say, ‘This 50 Craty| that a power more than human gave things their first