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Alphabetical [« »] knife 2 know 83 knowing 9 knowledge 41 known 6 knows 26 labelled 1 | Frequency [« »] 42 made 42 take 41 before 41 knowledge 41 neither 41 unjust 40 physician | Plato Gorgias IntraText - Concordances knowledge |
Dialogue
1 Gorg| intellectual antithesis of knowledge and opinion, being and appearance, 2 Gorg| two aspects of life and knowledge appear to be the two leading 3 Gorg| persuasion: one which gives knowledge, and another which gives 4 Gorg| which gives belief without knowledge; and knowledge is always 5 Gorg| belief without knowledge; and knowledge is always true, but belief 6 Gorg| and not that which gives knowledge; for no one can impart a 7 Gorg| no one can impart a real knowledge of such matters to a crowd 8 Gorg| which are needed in a critic—knowledge, good-will, frankness; Gorgias 9 Gorg| and good are the same, but knowledge and courage are not the 10 Gorg| distinguishing courage and knowledge from pleasure and good, 11 Gorg| other. Good and pleasure, knowledge and sense, truth and opinion, 12 Gorg| Theaetetus bears to his theory of knowledge.~d. A few minor points still 13 Gorg| famous thesis:—‘Virtue is knowledge;’ which is not so much an 14 Gorg| one department of human knowledge to the exclusion of the 15 Gorg| or even to increase our knowledge of human nature. There have 16 Gorg| the nature and degrees of knowledge having been previously set 17 Gorg| reached the limits of human knowledge; or, to borrow an expression 18 Gorg| addition to their store of knowledge? or, Did they pass their 19 Gorg| Because, Socrates, the knowledge of the other arts has only 20 Gorg| Well, but is there a false knowledge as well as a true?~GORGIAS: 21 Gorg| and this again proves that knowledge and belief differ.~GORGIAS: 22 Gorg| source of belief without knowledge, as the other is of knowledge?~ 23 Gorg| knowledge, as the other is of knowledge?~GORGIAS: By all means.~ 24 Gorg| which gives belief without knowledge, or that which gives knowledge?~ 25 Gorg| knowledge, or that which gives knowledge?~GORGIAS: Clearly, Socrates, 26 Gorg| ignorant than he who has knowledge?—is not that the inference?~ 27 Gorg| ignorant that he has more knowledge than those who know?~GORGIAS: 28 Gorg| whatever is that which his knowledge makes him.~GORGIAS: Certainly.~ 29 Gorg| chief of them. And what knowledge can be nobler? or what ignorance 30 Gorg| be said of the beauty of knowledge?~POLUS: To be sure, Socrates; 31 Gorg| to have three qualities—knowledge, good-will, outspokenness, 32 Gorg| me, either from lack of knowledge or from superfluity of modesty, 33 Gorg| presume, which you would call knowledge?~CALLICLES: There is.~SOCRATES: 34 Gorg| that some courage implied knowledge?~CALLICLES: I was.~SOCRATES: 35 Gorg| speaking of courage and knowledge as two things different 36 Gorg| you say that pleasure and knowledge are the same, or not the 37 Gorg| good are the same; but that knowledge and courage are not the 38 Gorg| or must he have art or knowledge of them in detail?~CALLICLES: 39 Gorg| I do not speak from any knowledge of what I am saying; I am 40 Gorg| ought to be just and have a knowledge of justice, has also turned 41 Gorg| results according to the knowledge which she has and they have