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Alphabetical    [«  »]
feebleness 5
feebly 1
feel 9
feeling 24
feelings 4
feels 1
feet 1
Frequency    [«  »]
25 much
25 pure
24 ask
24 feeling
24 living
24 ourselves
24 philosopher
Plato
Phaedo

IntraText - Concordances

feeling
   Dialogue
1 Phaedo| impartial, but he cannot help feeling that he has too great an 2 Phaedo| Scriptures. They convert feeling into reasoning, and throw 3 Phaedo| For this alternation of feeling compare the Old Testament,— 4 Phaedo| below (Phaedo) was a natural feeling which, in that age as well 5 Phaedo| and appeals to a common feeling.~20. Two arguments of this 6 Phaedo| destruction for which he is vainly feeling. There is no change in him; 7 Phaedo| greater unity of subject and feeling. Plato has certainly fulfilled 8 Phaedo| might have interpreted the feeling of the play: ‘There can 9 Phaedo| resign ourselves to the feeling of a great work, than to 10 Phaedo| PHAEDO: I had a singular feeling at being in his company. 11 Phaedo| to die, and this double feeling was shared by us all; we 12 Phaedo| True.~And yet what is the feeling of lovers when they recognize 13 Phaedo| I cannot get rid of the feeling of the many to which Cebes 14 Phaedo| Cebes was referring—the feeling that when the man dies the 15 Phaedo| The evil is that when the feeling of pleasure or pain is most 16 Phaedo| objects of this intense feeling to be then plainest and 17 Phaedo| daresay that you have the same feeling), how hard or rather impossible 18 Phaedo| said: I will tell you. My feeling is that the argument is 19 Phaedo| another, had an unpleasant feeling at hearing what they said. 20 Phaedo| to share the unpleasant feeling which you mention? or did 21 Phaedo| I have.~And is not the feeling discreditable? Is it not 22 Phaedo| condition, which the many, feeling about in the dark, are always 23 Phaedo| Echecrates; and such was the feeling of the whole company at 24 Phaedo| still feel and cannot help feeling uncertain in my own mind,


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