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Alphabetical [« »] how 69 however 8 hues 1 human 37 humbled 3 humour 1 hundred 2 | Frequency [« »] 38 up 37 beauty 37 far 37 human 37 nor 37 power 37 said | Plato Phaedrus IntraText - Concordances human |
Dialogue
1 Phaedr| art in general, and to the human soul, will be hereafter 2 Phaedr| gods and demi-gods and of human souls in their train, follows 3 Phaedr| the life of the gods; the human soul tries to reach the 4 Phaedr| for the grasshoppers were human beings themselves in a world 5 Phaedr| the natural soil of the human soul which has depth of 6 Phaedr| concupiscent element of human nature. The white horse 7 Phaedr| existence of them and of the human minds which were associated 8 Phaedr| give of the differences of human characters to which he afterwards 9 Phaedr| the element of chance in human life, and yet asserts the 10 Phaedr| there is the hint that human life is a life of aspiration 11 Phaedr| are beyond the range of human faculties, or inaccessible 12 Phaedr| the soul does he mean the human or the divine soul? and 13 Phaedr| with his great knowledge of human nature, was well aware how 14 Phaedr| natural yearning of the human mind that the great ideas 15 Phaedr| the Madonna. But although human nature has often attempted 16 Phaedr| natures and constitutions of human beings? Do we see as clearly 17 Phaedr| declaration that his study is human nature,—an exact resemblance, 18 Phaedr| add nothing to the sum of human knowledge; they are—what 19 Phaedr| and of the marvel of the human faculties. When feeding 20 Phaedr| of all, the knowledge of human nature, is hardly if at 21 Phaedr| the signs of decay in the human mind which are possible?~ 22 Phaedr| periods in the history of the human race, was destitute, or 23 Phaedr| reservoir or treasure-house of human intelligence out of which 24 Phaedr| who wills may read. The human race may not be always ground 25 Phaedr| friend, how prophetic is the human soul! At the time I had 26 Phaedr| information (istoria) to human thought (oiesis) they originally 27 Phaedr| for the one is only of human, but the other of divine 28 Phaedr| actions of the soul divine and human, and try to ascertain the 29 Phaedr| other races are mixed; the human charioteer drives his in 30 Phaedr| truth will not pass into the human form. For a man must have 31 Phaedr| Olympian victories; nor can human discipline or divine inspiration 32 Phaedr| who are said to have been human beings in an age before 33 Phaedr| thought, divine as well as human, and they have the sweetest 34 Phaedr| two kinds; one produced by human infirmity, the other was 35 Phaedr| learn the differences of human souls—they are so many and 36 Phaedr| even within the limits of human power. And this skill he 37 Phaedr| to the utmost extent of human happiness.~PHAEDRUS: Far