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Alphabetical    [«  »]
work 4
working 5
works 1
world 64
worldly 1
worlds 2
worn 1
Frequency    [«  »]
69 same
67 whether
64 opinion
64 world
63 about
63 infinite
63 well
Plato
Philebus

IntraText - Concordances

world
   Dialogue
1 Phileb| existing both in and out of the world would to ourselves. Nor 2 Phileb| out of his transcendental world, and proceeds to lay down 3 Phileb| Substance, and the like. The world of knowledge is always dividing 4 Phileb| kinds in the creation of the world; the first vague impression 5 Phileb| phenomena of the external world, he extended their principles 6 Phileb| ascribes the order of the world. Reasoning from man to the 7 Phileb| the final cause with the world, which is His work. But 8 Phileb| confounding God with the world, tends to identify the first 9 Phileb| the help of the material world; and therefore when we pass 10 Phileb| family which had spent ‘a world of money’ on the Sophists ( 11 Phileb| can they enter into the world of generation? How, as units, 12 Phileb| revelation of the order of the world, which some Prometheus first 13 Phileb| lovers of disorder in the world should ridicule my attempt.~ 14 Phileb| three first exist in the world, must not the fourth or 15 Phileb| noblest of them, exist in the world? And this cause is wisdom 16 Phileb| passion of this sensible world. But the highest truth is 17 Phileb| veriest impostor in the world, and the perjuries of lovers 18 Phileb| though all the animals in the world assert the contrary.~...~ 19 Phileb| the individual, or of the world?’ This little addition has 20 Phileb| ordinary men who live in the world of appearance; they are 21 Phileb| calling to them out of another world; or the life and example 22 Phileb| but the better part of the world has been slow to receive 23 Phileb| legislator, by the opinion of the world. Whatever may be the hypothesis 24 Phileb| ideas. In the history of the world, which viewed from within 25 Phileb| moments’ of thought to the world. The life of Christ has 26 Phileb| handed down to us, the modern world has received a standard 27 Phileb| our moral ideas, as the world grows older, perhaps as 28 Phileb| mind, the opinion of the world, familiarizes them to us; 29 Phileb| they have grown up in the world from the manner in which 30 Phileb| in which the whole moral world has been regarded by different 31 Phileb| the sum of pleasure in the world. But all pleasures are not 32 Phileb| the better for them. The world was against them while they 33 Phileb| been a benefactor to the world. But there is a danger that, 34 Phileb| truism to the rest of the world; or may degenerate in the 35 Phileb| the mind of the civilized world; none of them occupy that 36 Phileb| looking for a new moral world which has no marrying and 37 Phileb| often seem to open a new world to him, like the religious 38 Phileb| in a perfect state of the world my own happiness and that 39 Phileb| himself, but to all the world, makes none whatever in 40 Phileb| contribute to the pleasure of the world. In that very expression 41 Phileb| The upright man of the world will desire above all things 42 Phileb| instruments of thought? Would the world have been better if there 43 Phileb| benefits conferred by it on the world. All philosophies are refuted 44 Phileb| family, my country, the world? may check the rising feeling 45 Phileb| his creatures and in this world only, but of all of them 46 Phileb| present mixed state of the world, not wholly evil or wholly 47 Phileb| he is. It lives in this world and is known to us only 48 Phileb| through the phenomena of this world, but it extends to worlds 49 Phileb| alloyed with motives of this world may easily be in excess, 50 Phileb| eternal will of God in this world and in another,—justice, 51 Phileb| the will of God in this world, and co-operation with his 52 Phileb| best and fairest in this world and in the human soul.~...~ 53 Phileb| the Mind of God and of the World. The great distinction between 54 Phileb| of the better mind of the world, or of the one ‘sensible 55 Phileb| Chance Medley created the world; or the significance of 56 Phileb| which it has puzzled the world to find a use in so many 57 Phileb| multiplied in the infinity of the world of generation, or as still 58 Phileb| such is the order of the world, we too ought in every enquiry 59 Phileb| worthy of the aspect of the world, and of the sun, and of 60 Phileb| the constitution of the world.~PROTARCHUS: The proverb 61 Phileb| with the things of this world, how created, how acting 62 Phileb| beauty and virtue all the world over.~PROTARCHUS: True.~ 63 Phileb| veriest impostor in the world; and it is said that in 64 Phileb| horses and animals in the world by their pursuit of enjoyment


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