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Alphabetical    [«  »]
blown 1
bodies 3
bodily 15
body 58
boiling 1
boldly 2
boldness 1
Frequency    [«  »]
59 argument
59 being
59 question
58 body
58 both
56 either
55 great
Plato
Philebus

IntraText - Concordances

body
   Dialogue
1 Phileb| which there is a pain of the body and pleasure of the mind, 2 Phileb| the circumstance that the body is one, but has many members, 3 Phileb| and free-will, of mind and body, of Three Persons and One 4 Phileb| definiteness, the pleasures of the body are more capable of being 5 Phileb| mind as well as for the body; and in this is to be acknowledged, 6 Phileb| that pleasure is not in the body at all; and hence not even 7 Phileb| can be many members in one body, and the like wonders. Socrates 8 Phileb| have a soul as well as a body, in like manner the elements 9 Phileb| are affections which the body and soul feel together, 10 Phileb| is therefore not in the body, but in the mind. And there 11 Phileb| pleasure and pain; in his body there is want which is a 12 Phileb| desire, as we admitted, the body is divided from the soul, 13 Phileb| are the pleasures of the body, not of the mind; the pleasures 14 Phileb| the pain or sickness of body which precedes them. Their 15 Phileb| transition from one state of the body to another, as from cold 16 Phileb| external pleasure in the body: sometimes the feeling of 17 Phileb| fair rule over a living body. And now we are at the vestibule 18 Phileb| has learnt to despise the body and is yearning all his 19 Phileb| first referred only to the body, and then by a figure have 20 Phileb| the movements of the human body, which when measured by 21 Phileb| did we not call them a body?~PROTARCHUS: We did.~SOCRATES: 22 Phileb| may be considered to be a body, because made up of the 23 Phileb| true.~SOCRATES: But is our body nourished wholly by this 24 Phileb| nourished wholly by this body, or is this body nourished 25 Phileb| by this body, or is this body nourished by our body, thence 26 Phileb| this body nourished by our body, thence deriving and having 27 Phileb| question?~SOCRATES: May our body be said to have a soul?~ 28 Phileb| dear Protarchus, unless the body of the universe, which contains 29 Phileb| soul only, apart from the body, and is produced by expectation.~ 30 Phileb| imagine affections of the body which are extinguished before 31 Phileb| vibrate through both soul and body, and impart a shock to both 32 Phileb| unaffected by the shocks of the body, say unconsciousness.~PROTARCHUS: 33 Phileb| or communion of soul and body in one feeling and motion 34 Phileb| when in company with the body?~PROTARCHUS: Certainly.~ 35 Phileb| mind only, apart from the body; and the previous analysis 36 Phileb| And that cannot be the body, for the body is supposed 37 Phileb| cannot be the body, for the body is supposed to be emptied?~ 38 Phileb| such thing as desire of the body.~PROTARCHUS: Why so?~SOCRATES: 39 Phileb| will not allow that our body either hungers or thirsts 40 Phileb| he has two pains; in his body there is the actual experience 41 Phileb| termed, exist in us, then the body has separate feelings apart 42 Phileb| bodily state, while the body was the source of any pleasure 43 Phileb| interval of time at which the body experiences none of these 44 Phileb| what would happen if the body were not changed either 45 Phileb| are the pleasures of the body?~PROTARCHUS: Certainly.~ 46 Phileb| vicious state of soul and body, and not in a virtuous state.~ 47 Phileb| mixtures which are of the body, and only in the body, and 48 Phileb| the body, and only in the body, and others which are of 49 Phileb| common both to soul and body, which in their composite 50 Phileb| internal sensations in the body; there are also cases in 51 Phileb| opposite element to the body, whether of pleasure or 52 Phileb| similar emotions in which body and mind are opposed (and 53 Phileb| a general truth that the body without the soul, and the 54 Phileb| and the soul without the body, as well as the two united, 55 Phileb| agony and distress, both of body and mind.~PROTARCHUS: Then 56 Phileb| less, which pours through body and soul alike; and the 57 Phileb| nothing good or noble in the body, or in anything else, but 58 Phileb| fair rule over a living body.~PROTARCHUS: I agree with


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