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Alphabetical    [«  »]
hover 1
how 81
however 10
human 46
humanity 1
humble 1
hume 1
Frequency    [«  »]
48 saying
47 far
47 think
46 human
46 time
45 out
45 place
Plato
Philebus

IntraText - Concordances

human
   Dialogue
1 Phileb| ultimate principle of the human mind, is displaced by another 2 Phileb| them within the sphere of human cognition. This is described 3 Phileb| them the true type both of human life and of the order of 4 Phileb| affirmed to be necessary to human life, is depreciated. Music 5 Phileb| descend into the region of human action and feeling. To him, 6 Phileb| objective form, but as the human reason seeking to attain 7 Phileb| mind is confined to the human mind, and not extended to 8 Phileb| may be a life of mind, not human but divine, which conquers 9 Phileb| of the greater drama of human life. (There appears to 10 Phileb| guess-work? ‘Yes, you must, if human life is to have any humanity.’ 11 Phileb| obvious intellectual aspect of human action which occurred to 12 Phileb| and that the salvation of human life depends upon a right 13 Phileb| Politics, and under which all human actions are or may be included. 14 Phileb| noblest motives by which human nature can be animated. 15 Phileb| all other beginnings of human things, is obscure, and 16 Phileb| within is the history of the human mind, they have been slowly 17 Phileb| the true and only end of human life. To this all our desires 18 Phileb| one ten-thousandth part of human actions. This is the domain 19 Phileb| practically certain.~The rule of human life is not dependent on 20 Phileb| quality which in all states of human life we call happiness? 21 Phileb| fundamental distinctions in human thought; and having such 22 Phileb| word of Godwritten on the human heart: to no other words 23 Phileb| only a partial account of human actions: it is one among 24 Phileb| deduced from the laws of human nature, says one; resting 25 Phileb| watchword of an army. For in human actions men do not always 26 Phileb| the highest principle of human life. We may try them in 27 Phileb| obedience to law: the best human government is a rational 28 Phileb| not permitted. Though a human tyrant would be intolerable, 29 Phileb| perfection in which all human perfection is embodied. 30 Phileb| defining the point at which the human passes into the divine.~ 31 Phileb| divine perfection.~Secondly, human perfection, or the fulfilment 32 Phileb| Thirdly, the elements of human perfection,—virtue, knowledge, 33 Phileb| in this world and in the human soul.~...~The Philebus is 34 Phileb| of it were too great for human utterance and came down 35 Phileb| morals, the reference of human actions to the standard 36 Phileb| excessive and more than human awe which Socrates expresses 37 Phileb| observe the deep insight into human nature which is shown by 38 Phileb| of the gods is more than human—it exceeds all other fears. 39 Phileb| mother does he spare; no human being who has ears is safe 40 Phileb| in the movements of the human body, which when measured 41 Phileb| Theuth, observing that the human voice was infinite, first 42 Phileb| determining what is the best of human goods. For when Philebus 43 Phileb| on the greater stage of human life; and so in endless 44 Phileb| and knows nothing of our human spheres and circles, but 45 Phileb| think that you must, if human life is to be a life at 46 Phileb| excellent, as an element of human life, than pleasure.~PROTARCHUS:


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