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Alphabetical [« »] those 42 thou 5 though 19 thought 39 thoughts 7 thousand 8 thousands 1 | Frequency [« »] 39 does 39 further 39 generation 39 thought 39 why 38 up 37 better | Plato Philebus IntraText - Concordances thought |
Dialogue
1 Phileb| development of abstract thought great advances have been 2 Phileb| though dialectic may be thought to correspond to the highest 3 Phileb| again.’~But if superior in thought and dialectical power, the 4 Phileb| in a particular stage of thought such an analysis involved 5 Phileb| of sensation, and not of thought. He was aware that there 6 Phileb| have already set bounds to thought and matter, and divided 7 Phileb| judges of confusions of thought in those who view things 8 Phileb| following him into the sphere of thought which he is seeking to attain. 9 Phileb| the equable life of pure thought? Here is one absurdity, 10 Phileb| pursues the same vein of thought in the Protagoras, where 11 Phileb| feeling or by an effort of thought, any one beginning with 12 Phileb| them supplied ‘moments’ of thought to the world. The life of 13 Phileb| boundless ocean of language and thought in little rills, which convey 14 Phileb| self-preservation. Transfer the thought of happiness to another 15 Phileb| their followers imagine. The thought of self and the thought 16 Phileb| thought of self and the thought of others are alike superseded 17 Phileb| fundamental distinctions in human thought; and having such distinctions, 18 Phileb| noblest natures; and a passing thought naturally arises in our 19 Phileb| modes and instruments of thought? Would the world have been 20 Phileb| and has left its mark on thought and civilization in all 21 Phileb| and with instruments of thought. Though they may be shorn 22 Phileb| longer divide the empire of thought; the Mind of Anaxagoras 23 Phileb| and sometimes as if the thought of it were too great for 24 Phileb| moments of metaphysical thought which presented themselves 25 Phileb| but heads or gradations of thought. The question of pleasure 26 Phileb| surging in the chaos of thought, what transformations of 27 Phileb| the repetition of the same thought ‘All philosophers are agreed 28 Phileb| detrimental to the true course of thought; and no more favour is shown 29 Phileb| many become identified by thought, and that now, as in time 30 Phileb| an everlasting quality of thought itself, which never grows 31 Phileb| leaves no stone, or rather no thought unturned, now rolling up 32 Phileb| too, and may therefore be thought to show discretion in not 33 Phileb| whether great or small, was thought to be necessary to him who 34 Phileb| him who chose the life of thought and wisdom.~PROTARCHUS: 35 Phileb| companion, he repeats his thought to him in articulate sounds, 36 Phileb| or reasonably spoken or thought of as pleasant or painful.~ 37 Phileb| similar affections; and I thought that when I had given you 38 Phileb| only the purest possible thought.~PROTARCHUS: He who would 39 Phileb| truth, the latter, as we thought, were truer than the former.~