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Alphabetical [« »] eleatic 6 eleatics 1 element 31 elements 33 elevate 2 elevating 1 eligibility 2 | Frequency [« »] 34 often 34 view 33 arts 33 elements 33 without 32 actions 32 art | Plato Philebus IntraText - Concordances elements |
Dialogue
1 Phileb| life, the mixed class of elements, the mixture of pleasures, 2 Phileb| many, the four original elements, the kinds of pleasure, 3 Phileb| which of the four unities or elements they respectively fall. 4 Phileb| the table of categories or elements; (III) the kinds of pleasure; ( 5 Phileb| as imperfect and divided elements of the truth. Without entering 6 Phileb| of Plato’s categories or elements is the infinite. This is 7 Phileb| the list of principles or elements is the cause of the union 8 Phileb| really a comparison of two elements, which have no common measure, 9 Phileb| cause, which were two of the elements in the former table. Like 10 Phileb| ridicule my attempt.~Now the elements earth, air, fire, water, 11 Phileb| body, in like manner the elements of the finite, the infinite, 12 Phileb| us. And if they, like the elements, exist in us, and the three 13 Phileb| to nature, in which the elements are restored to their normal 14 Phileb| which there are three chief elements—truth, symmetry, and beauty. 15 Phileb| distinguish the original, simple elements from the manifold and complex 16 Phileb| contain other essential elements which cannot be explained 17 Phileb| own minds.~Thirdly, the elements of human perfection,—virtue, 18 Phileb| of posterity, but in the elements out of which they have arisen. 19 Phileb| proportion among the different elements.~PROTARCHUS: I understand; 20 Phileb| ingredients, but of all the elements of infinity, bound down 21 Phileb| SOCRATES: We see that the elements which enter into the nature 22 Phileb| remarked about each of these elements.~PROTARCHUS: What is it?~ 23 Phileb| reply about all the other elements?~PROTARCHUS: Why, how could 24 Phileb| step. When we saw those elements of which we have been speaking 25 Phileb| because made up of the same elements.~PROTARCHUS: Very true.~ 26 Phileb| universe, which contains elements like those in our bodies 27 Phileb| that whereas the self-same elements exist, both in the entire 28 Phileb| resolution and return of the elements to their original state 29 Phileb| find a mixture of the two elements so often named; did I not?~ 30 Phileb| nature; and then the truest elements both of pleasure and knowledge 31 Phileb| the superior or dominant elements in each of them.~PROTARCHUS: 32 Phileb| shall we still want some elements of another kind?~PROTARCHUS: 33 Phileb| necessity be fatal, both to the elements and to the mixture, which