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Alphabetical    [«  »]
spare 1
sparing 2
speak 22
speaking 30
speaks 5
specially 1
species 7
Frequency    [«  »]
30 find
30 kinds
30 reason
30 speaking
29 each
29 moral
29 sense
Plato
Philebus

IntraText - Concordances

speaking
   Dialogue
1 Phileb| answer to them. His mode of speaking of the analytical and synthetical 2 Phileb| imparted to us. Plato is speaking of two things—(1) the crude 3 Phileb| described, in our way of speaking, as the indefinite. To us, 4 Phileb| attributes to him, and in speaking of God both in the masculine 5 Phileb| not of the temperate. I am speaking, not of the frequency or 6 Phileb| philosophers of whom I was speaking, I believe to be real. These 7 Phileb| and he, or rather Plato speaking in his person, expressly 8 Phileb| Utilitarian or hedonist mode of speaking has been at variance with 9 Phileb| equally act as he does. We are speaking of the highest and noblest 10 Phileb| Proceed.~SOCRATES: Were we not speaking just now of hotter and colder?~ 11 Phileb| I shall be far wrong in speaking of the cause of mixture 12 Phileb| elements of which we have been speaking gathered up in one, did 13 Phileb| of which we were just now speaking?~PROTARCHUS: That again, 14 Phileb| what kind of life, are you speaking?~SOCRATES: I am speaking 15 Phileb| speaking?~SOCRATES: I am speaking of being emptied and replenished, 16 Phileb| and pains of which we are speaking are true or false? or some 17 Phileb| the feeling of which I am speaking only in relation to the 18 Phileb| more unexceptionable way of speaking will be—~PROTARCHUS: What?~ 19 Phileb| the more correct mode of speaking.~SOCRATES: But if this be 20 Phileb| but understand that I am speaking of the magnitude of pleasure; 21 Phileb| of which we were just now speaking, and by the tingling which 22 Phileb| called essence is, properly speaking, for the sake of generation?~ 23 Phileb| PROTARCHUS: Of whom are you speaking, and what do they mean?~ 24 Phileb| they mean?~SOCRATES: I am speaking of those who when they are 25 Phileb| the arts of which we were speaking into two kinds,—the arts 26 Phileb| art; and then again, as if speaking of two different things, 27 Phileb| knowledge of which we are now speaking; for I am sure that all 28 Phileb| the study of which I am speaking is superior in this particular 29 Phileb| science of which I have been speaking is most likely to possess 30 Phileb| akin.~PROTARCHUS: You are speaking of beauty, truth, and measure?~


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