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Alphabetical [« »] thrasymachus 1 threadbare 1 threatened 1 three 27 thrice 1 through 8 throughout 1 | Frequency [« »] 27 having 27 idea 27 just 27 three 27 whole 26 difference 26 different | Plato Philebus IntraText - Concordances three |
Dialogue
1 Phileb| dialogues there occur two or three highly-wrought passages; 2 Phileb| mixed pleasures there are three classes—(a) those in which 3 Phileb| this mixture. There are three criteria of goodness—beauty, 4 Phileb| free-will, of mind and body, of Three Persons and One Substance, 5 Phileb| fallacious, because these three dialogues are found to make 6 Phileb| elements, exist in us, and the three first exist in the world, 7 Phileb| assume, then, that there are three states—pleasureable, painful, 8 Phileb| good, in which there are three chief elements—truth, symmetry, 9 Phileb| them in this comparison by three tests—definiteness, comprehensiveness, 10 Phileb| motive power.~There are three subjective principles of 11 Phileb| two, or, if not, then for three or some other number, subdividing 12 Phileb| is, that two out of the three lives which have been proposed 13 Phileb| you do not object, into three classes.~PROTARCHUS: Upon 14 Phileb| as a fourth class to the three others.~PROTARCHUS: And 15 Phileb| us begin with the first three; and as we find two out 16 Phileb| as we find two out of the three greatly divided and dispersed, 17 Phileb| observe that I have spoken of three classes?~PROTARCHUS: Yes, 18 Phileb| generated, furnish all the three classes?~PROTARCHUS: Yes.~ 19 Phileb| assume then that there are three lives, one pleasant, one 20 Phileb| as you do that there are three of them.~SOCRATES: But if 21 Phileb| SOCRATES: Let us take any three things; or suppose that 22 Phileb| take the view that they are three, as we were just now saying, 23 Phileb| try to divide this into three.~PROTARCHUS: Indeed I am 24 Phileb| SOCRATES: Are there not three ways in which ignorance 25 Phileb| True.~SOCRATES: And the three kinds of vain conceit in 26 Phileb| with one idea only, with three we may catch our prey; Beauty, 27 Phileb| Symmetry, Truth are the three, and these taken together