Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] thickness 1 thing 32 things 49 think 40 thinking 1 thinks 9 this 219 | Frequency [« »] 41 taught 41 well 40 question 40 think 38 because 38 cannot 38 shall | Plato Protagoras IntraText - Concordances think |
Dialogue
1 Intro| of mankind. What does he think of knowledge? Does he agree 2 Prot| Sophist. And yet I hardly think that you know what a Sophist 3 Prot| good or evil.~I certainly think that I do know, he replied.~ 4 Prot| an understanding. And I think that the door-keeper, who 5 Prot| of other arts which they think capable of being taught 6 Prot| before me, am inclined to think that virtue cannot be taught. 7 Prot| waver; and am disposed to think that there must be something 8 Prot| Well, then, he said, I think that the myth will be more 9 Prot| also natural, because they think that every man ought to 10 Prot| with him, and his relations think that he is mad and go and 11 Prot| be acquired. If you will think, Socrates, of the nature 12 Prot| the number of those who think that virtue may be acquired 13 Prot| we have shown that they think virtue capable of being 14 Prot| the sons of bad ones? I think not. Would not their sons 15 Prot| slight, unlike.~And do you think, I said in a tone of surprise, 16 Prot| enquiry, and not faint. Do you think that an unjust man can be 17 Prot| beginning and answer me. You think that some men are temperate, 18 Prot| well, he said. And do you think that the ode is a good composition, 19 Prot| poet.~I know it.~And do you think, he said, that the two sayings 20 Prot| consistent?~Yes, I said, I think so (at the same time I could 21 Prot| in what he said). And you think otherwise?~Why, he said, 22 Prot| I wanted to get time to think what the meaning of the 23 Prot| term ‘awful,’ evil. And I think that Simonides and his countrymen 24 Prot| this poem.~Hippias said: I think, Socrates, that you have 25 Prot| Callias, and said:—Do you think, Callias, that Protagoras 26 Prot| answer? for I certainly think that he is unfair; he ought 27 Prot| talk with one another.~I think that Protagoras was really 28 Prot| own difficulties. For I think that Homer was very right 29 Prot| with any one, because I think that no man has a better 30 Prot| I said; I should like to think about that. When you speak 31 Prot| and were then led on to think that courage is the same 32 Prot| He assented.~And do you think that a man lives well who 33 Prot| that your view? or do you think that knowledge is a noble 34 Prot| show the way in which, as I think, our recent difficulty is 35 Prot| my name and yours: Do you think them evil for any other 36 Prot| acknowledge that they were not?~I think so, said Protagoras.~‘And 37 Prot| He assented.~‘Then you think that pain is an evil and 38 Prot| none to show.’~I do not think that they have, said Protagoras.~‘ 39 Prot| well as ours), whether you think that I am speaking the truth 40 Prot| to know whether you still think that there are men who are