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Alphabetical    [«  »]
grasped 1
grasping 1
grave 1
great 69
greater 19
greatest 17
greatly 2
Frequency    [«  »]
73 nature
71 again
71 on
69 great
69 should
69 such
68 both
Plato
The Sophist

IntraText - Concordances

great
   Dialogue
1 Intro| Not-being. Nor will the great importance of the two dialogues 2 Intro| original inventor of any of the great logical forms, with the 3 Intro| the description of the ‘great brute’ in the Republic, 4 Intro| retain the impress of the great master of language. But 5 Intro| also be considered. The great enemy of Plato is the world, 6 Intro| The man of genius, the great original thinker, the disinterested 7 Intro| words can only be made with great difficulty, and not unless 8 Intro| of abstractions was the great source of all mental improvement 9 Intro| they seem to be parted by a great gulf (Parmenides); at other 10 Intro| all, but are merged in one great class of the infinite or 11 Intro| we must allow that the great service rendered by Plato 12 Intro| First, there are the two great philosophies going back 13 Intro| hardly have described a great genius like Democritus in 14 Intro| or inconsistency is too great to be elicited from the 15 Intro| agreed about his nature. Great subjects should be approached 16 Intro| out; and the soul of the Great King himself, if he has 17 Intro| few pence—this would be a great jest; but not greater than 18 Intro| not-being. And this is what the great Parmenides was all his life 19 Intro| not-being, and now I am in great difficulties even about 20 Intro| difficulty about being, quite as great as that about not-being. 21 Intro| most nearly approaches the great modern master of metaphysics 22 Intro| and tedious enquiry; by a great effort he is able to look 23 Intro| Neither can we appreciate a great system without yielding 24 Intro| Greek poet, ‘There is a great God in them, and he grows 25 Intro| Hegel was quite sensible how great would be the difficulty 26 Intro| had no existence.~Of the great dislike and childish impatience 27 Intro| light which is not heavy, or great which is not small.’ And 28 Intro| and good, as well as to great and small. In like manner 29 Intro| measuring shows us what is truly great and truly small. Though 30 Intro| opposites. Abstractions have a great power over us, but they 31 Intro| modes of thinking, is a great height of philosophy. This 32 Intro| For if Hegel introduces a great many distinctions, he obliterates 33 Intro| distinctions, he obliterates a great many others by the help 34 Intro| in the latter days. The great metaphysician, like a prophet 35 Intro| no single man can do any great good or any great harm. 36 Intro| do any great good or any great harm. Even if it were a 37 Intro| the power of thinking a great deal more than we are able 38 Intro| ideas are the causes of the great movement of the world rather 39 Intro| which conceived them? The great man is the expression of 40 Intro| from antecedents, but he is great in proportion as he disengages 41 Intro| the genius of one or two great thinkers contain the secret 42 Intro| necessary to have had a great experience of it.~2. Hegel, 43 Intro| will find realized in the great German thinker, an emancipation 44 Intro| may acknowledge that the great thinker has thrown a light 45 Intro| that their meaning is to a great extent due to association, 46 Intro| appearing ‘fragments of the great banquet’ of Hegel.~ 47 Soph| certainly be a very long one, a great deal longer than might be 48 Soph| long ago agreed, that if great subjects are to be adequately 49 Soph| which is well known and not great, and is yet as susceptible 50 Soph| for he is a professor of a great and many-sided art; and 51 Soph| besides these there are a great many more, such as carding, 52 Soph| this appears to be the great source of all the errors 53 Soph| entirely delivered from great prejudices and harsh notions, 54 Soph| refuted, though he be the Great King himself, is in an awful 55 Soph| entertained, so that the great appears small to them, and 56 Soph| Certainly.~STRANGER: There is a great deal of this kind of thing 57 Soph| days when I was a boy, the great Parmenides protested against 58 Soph| you, but now we are in a great strait. Please to begin 59 Soph| but there will be very great difficulty, or rather an 60 Soph| Theaetetus, I perceive a great improvement in them; the 61 Soph| And are we not now in as great a difficulty about being?~ 62 Soph| between them, without any great discredit.~THEAETETUS: Very 63 Soph| many, or the many one; and great is their delight in denying 64 Soph| speak of something as not great, does the expression seem 65 Soph| exist, equally with the great?~THEAETETUS: Yes.~STRANGER: 66 Soph| of its own? Just as the great was found to be great and 67 Soph| the great was found to be great and the beautiful beautiful, 68 Soph| or the other same, or the great small, or the like unlike; 69 Soph| species; wherefore there is no great abundance of names. Yet,


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