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Alphabetical [« »] how 89 however 13 huge 1 human 42 humble 2 hume 1 humour 1 | Frequency [« »] 43 truth 42 form 42 himself 42 human 42 question 41 difficulty 41 meaning | Plato The Sophist IntraText - Concordances human |
Dialogue
1 Intro| opinion and reflection the human mind was exposed to many 2 Intro| later works of Plato. The human mind is a sort of reflection 3 Intro| more remote relation. There human thought is in process of 4 Intro| elemental conceptions of the human mind admit of a natural 5 Intro| imitations which are of human, and those which are of 6 Intro| divine mind. And there are human creations and human imitations 7 Intro| are human creations and human imitations too,— there is 8 Intro| dissembling / without knowledge / human and not divine / juggling 9 Intro| to be beyond the reach of human thought, like stars shining 10 Intro| natural tendency in the human mind towards certain ideas 11 Intro| The succession in time of human ideas is also the eternal ‘ 12 Intro| another until the cycle of human thought and existence is 13 Intro| elevates the defects of the human faculties into Laws of Thought; 14 Intro| union of the divine and human nature, a contradiction 15 Intro| could be found. But soon the human mind became dissatisfied 16 Intro| the idea of mind, whether human or divine, was beginning 17 Intro| of the confusion of the human faculties; the art of measuring 18 Intro| recognize truly how in all human things there is a thesis 19 Intro| language or the limitation of human faculties. It is nevertheless 20 Intro| the walls within which the human mind was confined. Formerly 21 Intro| lost in a region beyond human comprehension. But Hegel 22 Intro| and also the thinnest of human ideas, or, in the language 23 Intro| thinker has ever dissected the human mind with equal patience 24 Intro| indefinitely improved by human effort. There is also an 25 Intro| to imply a state of the human mind which has entirely 26 Intro| a mere waif or stray in human history, any more than he 27 Intro| the ages during which the human race may yet endure, do 28 Intro| anticipate the proportions human knowledge may attain even 29 Intro| and action, between the human and divine.~These are some 30 Intro| one has equally raised the human mind above the trivialities 31 Intro| assimilating the natural order of human thought with the history 32 Intro| a light on many parts of human knowledge, and has solved 33 Intro| within the sphere of the human mind, and not beyond it. 34 Soph| looking from above upon human life; and some think nothing 35 Soph| STRANGER: One of them is human and the other divine.~THEAETETUS: 36 Soph| out of these are works of human art. And so there are two 37 Soph| and production, the one human and the other divine.~THEAETETUS: 38 Soph| reference to us and are human, and two of them have reference 39 Soph| And what shall we say of human art? Do we not make one 40 Soph| STRANGER: And other products of human creation are also twofold 41 Soph| there is both a divine and a human production; in the vertical 42 Soph| juggling of words, a creation human, and not divine—any one