Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
forget 3
forging 1
forgive 1
form 42
formal 2
formed 5
former 8
Frequency    [«  »]
43 others
43 think
43 truth
42 form
42 himself
42 human
42 question
Plato
The Sophist

IntraText - Concordances

form
   Dialogue
1 Intro| Being was asserted in every form of language, the sensible 2 Intro| flying,’ is a sentence in form quite as grammatical as ‘ 3 Intro| be criticizing an earlier form of his own doctrines. We 4 Intro| explanation, either in the form of a speech or of question 5 Intro| jest, and the most graceful form of jest. Now the painter 6 Intro| being is a mere everlasting form, devoid of motion and soul? 7 Intro| who discerns one whole or form pervading a scattered multitude, 8 Intro| discourse in the shortest form. And thus not only speech, 9 Intro| expression of this in some form of sense. All of them are 10 Intro| but he can imitate the form of justice or virtue if 11 Intro| together under the higher form of the notion. (ii) Under 12 Intro| present or past, under the form of time or of eternity, 13 Intro| thought from the outward form, (3) combining the I and 14 Intro| philosophy to mankind under the form of opposites. Most of us 15 Intro| all philosophy under the form of opposites. The first 16 Intro| universe under a single form which was at first simply 17 Intro| Socrates presented in a new form as the study of ethics. 18 Intro| A,’ or, in the negative form, ‘Nothing can at the same 19 Intro| who remarks that ‘the form of the maxim is virtually 20 Intro| does not fulfil what its form requires. Nor does any mind 21 Intro| does any mind ever think or form conceptions in accordance 22 Intro| or both.’ The double form makes reflection easier 23 Intro| him to build up in a new form the ‘beggarly elements’ 24 Intro| compass of the mind the form of universal knowledge. 25 Intro| essence,’ ‘matter,’ ‘form,’ either have become obsolete, 26 Intro| is not cast in a poetic form, but neither has all this 27 Intro| appear in their natural form, stripped of the disguises 28 Soph| sort, which professes to form acquaintances only for the 29 Soph| written down in a popular form, and he who likes may learn.~ 30 Soph| more artistic or graceful form of jest than imitation?~ 31 Soph| which of them the desired form is to be found.~THEAETETUS: 32 Soph| word ‘it’ would imply a form of unity.~THEAETETUS: Quite 33 Soph| Again, false opinion is that form of opinion which thinks 34 Soph| able to see clearly one form pervading a scattered multitude, 35 Soph| contained under one higher form; and again, one form knit 36 Soph| higher form; and again, one form knit together into a single 37 Soph| but we have shown what form of being not-being is; for 38 Soph| is the simplest and least form of discourse.~THEAETETUS: 39 Soph| which do not, combine and form discourse.~THEAETETUS: Quite 40 Soph| example of the shortest form consistent with our definition.~ 41 Soph| not simply, but in some form of sense, would you not 42 Soph| you say of the figure or form of justice or of virtue


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