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Alphabetical [« »] grasps 1 grateful 1 graven 1 great 81 greater 30 greatest 5 greatly 3 | Frequency [« »] 83 perception 82 being 82 nor 81 great 81 himself 81 plato 80 many | Plato Theaetetus IntraText - Concordances great |
Dialogue
1 Intro| remark, that ‘he would be a great man if he lived.’~In this 2 Intro| disciple of Theodorus, the great geometrician, whose science 3 Intro| and enthusiasm about the great question. Like a youth, 4 Intro| discussion which turns up. His great dialectical talent is shown 5 Intro| that Socrates has got a great deal more out of him than 6 Intro| At the commencement of a great discussion, the reflection 7 Intro| fallacy himself, and is the great detector of the errors and 8 Intro| writer. In this dialogue a great part of the answer of Protagoras 9 Intro| nor does he imagine that a great philosophical problem can 10 Intro| original chaos. The two great speculative philosophies, 11 Intro| of him that he would be a great man if he lived.’ ‘How true 12 Intro| as others see them, to be great fools. Aristides, the son 13 Intro| be relative; nothing is great or small, or heavy or light, 14 Intro| Homer and Heracleitus, the great Protagorean saying that “ 15 Intro| that he did not begin his great work on Truth with a declaration 16 Intro| dispute; and there is a great difference between reasoning 17 Intro| is clear that there are great differences in the understandings 18 Intro| too much reverence for the great Parmenides lightly to attack 19 Intro| another; Heracleitus, like his great successor Hegel, has both 20 Intro| philosophy of sensation presented great attraction to the ancient 21 Intro| truism to us, but was a great psychological discovery 22 Intro| all things.’ Like other great thinkers, he was absorbed 23 Intro| unfairness which is worthy of the great ‘brainless brothers,’ Euthydemus 24 Intro| succeeded him; nor of the great original ideas of the master, 25 Intro| been the case with other great philosophers, and with Plato 26 Intro| thoughts, like those of the great Eleatic, soon degenerated 27 Intro| nature, in which they meet. A great advance has been made in 28 Intro| influenced the minds of great thinkers. Also there are 29 Intro| sight of an object at a great distance which we have previously 30 Intro| And language, which is the great educator of mankind, is 31 Intro| can divide the nerves or great nervous centres from the 32 Intro| or composer’s mind, so a great principle or leading thought 33 Intro| any other sense, of the great complexity of the causes 34 Intro| complexity of the causes and the great simplicity of the effect.~ 35 Intro| first intoxication of a great thought. But he soon finds 36 Intro| have been associated with great virtues, or that both religious 37 Intro| that they were doing, a great deal more.~The philosophies 38 Intro| Physical Science and has great expectations from its near 39 Intro| knowledge and may be of great value in education. We may 40 Intro| itself in the glass. The great, if not the only use of 41 Intro| of the mind is not to any great extent derived from the 42 Intro| literature and philosophy. A great, perhaps the most important, 43 Intro| nations, as it is renovated by great movements, which go beyond 44 Intro| is created or renewed by great minds, who, looking down 45 Intro| the reflection how these great ideas or movements of the 46 Intro| tends to hinder the other great source of our knowledge 47 Intro| probability can never make any great progress or attain to much 48 Intro| of knowledge which has a great interest for us and is always 49 Intro| philosophy, and religion, the great thoughts or inventions or 50 Thea| would most certainly be a great man, if he lived.~TERPSION: 51 Thea| follow, and I see that a great many of them follow you, 52 Thea| grown-up man, who was a great runner—would the praise 53 Thea| as others see them, to be great fools. Aristeides, the son 54 Thea| that you are in labour—great with some conception. Come 55 Thea| anything by any name, such as great or small, heavy or light, 56 Thea| heavy or light, for the great will be small and the heavy 57 Thea| you in this. Summon the great masters of either kind of 58 Thea| take up arms against such a great army having Homer for its 59 Thea| apprehend by touch, were great or white or hot, it could 60 Thea| apprehending subject were great or white or hot, could this, 61 Thea| the use of the term. But great philosophers tell us that 62 Thea| I think that there is a great deal in what you say, and 63 Thea| motion and flux, or with the great sage Protagoras, that man 64 Thea| alive; he would have had a great deal to say on their behalf. 65 Thea| questions: for there is great inconsistency in saying 66 Thea| philosophical enquiry than a great many men who have long beards?~ 67 Thea| about his meaning, for a great deal may be at stake?~THEODORUS: 68 Thea| deny is, that there are great differences in the understandings 69 Thea| again, he observes that the great man is of necessity as ill-mannered 70 Thea| with one another; their great care is, not to allow of 71 Thea| ridiculous position, having so great a conceit of our own poor 72 Thea| proceeding when the danger is so great?~THEODORUS: Nay, Socrates, 73 Thea| and at rest,’ as for the great leader himself, Parmenides, 74 Thea| same name, when there is so great a difference between them?~ 75 Thea| often troubles me, and is a great perplexity to me, both in 76 Thea| which is well done, than a great deal imperfectly.~THEAETETUS: 77 Thea| issue; but as we are in a great strait, every argument should 78 Thea| But, seeing that we are no great wits, shall I venture to 79 Thea| SOCRATES: The profession of the great wise ones who are called 80 Thea| be cowards and betray a great and imposing theory.~THEAETETUS: 81 Thea| aught of the things which great and famous men know or have