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workings 2
workman 1
works 4
world 64
worlds 2
worse 5
worship 2
Frequency    [«  »]
65 said
64 having
64 motion
64 world
63 neither
62 way
61 could
Plato
Theaetetus

IntraText - Concordances

world
   Dialogue
1 Intro| favourite antithesis between the world, in the various characters 2 Intro| Plato, the limits of the world of imagination and of pure 3 Intro| abstraction, of the old world and the new, were not yet 4 Intro| into the composition of the world; which could distinguish 5 Intro| bring anything into the world of his own. He also reminds 6 Intro| women do not bring into the world at one time real children 7 Intro| agents and patients in the world, and these produce in every 8 Intro| if he were a god. And the world is full of men who are asking 9 Intro| pop his head out of the world below, he would doubtless 10 Intro| is unacquainted with the world; he hardly knows whether 11 Intro| virtue’s praises.~‘If the world, Socrates, were as ready 12 Intro| must ever remain in this world to be the antagonist of 13 Intro| form conceptions of the world, now led them to frame general 14 Intro| ancient as well as the modern world there were reactions from 15 Intro| conception. There would be no world, if there neither were nor 16 Intro| any one to perceive the world. A slight effort of reflection 17 Intro| nature’ to ‘truth,’ from the world to man. But he did not stop 18 Intro| applied to the sensible world, and again used in the more 19 Intro| belonging neither to the old world of sense and imagination, 20 Intro| imagination, nor to the new world of reflection and reason. 21 Intro| constructing anew the entire world of thought. And prior to 22 Intro| from the observation of the world. The memory has but a feeble 23 Intro| attempting to imagine the world first dawning upon the eye 24 Intro| the contemplation of the world without us—the boundless 25 Intro| without the one than the world without the other. It is 26 Intro| when connected with the world and the divine nature, like 27 Intro| universality of the inner world. For logic teaches us that 28 Intro| only withdrawn from the world of sense but introduced 29 Intro| but introduced to a higher world of thought and reflection, 30 Intro| suggests and arranges a world of particulars. The power 31 Intro| surface: the mind takes the world to pieces and puts it together 32 Intro| sense are the truth of the world in which we live; and (as 33 Intro| only: for a day or two the world has a new interest to him; 34 Intro| He liked to think of the world as the representation of 35 Intro| unsettled, but the laws of the world remain fixed as at the beginning. 36 Intro| himself to the opinions of the world; it is Plato who rises above 37 Intro| characters which exist in the world—are the disguises of self-interest. 38 Intro| below the opinions of the world.~Imagination has been called 39 Intro| of herself in the outward world. To deprive life of ideals 40 Intro| hovers about this lower world and the earthly nature.’ 41 Intro| curtain of the physical world and is satisfied. The strength 42 Intro| experience. To the man of the world they are the quintessence 43 Intro| the greater part of the world as the natural way of passing 44 Intro| has ever been done in this world has been the work of another 45 Intro| from the history of the world. It has no conception of 46 Intro| Psychology have been given to the world, partly based upon the views 47 Intro| the individual or of the world. This is the scientific 48 Intro| independent of the external world. It has five or six natural 49 Intro| knowledge of himself and of the world. The majority of them have 50 Intro| ideas or movements of the world have been appropriated by 51 Intro| The relation of man to the world around him,—in what sense 52 Intro| ourselves from the external world, we seem to find there more 53 Intro| philosophy; from one end of the world or from one pole of knowledge 54 Intro| move in a better-ordered world, and will himself be a better-ordered 55 Intro| communion with the unseen world. Somehow, he knows not how, 56 Thea| philosophers in that part of the world. But I am more interested 57 Thea| reveal the secret, as the world in general have not found 58 Thea| women do not bring into the world at one time real children, 59 Thea| difficulty brought into the world. And now that he is born, 60 Thea| in knowledge? Is not the world full of men in their several 61 Thea| Homer says, who give me a world of trouble.~SOCRATES: Well, 62 Thea| get his head out of the world below, he would have overthrown 63 Thea| the reason given by the world, and in my judgment is only 64 Thea| are any teachers in the world so clever as to be able


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