Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] expecting 1 expediency 3 expedient 10 experience 45 experienced 4 experiences 2 experiencing 1 | Frequency [« »] 46 definition 46 ourselves 46 space 45 experience 45 sensation 45 tell 44 before | Plato Theaetetus IntraText - Concordances experience |
Dialogue
1 Intro| there was no measure of experience with which the ideas swarming 2 Intro| learned by reflection and experience. Mere perception does not 3 Intro| reactions from theory to experience, from ideas to sense. This 4 Intro| axiom, ‘All knowledge is experience.’ He means to say that the 5 Intro| this—that the modern term ‘experience,’ while implying a point 6 Intro| from that of which we have experience. There are certain laws 7 Intro| oral, which he knows by experience to be trustworthy. He cannot 8 Intro| the parts? The answer of experience is that they can; for we 9 Intro| further than is justified by experience. Any separation of things 10 Intro| recognize within us is not experience, but rather the suggestion 11 Intro| rather the suggestion of an experience, which we may gather, if 12 Intro| enquire into the meaning of experience, and did not attempt to 13 Intro| the modern philosophy of experience forms an alliance with ancient 14 Intro| knowledge, they are derived from experience, and that experience is 15 Intro| from experience, and that experience is ultimately resolvable 16 Intro| agreement with history and experience. But sensation is of the 17 Intro| altogether independent of experience. Geometry teaches us that 18 Intro| reasoning as well as by common experience. Through quantity and measure 19 Intro| other truths derived from experience, which seem to have a necessity 20 Intro| contradicted in all our experience and is therefore confirmed 21 Intro| prior to the mind and to experience, or coeval with them, is ( 22 Intro| latent logic— some previous experience or observation. Sensation, 23 Intro| What becomes of the mind? Experience tells us by a thousand proofs 24 Intro| knowledge is derived from experience without implying that this 25 Intro| of knowledge is prior to experience. The truth seems to be that 26 Intro| the results of their own experience. To the man of the world 27 Intro| with its own modicum of experience having only such vague conceptions 28 Intro| seeks to explain from the experience of the individual what can 29 Intro| is not really entitled.~Experience shows that any system, however 30 Intro| deal to them from our own experience, and we may verify them 31 Intro| impressions or the oldest experience of man respecting himself. 32 Intro| general foundation in popular experience, it is moulded to a certain 33 Intro| workings of the mind, their experience is the same or nearly the 34 Intro| language, acknowledged by experience, and corrected from time 35 Intro| rather based on popular experience. They were not held with 36 Intro| some degree verified by experience, but not in such a manner 37 Intro| nature and the increasing experience of life have always been 38 Intro| Neither in thought nor in experience can we separate them. They 39 Intro| also interpreted by our experience of others. The history of 40 Thea| mystery of an art without experience; and therefore she assigned 41 Thea| space, which is a strange experience to him, he being dismayed, 42 Thea| gained, by education and long experience.~THEAETETUS: Assuredly.~ 43 Thea| or origin of the mental experience to which I refer.~THEAETETUS: 44 Thea| when you remember your own experience in learning to read?~THEAETETUS: 45 Thea| to read?~THEAETETUS: What experience?~SOCRATES: Why, that in