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Alphabetical    [«  »]
idealism 3
idealists 1
ideals 4
ideas 42
identical 2
identified 5
identifies 2
Frequency    [«  »]
43 use
42 appears
42 human
42 ideas
42 meaning
42 measure
41 far
Plato
Theaetetus

IntraText - Concordances

ideas
   Dialogue
1 Intro| recollection and of any doctrine of ideas except that which derives 2 Intro| of sense to a theory of ideas.~There is no reason to doubt 3 Intro| cleared up or advanced popular ideas, or illustrated a new method, 4 Intro| experience with which the ideas swarming in men’s minds 5 Intro| and not only the Platonic Ideas and the Eleatic Being, but 6 Intro| assist in bringing their ideas to the birth. Many of them 7 Intro| to discover whether our ideas are clear and consistent. 8 Intro| is fixed in them or their ideas,—they are at war with fixed 9 Intro| assumes the existence of ideas independent of the mind ( 10 Intro| theory to experience, from ideas to sense. This is a point 11 Intro| thinker. Amid the conflict of ideas and the variety of opinions, 12 Intro| conform, and to which our ideas naturally adapt themselves; 13 Intro| nor of the great original ideas of the master, but of the 14 Intro| Platonic reminiscence of Ideas as well as the Eleatic Being 15 Intro| universal all-pervading ideas,—a notion further carried 16 Intro| Important metaphysical ideas are: a. the conception of 17 Intro| A profusion of words and ideas has obscured rather than 18 Intro| self-existent entity apart from the ideas which are contained in them.~ 19 Intro| science of relations, of ideas, of the so-called arts and 20 Intro| fleetings of sensible objects, ideas alone seemed to be fixed, 21 Intro| are applications of our ideas of space to matter. No wonder 22 Intro| Being the simplest of our ideas, space is also the one of 23 Intro| that the necessity in our ideas of space on which much stress 24 Intro| to belong to other of our ideas, e.g. weight, motion, and 25 Intro| of space, like our other ideas, has a history. The Homeric 26 Intro| of the necessity of our ideas of space we must remember 27 Intro| sometimes called our simple ideas pass into one another, and 28 Intro| gradual developement of ideas through religion, through 29 Intro| the natural connexion of ideas with objects or with one 30 Intro| inheritance of thoughts and ideas handed down by tradition, ‘ 31 Intro| seem chiefly to derive our ideas of distance and position. 32 Intro| which separates facts from ideas. And the mind is not something 33 Intro| follow custom, to have no new ideas or opinions, not to be straining 34 Intro| type; they have personified ideas; they have sometimes also 35 Intro| disengage ourselves from the ideas which the customary use 36 Intro| example, we must assume ideas before we can analyze them, 37 Intro| reflection how these great ideas or movements of the world 38 Intro| distinguish outward facts from the ideas of them in the mind, or 39 Intro| strength and intensity of our ideas or feelings.~j. Although 40 Intro| his being he grasps the ideas of God, freedom and immortality; 41 Thea| within the range of their ideas; neither am I their enemy 42 Thea| understand their poverty of ideas. Why are they unable to


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