Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
hovers 1
how 101
however 15
human 42
humaner 1
humble 1
humbler 1
Frequency    [«  »]
43 sight
43 use
42 appears
42 human
42 ideas
42 meaning
42 measure
Plato
Theaetetus

IntraText - Concordances

human
   Dialogue
1 Intro| in a different cycle of human thought. All times of mental 2 Intro| the positive a place in human thought. To such a philosophy 3 Intro| frame general notions of the human faculties and feelings, 4 Intro| relativity of knowledge to the human mind? Or did he mean to 5 Intro| exist independently of the human faculties, because they 6 Intro| self-existence, or as the totality of human thought, or as the Divine 7 Intro| to the childhood of the human mind, like the parallel 8 Intro| complete. The framework of the human intellect is not the peculium 9 Intro| growth of a flower, a tree, a human being. They may be conceived 10 Intro| impede the natural course of human thought. Lastly, there is 11 Intro| up with the growth of the human mind, and has been made 12 Intro| men sought to explain the human mind without regard to history 13 Intro| build up the mind’ of the human race. And language, which 14 Intro| assignable place in the human frame. Who can divide the 15 Intro| imperfection or variation of the human senses, or possibly from 16 Intro| extremes; they stop where the human mind is disposed also to 17 Intro| sense, that explanation of human action is deemed to be the 18 Intro| disguises of self-interest. Human nature is dried up; there 19 Intro| to the narrower view of human knowledge. It seeks to fly 20 Intro| that they might lift the human race out of the slough in 21 Intro| unlimited, freedom of the human will: (e) of the reference, 22 Intro| practical one,—to know, first, human nature, and, secondly, our 23 Intro| factor in the formation of human thought, we must endeavour 24 Intro| thought are rooted so deep in human nature that they can never 25 Intro| the first analysis of the human mind; having a general foundation 26 Intro| growing consciousness of the human race, embodied in language, 27 Intro| begins to be inspired by a human or divine reason, as it 28 Intro| limits of nations and affect human society on a scale still 29 Intro| strength and skill of the human body is so immeasurably 30 Intro| eye can take in the whole human body at a glance. Yet there 31 Intro| considerable influence on human character, yet we are unable 32 Intro| collection of facts bearing on human life, as a part of the history 33 Intro| phenomena present to the human mind they seem to have most 34 Intro| ever-present phenomena of the human mind. We speak of the laws 35 Intro| and the lower elements of human nature, and not allow one 36 Intro| consistently the unity of the human faculties, the unity of 37 Intro| or outlines in which the human mind has been cast. From 38 Thea| to be midwives, because human nature cannot know the mystery 39 Thea| their orbits, all things human and divine are and are preserved, 40 Thea| are the physicians of the human body, and the husbandmen 41 Thea| littlenesses and nothingnesses of human things, is ‘flying all abroad’ 42 Thea| consideration of government, and of human happiness and misery in


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