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Alphabetical [« »] extracted 1 extreme 6 extremes 1 eye 36 eye-witnesses 1 eyes 24 f 4 | Frequency [« »] 36 after 36 ask 36 come 36 eye 36 hear 36 parts 36 quite | Plato Theaetetus IntraText - Concordances eye |
Dialogue
1 Intro| between the object and the eye, and varying in the case 2 Intro| from place to place. The eye and the appropriate object 3 Intro| sensation of whiteness; the eye is filled with seeing, and 4 Intro| becomes not sight but a seeing eye, and the object is filled 5 Intro| perceives sights with the eye, and sounds with the ear. 6 Intro| one to the other, of the eye to the object of sense, 7 Intro| For he who sees with one eye only cannot be truly said 8 Intro| common sense, the mind’s eye, are figures of speech transferred 9 Intro| mind unless we have the eye which sees, and we can only 10 Intro| which come to us through the eye and ear, still their origin 11 Intro| following the lead of the eye or ear instead of the command 12 Intro| think, and that without the eye we cannot see: and yet there 13 Intro| given by the brain and the eye. It observes the ‘concomitant 14 Intro| apparent to the outward eye; by the other they are regarded 15 Intro| world first dawning upon the eye of the infant or of a person 16 Intro| the mind as well as the eye opens or enlarges. For all 17 Intro| are represented to us by eye or ear—stronger by the natural 18 Intro| the seeing and the closed eye—between the sensation and 19 Intro| enables the experienced eye to judge approximately of 20 Intro| actual impression made on the eye is very different in one 21 Intro| strain upon the nerves of the eye or ear is communicated to 22 Intro| also the use not of one eye only, but of two, which 23 Intro| sympathy of the mind and the eye. Do we not seem to perceive 24 Intro| same time?—No more than the eye can take in the whole human 25 Intro| too much colour is to the eye; but the truth is rather 26 Intro| what we term the mind’s eye the picture of the surrounding 27 Thea| colour, arises out of the eye meeting the appropriate 28 Thea| this to sense:—When the eye and the appropriate object 29 Thea| sight is flowing from the eye, whiteness proceeds from 30 Thea| producing the colour; and so the eye is fulfilled with sight, 31 Thea| not sight, but a seeing eye; and the object which combined 32 Thea| can see his cloak with the eye which he has closed, how 33 Thea| should answer, ‘Not with that eye but with the other.’~SOCRATES: 34 Thea| persons, for they have no eye for the situation, but by 35 Thea| difficulty still troubles the eye of my mind; and I am uncertain 36 Thea| separate letters both by the eye and by the ear, in order