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Alphabetical [« »] those 49 though 23 thought 92 thoughts 35 thousand 8 thousands 9 thracian 3 | Frequency [« »] 35 difficulty 35 doctrine 35 friend 35 thoughts 34 called 34 person 34 power | Plato Theaetetus IntraText - Concordances thoughts |
Dialogue
1 Intro| who delivers men of their thoughts, and under this character 2 Intro| power which unlocks their thoughts. The hit at Aristides, the 3 Intro| as well as the serious thoughts, run through the dialogue. 4 Intro| desires to pour forth the thoughts which are always present 5 Intro| light, not children, but the thoughts of men. Like the midwives, 6 Intro| can he awaken harmonious thoughts or hymn virtue’s praises.~‘ 7 Intro| the man whom he has in his thoughts with the horse which he 8 Intro| horse which he has in his thoughts, but he may err in the addition 9 Intro| or expression of a man’s thoughts—but every man who is not 10 Intro| dumb is able to express his thoughts—or (2) the enumeration of 11 Intro| birth? If you have any more thoughts, you will be the better 12 Intro| consistency. His simple and noble thoughts, like those of the great 13 Intro| always to adhere to our thoughts about ourselves, and mental 14 Intro| our own minds as if our thoughts or feelings were written 15 Intro| but out of the mind at the thoughts, words, actions of ourselves 16 Intro| objective ‘All is flux.’ But the thoughts of men deepened, and soon 17 Intro| time. It is the vacancy of thoughts or sensations, as space 18 Intro| first in the order of our thoughts, and is not the condition 19 Intro| part of the train of our thoughts are hardly realized by us 20 Intro| the mental inheritance of thoughts and ideas handed down by 21 Intro| our sensations, feelings, thoughts, actions, to ourselves, 22 Intro| philosophies and in the thoughts of nations, is one of the 23 Intro| suppose the train of our thoughts to be always called up by 24 Intro| the living sense that our thoughts, actions, sufferings, are 25 Intro| and religion, the great thoughts or inventions or discoveries 26 Thea| patiently review our own thoughts, and thoroughly examine 27 Thea| are sleeping, and all our thoughts are a dream; or whether 28 Thea| the soul contends that the thoughts which are present to our 29 Thea| inferior habit of mind has thoughts of kindred nature, so I 30 Thea| causes men to have good thoughts; and these which the inexperienced 31 Thea| and missing the aim of his thoughts, he may be truly said to 32 Thea| has both of them in his thoughts, he cannot think that the 33 Thea| that which is not in his thoughts at all.~SOCRATES: Then no 34 Thea| wax to the perceptions and thoughts, and in that material receive 35 Thea| confusion, but have true thoughts, for they have plenty of