Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
wine 9
wings 1
wiped 1
wisdom 34
wise 26
wiser 15
wisest 2
Frequency    [«  »]
34 subject
34 themselves
34 thinks
34 wisdom
33 able
33 becomes
33 conception
Plato
Theaetetus

IntraText - Concordances

wisdom
   Dialogue
1 Intro| his real and his assumed wisdom. No one is the superior 2 Intro| specimens of other men’s wisdom, because I have no wisdom 3 Intro| wisdom, because I have no wisdom of my own, and I want to 4 Intro| wondering at his incomparable wisdom, he gets you into his power, 5 Intro| I deny the existence of wisdom or of the wise man. But 6 Intro| man. But I maintain that wisdom is a practical remedial 7 Intro| who is their superior in wisdom as if he were a god. And 8 Intro| righteous. To know this is wisdom; and in comparison of this 9 Intro| in comparison of this the wisdom of the arts or the seeming 10 Intro| the arts or the seeming wisdom of politicians is mean and 11 Intro| revealed by the superior wisdom of a later generation, and 12 Intro| and (2) remarks full of wisdom, (3) also germs of a metaphysic 13 Intro| vague conceptions of the wisdom of the past as are inseparable 14 Thea| he praises the virtue or wisdom which are the mental endowments 15 Thea| course.~SOCRATES: And by wisdom the wise are wise?~THEAETETUS: 16 Thea| THEAETETUS: What?~SOCRATES: Wisdom; are not men wise in that 17 Thea| they are.~SOCRATES: Then wisdom and knowledge are the same?~ 18 Thea| to extract them from the wisdom of another, and to receive 19 Thea| reverencing him like a God for his wisdom he was no better than a 20 Thea| preferred to the place of wisdom and instruction, and deserve 21 Thea| is the measure of his own wisdom? Must he not be talking ‘ 22 Thea| envy and admiration of his wisdom, he would have got you into 23 Thea| am far from saying that wisdom and the wise man have no 24 Thea| to it; but the teacher of wisdom causes the good to take 25 Thea| equal and sufficient in wisdom; although he admitted that 26 Thea| implied that ignorance and wisdom exist among them, at least 27 Thea| Certainly.~SOCRATES: And wisdom is assumed by them to be 28 Thea| as he thinks, a master in wisdom. Such is the lawyer, Theodorus. 29 Thea| For to know this is true wisdom and virtue, and ignorance 30 Thea| vice. All other kinds of wisdom or cleverness, which seem 31 Thea| which seem only, such as the wisdom of politicians, or the wisdom 32 Thea| wisdom of politicians, or the wisdom of the arts, are coarse 33 Thea| ancients, who concealed their wisdom from the many in poetical 34 Thea| moderns, in their superior wisdom, have declared the same


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