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Alphabetical [« »] truest 1 truism 1 truisms 1 truly 33 trust 3 trustees 2 trustworthy 3 | Frequency [« »] 33 old 33 seeing 33 seems 33 truly 32 admit 32 appear 32 give | Plato Theaetetus IntraText - Concordances truly |
Dialogue
1 Intro| Theaetetus, who in his turn truly declares that Socrates has 2 Intro| further, that they speak truly who deny him to speak truly, 3 Intro| truly who deny him to speak truly, which is a famous jest. 4 Intro| he admits that they speak truly who deny him to speak truly, 5 Intro| truly who deny him to speak truly, he must admit that he himself 6 Intro| he himself does not speak truly. But his opponents will 7 Intro| will deny that he speaks truly; and his truth will be true 8 Intro| form a true opinion and truly judge. But if true opinion 9 Intro| with one eye only cannot be truly said both to see and not 10 Intro| of violence, but he may truly persuade them of the commission 11 Intro| can mental phenomena be truly explained either by physiology 12 Intro| might be described more truly as the mind conversing with 13 Intro| imagination, which may be truly described in the language 14 Intro| relationship to Physiology. We truly remark that there is an 15 Intro| secondly, our own nature, as it truly is.~(3) Hence it is important 16 Thea| ridiculous?~THEAETETUS: Truly.~SOCRATES: In the first 17 Thea| Socrates, that you have truly explained his meaning.~SOCRATES: 18 Thea| become.~THEAETETUS: Yes, truly.~SOCRATES: These three axioms, 19 Thea| madmen or dreamers think truly, when they imagine, some 20 Thea| ever made another think truly, who previously thought 21 Thea| what we are about; for you truly said that we belong to a 22 Thea| that they are all the more truly what they do not think they 23 Thea| whole’ appear to speak more truly, we will fly off from the 24 Thea| SOCRATES: You conceive truly. And now, my friend, please 25 Thea| just now remarking very truly, that in discussions of 26 Thea| his thoughts, he may be truly said to have false opinion.~ 27 Thea| of the base, then he has truly false opinion.~SOCRATES: 28 Thea| not mistaken, that your ‘truly false’ is safe from censure, 29 Thea| more reason; for to think truly is noble and to be deceived 30 Thea| and does not the argument truly show that we are wrong in 31 Thea| may say that his mind is truly exercised, but has no knowledge; 32 Thea| Thus letters may be most truly said to be undefined; for 33 Thea| requirement; and we may be truly described as the blind directing