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Alphabetical [« »] relate 1 relater 1 relating 2 relation 32 relations 5 relationship 1 relative 10 | Frequency [« »] 32 number 32 once 32 really 32 relation 32 says 32 sometimes 31 common | Plato Theaetetus IntraText - Concordances relation |
Dialogue
1 Intro| various a character that their relation to the other dialogues cannot 2 Intro| both may be brought into relation with the Apology as illustrating 3 Intro| but they have no other relation; and the combination of 4 Intro| another kind, which exist in relation and which above all others 5 Intro| philosophy, and secondly, in relation to modern speculations.~( 6 Intro| faculties, or to imagine the relation or adaptation of objects 7 Intro| escape from the category of relation.~But because knowledge is 8 Intro| the Republic, the idea of relation, which is equally distinct 9 Intro| as they are in nature in relation to other individuals.~Yet 10 Intro| resemblance between the relation of letters to a syllable, 11 Intro| either of them, or of their relation to one another, could be 12 Intro| this opinion stood in no relation.~Like Theaetetus, we have 13 Intro| of view. It speaks of the relation of the senses to one another; 14 Intro| simplest sensation implies some relation of objects to one another, 15 Intro| position in space, some relation to a previous or subsequent 16 Intro| two questions—first their relation to the mind, secondly, their 17 Intro| the mind, secondly, their relation to outward objects:—~1. 18 Intro| distance of an object and its relation to other objects. But we 19 Intro| namely, that concerning the relation of the mind to external 20 Intro| constitution of the mind, of the relation of man to God and nature, 21 Intro| it as a whole or in its relation to God and the laws of the 22 Intro| summed up as follows:—~a. The relation of man to the world around 23 Intro| outward and what is the relation between them, and where 24 Intro| way of describing their relation to us. For of all the phenomena 25 Intro| involving every sort of complex relation, so sudden, so accidental, 26 Thea| the wind, regarded not in relation to us but absolutely, cold 27 Thea| to see what is the mutual relation of these principles,— whether 28 Thea| everything is becoming and in relation; and being must be altogether 29 Thea| other quality, must have relation to a percipient; nothing 30 Thea| patient) are or become in relation to one another; there is 31 Thea| or becomes to or of or in relation to something else; but he 32 Thea| that which acts upon me has relation to me and to no other, I