Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] grateful 1 graven 1 great 81 greater 30 greatest 5 greatly 3 greece 1 | Frequency [« »] 30 further 30 general 30 go 30 greater 30 higher 30 impressions 30 indeed | Plato Theaetetus IntraText - Concordances greater |
Dialogue
1 Intro| conventional and the true.~The greater part of the dialogue is 2 Intro| first, that nothing can be greater or less while remaining 3 Intro| there can be no becoming greater or less without addition 4 Intro| does not consist in any greater truth or superior knowledge. 5 Intro| as I am, there would be greater peace and less evil among 6 Intro| are too soon effaced. Yet greater is the indistinctness when 7 Intro| difficulty only to encounter a greater? For how can the exchange 8 Intro| the consideration of the greater number, by designedly omitting 9 Intro| Plato does not mention the greater objection, which is, that 10 Intro| instance to the contrary? The greater part of what is sometimes 11 Intro| and might therefore with greater plausibility be affirmed 12 Intro| intensity; they admit also of a greater or less extension from one 13 Intro| the mind. In general the greater the intension the less the 14 Intro| nor the consideration. The greater or less strain upon the 15 Intro| help us to discern, by the greater or less acuteness of the 16 Intro| this is regarded by the greater part of the world as the 17 Intro| may have fallen into still greater ones; under the pretence 18 Intro| with the reality, with the greater and, as it may be termed, 19 Intro| society on a scale still greater, as it is created or renewed 20 Intro| become conscious of them in a greater or less degree, or with 21 Intro| or less degree, or with a greater or less continuity or attention, 22 Intro| overwhelming impulse. These are the greater phenomena of mind, and he 23 Thea| unequal factors, either of a greater multiplied by a less, or 24 Thea| of a less multiplied by a greater, and when regarded as a 25 Thea| whether anything can become greater or more if not by increasing, 26 Thea| that nothing can become greater or less, either in number 27 Thea| may be involved even in greater paradoxes than these. Shall 28 Thea| confused and effaced. Yet greater is the indistinctness when 29 Thea| numbers the chance of error is greater still; for I assume you 30 Thea| deceived. And yet I fear that a greater difficulty is looking in