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Alphabetical [« »] mockery 1 mode 5 model 1 modern 22 moderns 2 modes 3 modest 2 | Frequency [« »] 22 follow 22 help 22 imagine 22 modern 22 myself 22 order 22 within | Plato Theaetetus IntraText - Concordances modern |
Dialogue
1 Intro| the author. There are few modern readers who do not side 2 Intro| untenable to Plato as to a modern writer. In this dialogue 3 Intro| absolute at each moment. (In modern language, the act of sensation 4 Intro| secondly, in relation to modern speculations.~(a) In the 5 Intro| corresponding differences would in modern philosophy. The most ideal 6 Intro| the ancient as well as the modern world there were reactions 7 Intro| connexion between ancient and modern philosophy. The modern thinker 8 Intro| and modern philosophy. The modern thinker often repeats the 9 Intro| Chiefly in this—that the modern term ‘experience,’ while 10 Intro| instead of being veiled, as in modern times, under ambiguous and 11 Intro| tendency in them, just as the modern historian of ancient philosophy 12 Intro| difference between ancient and modern psychology, and we have 13 Intro| coexist.~So comprehensive is modern psychology, seeming to aim 14 Intro| as well as Plato would in modern phraseology have been termed 15 Intro| them. In like manner the modern inductive philosophy forgot 16 Intro| perceptions. At this point the modern philosophy of experience 17 Intro| metaphorically, both in ancient and modern philosophy, to express the 18 Intro| sensationalism or materialism in modern times, be allied to the 19 Intro| materialist doctrines prevalent in modern times have been associated 20 Intro| whether in ancient or in modern times, the mind is only 21 Intro| held with the precision of modern thinkers, but taken all 22 Intro| Western nations. Yet in modern times we have also drifted