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Alphabetical    [«  »]
how 62
however 28
hue 4
human 70
humbled 1
humorous 1
humour 1
Frequency    [«  »]
73 again
73 manner
72 thus
70 human
70 said
68 greek
65 triangles
Plato
Timaeus

IntraText - Concordances

human
   Dialogue
1 Intro| they exhibit a phase of the human mind which prevailed widely 2 Intro| formation of the world and the human frame to have the same interest 3 Intro| contemplating processes of the human mind, or of that divine 4 Intro| functions and diseases of the human frame. He uses the thoughts 5 Intro| design. The creator is like a human artist who frames in his 6 Intro| of their future birth and human lot. They were to be sown 7 Intro| the younger gods to frame human bodies for them and to make 8 Intro| a forward motion to the human body, because the front 9 Intro| is the great blessing of human life; not to speak of the 10 Intro| forget the difference of the human and divine nature. God only 11 Intro| is a natural order in the human frame according to which 12 Intro| the world, so also in the human frame, produces harmony 13 Intro| enthusiasm, in which the human faculties seemed to yearn 14 Intro| universe. In a few years the human mind was peopled with abstractions; 15 Intro| to the first efforts of human intelligence.~There was 16 Intro| of the heavens and of the human body is not a mere vagary, 17 Intro| on the primaeval chaos of human knowledge. He would see 18 Intro| of the world and of the human mind, under which they carried 19 Intro| upon the utmost limit of human intelligence, and then of 20 Intro| the Eleatics, unless some human qualities are added on to 21 Intro| mere negative residuum of human thought.~There is another 22 Intro| law, and need not imply a human consciousness, a conception 23 Intro| the world as well as the human soul is divided answer to 24 Intro| unreal—the succession of human thoughts as well as the 25 Intro| quite possible that the human mind should retain an enthusiasm 26 Intro| universe as well as in the human mind. The soul of man is 27 Intro| difference between the soul human and divine. The human soul, 28 Intro| soul human and divine. The human soul, like the cosmical, 29 Intro| head, heart and belly. The human soul differs from the soul 30 Intro| in a similar manner the human body is conceived of as 31 Intro| infinite complexity of the human frame remains unobserved. 32 Intro| heat and air within the human frame, and the blood circulating 33 Intro| man. The microcosm of the human body is the lesser image 34 Intro| original composition of the human frame; the bone was formed 35 Intro| forming the substances of the human body to those which are 36 Intro| more sensitive parts of the human frame are those which are 37 Intro| imperfect, either of the human frame as a whole, or of 38 Intro| they are inherent in the human mind, and when they have 39 Intro| is the feebleness of the human intellect—‘God knows the 40 Intro| almost the same words of human intelligence, but not in 41 Intro| forget the difference of the human and divine natures.’ Their 42 Intro| attributing them to the human frame, but in the omission 43 Intro| such an error how could the human mind have comprehended the 44 Intro| in suns and stars; in the human body as well as in external 45 Intro| no eye has seen nor any human language can express.~Lastly, 46 Intro| While the determinations of human thought are in process of 47 Intro| eternal pattern he is like the human artificer in the Republic. 48 Intro| the Gods have no care of human things.~The creation of 49 Intro| impressed by one aspect of human life, sometimes by the other. 50 Intro| Statesman he supposes the human race to be preserved in 51 Intro| themselves; and therefore human actions, in so far as they 52 Intro| much of the good and bad in human character depends on the 53 Intro| the greatest effort of the human mind to conceive the world 54 Intro| fiction so natural to the human mind, because it answered 55 Intro| legend so adapted to the human mind that it made a habitation 56 Intro| chapter in the history of the human mind. The tale of Atlantis 57 Intro| eighteenth century, when the human mind, seeking for Utopias 58 Intro| that now as formerly the human mind is liable to be imposed 59 Intro| supposed to find a place in the human soul and to infuse harmony 60 Timae| deriving what was needful for human life, and adding every sort 61 Timae| religious of animals; and as human nature was of two kinds, 62 Timae| was still lacking to the human soul, and having made all 63 Timae| more earthy parts of the human body; whereas what was said 64 Timae| forget the difference of the human and divine nature. For God 65 Timae| he bade them create the human race as good as they could, 66 Timae| root and foundation of the human race. The marrow itself 67 Timae| have co-existed, and the human race, having a strong and 68 Timae| principle applies to the human belly; for when meats and 69 Timae| the sovereign part of the human soul to be the divinity 70 Timae| truth, and in so far as human nature is capable of sharing


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