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Alphabetical [« »] philosophers 17 philosophical 6 philosophies 5 philosophy 54 phlegm 16 phlogiston 1 phorcys 1 | Frequency [« »] 55 natural 55 together 54 become 54 philosophy 54 principle 53 cannot 53 say | Plato Timaeus IntraText - Concordances philosophy |
Dialogue
1 Intro| genius of Plato and Greek philosophy reacted upon the East, and 2 Intro| birth of a marriage between philosophy and tradition, between Hellas 3 Intro| growth of an age in which philosophy is not wholly separated 4 Intro| foundations of the Platonic philosophy, such as the nature of God, 5 Intro| adopting from old religion into philosophy the conception of God, and 6 Intro| elements of the Pre-Socratic philosophy are included in the Timaeus. 7 Intro| the various elements of philosophy which preceded him.~If we 8 Intro| servants. Thus the language of philosophy which speaks of first and 9 Intro| physiology, and natural philosophy in a few pages.~It is not 10 Intro| age, and the elements of philosophy which entered into the conception 11 Intro| the power of enquiry, and philosophy, which is the great blessing 12 Intro| of the conjectures which philosophy forms, when, leaving the 13 Intro| become impervious to divine philosophy.~The creation of bones and 14 Intro| animals were men who had no philosophy, and never looked up to 15 Intro| intermediate between mythology and philosophy and had a great influence 16 Intro| in mythology, so also in philosophy, worked upon the minds of 17 Intro| an elevating influence on philosophy. The conception of the world 18 Intro| comprehensiveness in early philosophy, which has not increased, 19 Intro| the beginnings of physical philosophy, leading to error and sometimes 20 Intro| progress in moral and political philosophy has been sometimes contrasted 21 Intro| of the modern inductive philosophy. But it remains to be shown 22 Intro| in the history of modern philosophy which have been barren and 23 Intro| pass out of mythology into philosophy. Early science is not a 24 Intro| This is poetry, this is philosophy’; for the transition from 25 Intro| systems of theology and philosophy, that of which we know least 26 Intro| a name, in ancient Greek philosophy. To this principle of the 27 Intro| foundation of so much in the philosophy of Greece and of the world, 28 Intro| a shadow in the Eleatic philosophy in the realm of opinion, 29 Intro| great thoughts of early philosophy, which are still as difficult 30 Intro| the decline of the Eleatic philosophy and were very familiar to 31 Intro| Greek as well as Christian philosophy, show that it is quite possible 32 Intro| part in the metaphysical philosophy of Aristotle and his followers. 33 Intro| is approved by modern philosophy too. The same irony which 34 Intro| consider that ancient physical philosophy was not a free enquiry, 35 Intro| should consider the physical philosophy of the ancients as a whole; 36 Intro| language, that physical philosophy and metaphysical too have 37 Intro| physical or metaphysical philosophy. There is also an intermediate 38 Intro| The latest word of modern philosophy is continuity and development, 39 Intro| Plato and to the previous philosophy; (b) the nature of God and 40 Intro| astronomy, conjectural natural philosophy, conjectural medicine. The 41 Intro| penetrated by the spirit of their philosophy; he differs from them with 42 Intro| composition with which his own philosophy is overlaid. In early life 43 Intro| at times the old Eleatic philosophy appears to go beyond him; 44 Intro| three, in the Pythagorean philosophy and in the teaching of Socrates 45 Intro| surprised to find that his philosophy in the Timaeus returns at 46 Intro| in the language of modern philosophy, to resolve the divine mind 47 Intro| times; it realizes how a philosophy made up of words only may 48 Intro| study this degeneracy of philosophy and of the Greek mind in 49 Timae| once both in politics and philosophy. Here is Timaeus, of Locris 50 Timae| scaled the heights of all philosophy; and here is Critias, whom 51 Timae| this source we have derived philosophy, than which no greater good 52 Timae| the whole race an enemy to philosophy and music, and rebellious 53 Timae| cultivate music and all philosophy, if he would deserve to 54 Timae| came from those who had no philosophy in any of their thoughts,