Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] truest 5 truly 24 trunk 2 truth 49 truths 6 try 1 trying 2 | Frequency [« »] 50 therefore 50 too 50 yet 49 truth 48 element 48 four 48 itself | Plato Timaeus IntraText - Concordances truth |
Dialogue
1 Intro| to have anticipated the truth.~The influence with the 2 Intro| For he has glimpses of the truth, but no comprehensive or 3 Intro| Panathenaic festival; the truth of the story is a great 4 Intro| being is to becoming what truth is to belief. And amid the 5 Intro| the very opposite of the truth, and they are false and 6 Intro| should attempt to test the truth of this by experiment, would 7 Intro| to its natural size.~The truth concerning the soul can 8 Intro| this is a mistake; for the truth is that the intemperance 9 Intro| immortal thoughts, attains to truth and immortality, as far 10 Intro| often anticipations of the truth. He was full of original 11 Intro| in word only, but in very truth, for ten thousand years’ ( 12 Intro| and also the beginning of truth to them was reasoning from 13 Intro| to error and sometimes to truth; for many thoughts were 14 Intro| a nearer approach to the truth than any patient investigation 15 Intro| abstraction the greater the truth. Behind any pair of ideas 16 Intro| proportions, and to comprehend all truth. Being or essence, and similar 17 Intro| to the eye of sense; the truth of nature was mathematics; 18 Intro| trivial, assured men of their truth; they were everywhere to 19 Intro| certain amount of scientific truth imperceptibly blends, even 20 Intro| other hand, there is no truth of which Plato is more firmly 21 Intro| of Plato is equivalent to truth or law, and need not imply 22 Intro| to darken the purity of truth in itself.—So far the words 23 Intro| independent of time, that truth is not a thing of yesterday 24 Intro| described as Mind or Being or Truth or God or the unchangeable 25 Intro| to have an inkling of the truth that to the higher nature 26 Intro| with an insight into the truth, ‘every disease is akin 27 Intro| ends and the philosophical truth begins; we cannot explain ( 28 Intro| disposed to believe in the truth of it as the modern reader 29 Intro| Are not the words, ‘The truth of the story is a great 30 Intro| records in their temples. The truth is that the introduction 31 Intro| examine in detail the exact truth about these things’—what 32 Intro| the place of reason and truth, how all philosophies grow 33 Intro| the mind of the reader the truth of his narrative have been 34 Intro| which works with equal truth, whether she be in the circle 35 Intro| partaking of the natural truth of reason, might imitate 36 Timae| being is to becoming, so is truth to belief. If then, Socrates, 37 Timae| which works with equal truth, whether she be in the circle 38 Timae| the very opposite of the truth.~When the father and creator 39 Timae| he ‘will be,’ but the truth is that ‘is’ alone is properly 40 Timae| the very opposite of the truth; and they become false and 41 Timae| partaking of the natural truth of reason, might imitate 42 Timae| generation. I have spoken the truth; but I must express myself 43 Timae| sleep and determine the truth about them. For an image, 44 Timae| would arrive at the probable truth of nature ought duly to 45 Timae| them to attain a measure of truth, placed in the liver the 46 Timae| wits, attains prophetic truth and inspiration; but when 47 Timae| that we have spoken the truth, then, and then only, can 48 Timae| which is a mistake. The truth is that the intemperance 49 Timae| and divine, if he attain truth, and in so far as human