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Alphabetical [« »] mathematics 8 matrix 1 matted 1 matter 46 mattered 1 matters 4 matured 2 | Frequency [« »] 47 well 46 kind 46 knowledge 46 matter 46 never 45 best 45 circle | Plato Timaeus IntraText - Concordances matter |
Dialogue
1 Intro| For he is hanging between matter and mind; he is under the 2 Intro| that words are akin to the matter of which they speak. What 3 Intro| may also remark that the matter which receives every variety 4 Intro| In the same way space or matter is neither earth nor fire 5 Intro| one another. The yielding matter is that which has the slenderest 6 Intro| the fibres. The glutinous matter which comes away from the 7 Intro| the fingers was a ‘trivial matter (Rep.), a little instrument 8 Intro| add a rude conception of matter and his own immediate experience 9 Intro| and to the particles of matter. The ancients had not the 10 Intro| his original conception of matter as something which has no 11 Intro| the eternal existence of matter. The beginning of things 12 Intro| creation began, not with matter, but with ideas. According 13 Intro| as the preceding. How can matter be conceived to exist without 14 Intro| to the class of (Greek). Matter, being, the Same, the eternal,— 15 Intro| remnant of evil inherent in matter which he cannot get rid 16 Intro| perception of (Greek) or matter, which has played so great 17 Intro| realize either space or matter the two abstract ideas of 18 Intro| hardly distinguishable from matter. The matter out of which 19 Intro| distinguishable from matter. The matter out of which the world is 20 Intro| impressed on pre-existent matter. It is remarkable that he 21 Intro| all such disturbances of matter there is an alternative 22 Intro| void, but the particles of matter are ever pushing one another 23 Intro| in solution a residuum of matter or evil, which the author 24 Intro| shows, although this is a matter of minor importance, that 25 Intro| finds its expression in matter, whereas the soul of the 26 Intro| enveloped or diffused in matter, but is the element in which 27 Intro| is the element in which matter moves. The breath of man 28 Intro| 8) the annihilation of matter was denied by several of 29 Intro| and secondary qualities of matter. (2) Another popular notion 30 Intro| world acting on the same matter. He would have readily admitted 31 Intro| limited by the conditions of matter. In the generation before 32 Intro| degree. As in Aristotle’s matter and form the connexion between 33 Intro| predicated, and the chaos or matter which has no perceptible 34 Intro| seeking in vain to get rid of matter or to find absorption in 35 Timae| way thither, we talked the matter over, and he told us an 36 Timae| that words are akin to the matter which they describe; when 37 Timae| them, although a secondary matter, would give more trouble 38 Timae| of them, is a difficult matter. How, then, shall we settle 39 Timae| variety of form, then the matter in which the model is fashioned 40 Timae| from without. For if the matter were like any of the supervening 41 Timae| water. Let us consider the matter in another way. When one 42 Timae| Something has been said of this matter already, and something more 43 Timae| filled with the unclean matter, swells and festers, but, 44 Timae| And the glutinous and rich matter which comes away from the 45 Timae| mingles with the bitter matter when new flesh is decomposed 46 Timae| do wrong is not justly a matter for reproach. For no man