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Alphabetical    [«  »]
idealism 2
idealist 1
ideality 1
ideas 44
identified 1
identify 1
idols 2
Frequency    [«  »]
45 visible
44 divided
44 eternal
44 ideas
44 much
43 solon
43 speak
Plato
Timaeus

IntraText - Concordances

ideas
   Dialogue
1 Intro| subjected, nor have the ideas which fastened upon his 2 Intro| abruptly from persons to ideas and numbers, and from ideas 3 Intro| ideas and numbers, and from ideas and numbers to persons,— 4 Intro| previously shown to exist in the ideas. There is a similar uncertainty 5 Intro| that the relation of the ideas to God or of God to the 6 Intro| prior state of being. The ideas also remain, but they have 7 Intro| thread of connexion to his ideas without giving greater consistency 8 Intro| mortal soul, has all his ideas mortal, and is himself mortal 9 Intro| occasionally confused numbers with ideas, and atoms with numbers; 10 Intro| mythology, and yet mythological ideas still retained their hold 11 Intro| but these principles or ideas were regarded by him as 12 Intro| found in mythology many ideas which, if not originally 13 Intro| Under the influence of such ideas, perhaps also deriving from 14 Intro| Soon an inner world of ideas began to be unfolded, more 15 Intro| They were mastered by their ideas and not masters of them. 16 Intro| truth. Behind any pair of ideas a new idea which comprehended 17 Intro| the most fruitful of all ideas. It is the beginning of 18 Intro| was exerted by abstract ideas, they were also capable 19 Intro| investigations. ‘They had plenty of ideas,’ says Dr. Whewell, ‘and 20 Intro| plenty of facts; but their ideas did not accurately represent 21 Intro| by the help of experience ideas which they already possessed. 22 Intro| not with matter, but with ideas. According to Plato in the 23 Intro| old difficulties about the ideas come back upon us in an 24 Intro| accordance with his own theory of ideas; and as we cannot give a 25 Intro| world, just as the other ideas are prior to sensible objects; 26 Intro| distinguished from the eternal ideas, or essence itself from 27 Intro| attain to the clearness of ideas. But like them it seems 28 Intro| matter the two abstract ideas of weight and extension, 29 Intro| and often confused in his ideas where we have become clear, 30 Intro| an anticipation of modern ideas as about some questions 31 Intro| the absurdities of ancient ideas about science, on the haphazard 32 Intro| their confusion of facts and ideas, on their inconsistency 33 Intro| between mind and body, between ideas and facts. Have not many 34 Intro| contributed to the general ideas of physics, or supplied 35 Intro| must remember that these ideas were not derived from any 36 Intro| us) the relation of the ideas to appearance, of which 37 Intro| great opposition between ideas and phenomena—they easily 38 Intro| disappears, but the doctrine of ideas is also reduced to nothingness. 39 Intro| measure and a presentiment of ideas. Even in Plato they still 40 Intro| numbers to the universal ideas, or of universals to the 41 Intro| Here the theory of Platonic ideas intrudes upon us. God, like 42 Intro| theory of the universe with ideas of mind and of the best, 43 Timae| animal the mind perceives ideas or species of a certain 44 Timae| are these self-existent ideas unperceived by sense, and


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