Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] sow 2 sowed 2 sown 3 space 41 spake 2 span 2 spangled 1 | Frequency [« »] 41 motions 41 rest 41 similar 41 space 41 wherefore 40 her 40 let | Plato Timaeus IntraText - Concordances space |
Dialogue
1 Intro| conceptions of time and space, also appear in it. They 2 Intro| the conception of time and space, and the composition of 3 Intro| impressed. In the same way space or matter is neither earth 4 Intro| also a third nature—that of space, which is indestructible, 5 Intro| things must be somewhere in space. For they are the images 6 Intro| exist in something (i.e. in space). But true reason assures 7 Intro| Being and generation and space, these three, existed before 8 Intro| moving round the sun in space: there is no truer or more 9 Intro| indivisible same? Or, how could space or anything else have been 10 Intro| laws of nature. They are in space, but not in time, and they 11 Intro| two natures of time and space. Time is conceived by him 12 Intro| doctrine of the ideality of space and time at once press upon 13 Intro| The ever-present image of space is transferred to time—succession 14 Intro| with the above and below in space, as he has done away with 15 Intro| like the infinitesimal in space, were a source of perplexity 16 Intro| is revolving in his mind.~Space is said by Plato to be the ‘ 17 Intro| are made, there is also a space in which they are contained. 18 Intro| abstract as the English word ‘space’ or the Latin ‘spatium.’ 19 Intro| we speak of ‘time’ and ‘space.’~Yet space is also of a 20 Intro| time’ and ‘space.’~Yet space is also of a very permanent 21 Intro| than of the unreality of space; because, as he says, all 22 Intro| must necessarily exist in space. We, on the other hand, 23 Intro| disposed to fancy that even if space were annihilated time might 24 Intro| indeed that our knowledge of space is of a dreamy kind, and 25 Intro| attempt to realize either space or matter the two abstract 26 Intro| moving image of eternity, and space, existing by a sort of necessity 27 Intro| is indivisible exist in space. But the whole description 28 Intro| them as resting, while the space in which they are contained, 29 Intro| for men a freedom out of space and time; but he acknowledges 30 Intro| motions of the world in space, which is the mother and 31 Intro| other stars revolving in space around the sun or a central 32 Intro| denied the above and below in space, and said that all things 33 Timae| a third nature, which is space, and is eternal, and admits 34 Timae| some place and occupy a space, but that what is neither 35 Timae| to be in another (i.e. in space), grasping existence in 36 Timae| things (i.e. the image and space) are different they cannot 37 Timae| verdict is that being and space and generation, these three, 38 Timae| changes its position in space. And these causes generate 39 Timae| drives it into the vacant space whence the new air had come 40 Timae| does not go into a vacant space, but pushes its neighbour 41 Timae| breath, fills up the vacant space; and this goes on like the