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Alphabetical [« »] fighting 2 figurative 3 figure 27 figures 34 fill 5 filled 10 filling 1 | Frequency [« »] 34 different 34 ever 34 external 34 figures 34 given 34 heavens 34 moving | Plato Timaeus IntraText - Concordances figures |
Dialogue
1 Intro| dreaming of geometrical figures lost in a flux of sense. 2 Intro| symbols or translates into figures of speech. He has no implements 3 Intro| differences of kinds to the figures of the elements and their 4 Intro| labour of telling all the figures of them, moving as in dance, 5 Intro| soft materials on which figures are impressed. In the same 6 Intro| planes, and plane rectilinear figures are made up of triangles. 7 Intro| the four most beautiful figures which are unlike one another 8 Intro| divided into long and round figures, and to these as to anchors, 9 Intro| thoughts of their hearts in figures of speech which to them 10 Intro| speech which to them were not figures, and were already consecrated 11 Intro| without. The numbers and figures which were present to the 12 Intro| combinations of geometrical figures or in the infinite variety 13 Intro| surfaces of geometrical figures have formed solids? We must 14 Intro| personification of the numbers and figures in which the heavenly bodies 15 Intro| by mathematical laws and figures. (We may observe by the 16 Intro| may help to fill up with figures of speech the void of knowledge.~ 17 Intro| of imaginary geometrical figures; in other words, we are 18 Intro| combined into regular solid figures: (3) three of them, fire, 19 Intro| differences in geometrical figures. But he does not explain 20 Intro| deductions from geometrical figures or movements. Of the causes 21 Intro| is a sum of numbers and figures has been the most fruitful 22 Intro| which they constructed into figures. Plato adopted their speculations 23 Intro| if not out of geometrical figures, at least out of different 24 Intro| truer far—of mathematical figures. It is this element in the 25 Timae| within itself all other figures. Wherefore he made the world 26 Timae| most like itself of all figures; for he considered that 27 Timae| attempt to tell all the figures of them circling as in dance, 28 Timae| person to make all kinds of figures of gold and to be always 29 Timae| the triangle or any other figures which are formed in the 30 Timae| those who wish to impress figures on soft substances do not 31 Timae| and take their own proper figures; or, again, when many small 32 Timae| having generated these figures, generated no more; but 33 Timae| sides; and of the compound figures which are formed out of 34 Timae| soul he distributed into figures at once round and elongated,