Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
lamentable 1
land 6
lands 1
language 28
lapse 3
large 8
largely 1
Frequency    [«  »]
28 bone
28 call
28 however
28 language
28 pass
28 substance
27 although
Plato
Timaeus

IntraText - Concordances

language
   Dialogue
1 Intro| Greek element of thought and language overlaid and partly reduced 2 Intro| with true principles of language; in the Parmenides overthrowing 3 Intro| of his servants. Thus the language of philosophy which speaks 4 Intro| Platonic dialogues. The language is weighty, abrupt, and 5 Intro| of the work the power of language seems to fail him, and the 6 Intro| in another, and the Greek language had not as yet been fashioned 7 Intro| for the great master of language was speaking on a theme 8 Intro| to the mind of Plato than language of a neutral and impersonal 9 Intro| other, has over the mind. Language, two, exercised a spell 10 Intro| the thinnest; or, in the language of the common logic, the 11 Intro| received from poetry or language or unintelligent sense. 12 Intro| no tongue can utter—his language, as he himself says, partaking 13 Intro| numbers. The vagueness of his language does not allow us to determine 14 Intro| expression, or viewed, in the language of Spinoza, ‘sub specie 15 Intro| every part. He assumes in language almost unintelligible to 16 Intro| generalizations and delusions of language, that physical philosophy 17 Intro| other. At any rate, the language of Plato has been the language 18 Intro| language of Plato has been the language of natural theology down 19 Intro| eye has seen nor any human language can express.~Lastly, there 20 Intro| concealed by a judicious use of language, but they cannot be wholly 21 Intro| mastered by them; and in language (Sophist) which may be compared 22 Intro| He may be said, in the language of modern philosophy, to 23 Intro| seas from one country and language to another. It inspired 24 Intro| except this uncertain one of language, appears in it. In several 25 Intro| writer has simplified the language of Plato, in a few others 26 Timae| adequately to represent in language. I am aware that the Sophists 27 Timae| best. Wherefore, using the language of probability, we may say 28 Timae| express myself in clearer language, and this will be an arduous


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