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Alphabetical [« »] thick 1 thieving 1 thing 20 things 64 think 41 thinkers 1 thinking 3 | Frequency [« »] 65 nature 65 than 64 let 64 things 63 whether 62 say 62 shall | Plato The Statesman IntraText - Concordances things |
Dialogue
1 Intro| putting words in the place of things. He has banished the poets, 2 Intro| the other way. For divine things alone are unchangeable; 3 Intro| For the lord of moving things is alone self-moved; neither 4 Intro| produced a sufficiency of all things, and men were born out of 5 Intro| every man seems to know all things in a dream, and to know 6 Intro| of the first elements of things; and then again is at fault 7 Intro| and excess or defect. All things require to be compared, 8 Intro| measurement has to do with all things, but these persons, although 9 Intro| which are very different things. Whereas the right way is 10 Intro| classes, and to comprehend the things which have any affinity 11 Intro| for the preservation of things, moist or dry, prepared 12 Intro| Further, there are small things, such as coins, seals, stamps, 13 Intro| the Timaeus, pervades all things in the world, the reversal 14 Intro| impossibilities in the nature of things,’ hindering God from continuing 15 Intro| disengaged, and envelope all things. The condition of man becomes 16 Intro| to us. The immanence of things in the Ideas, or the partial 17 Intro| comparisons are slippery things,’ and may often give a false 18 Intro| If you think more about things, and less about words, you 19 Intro| feeble intelligence of all things; given by metaphysics better 20 Intro| every man seems to know all things in a kind of dream, and 21 Intro| The greatest and noblest things have no outward image of 22 Intro| with and regulating all things. Such a conception has sometimes 23 Intro| the actual state of human things. Mankind have long been 24 Intro| of the tyrant, who, when things are at the worst, obtains 25 Intro| dealing with the reality of things, not with visions or pictures 26 Intro| the true measure of human things; and very often in the process 27 State| knows, but he also makes things which previously did not 28 State| difficulty in dividing the things produced into two classes.~ 29 State| amongst twice the number of things, to be then sought amongst 30 State| because only the most divine things of all remain ever unchanged 31 State| For the lord of all moving things is alone able to move of 32 State| to the world, and to the things contained in him. Wherefore 33 State| into the earth again. All things changed, imitating and following 34 State| every man seems to know all things in a dreamy sort of way, 35 State| uncertainty about the alphabet of things, and sometimes and in some 36 State| afterwards from lesser things we intend to pass to the 37 State| Very good.~STRANGER: All things which we make or acquire 38 State| but those which make the things themselves are causal.~YOUNG 39 State| treat and fabricate the things themselves, causal.~YOUNG 40 State| and has to do with all things. And this means what we 41 State| are now saying; for all things which come within the province 42 State| together two widely different things, relation to one another, 43 State| error of dividing other things not according to their real 44 State| first seen the unity of things, to go on with the enquiry 45 State| are seen in a multitude of things until he has comprehended 46 State| seem to forget that some things have sensible images, which 47 State| of them; for immaterial things, which are the noblest and 48 State| expressing the truth of things; about any other praise 49 State| for the preservation of things moist and dry, of things 50 State| things moist and dry, of things prepared in the fire or 51 State| and in which most of the things formerly mentioned are contained,— 52 State| and ten thousand other things? all of which being made 53 State| them, for none of these things have a serious purpose—amusement 54 State| of food and of all other things which mingle their particles 55 State| playthings, nourishment; small things, which may be included under 56 State| authority over lifeless things and another other living 57 State| themselves—none of these things can with any propriety be 58 State| irregular movements of human things, do not admit of any universal 59 State| be applied to a state of things which is the reverse of 60 State| that he suffers strange things at the hands of both of 61 State| motion,—I say, if all these things were done in this way according 62 State| Statesman, will do many things within his own sphere of 63 State| is the way in which these things are said to be done.~STRANGER: 64 State| our enquiry to all those things which we consider beautiful