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Alphabetical [« »] grass 1 grave 1 gravity 1 great 50 greater 15 greatest 20 greatly 3 | Frequency [« »] 51 royal 51 time 50 about 50 great 48 part 48 power 48 said | Plato The Statesman IntraText - Concordances great |
Dialogue
1 Intro| Sophist.~SOCRATES: Does the great geometrician apply the same 2 Intro| good, but you are in too great a hurry to get to man. All 3 Intro| and in the ponds of the Great King, and of the nurseries 4 Intro| their competitors;—this is a great joke, and there is a still 5 Intro| rebounded, and there was a great earthquake, and utter ruin 6 Intro| Creator, seeing the world in great straits, and fearing that 7 Intro| kinds, falling under the two great categories of composition 8 Intro| discoveries, but for the great end of developing the dialectical 9 Intro| imitations only. Yet no great number of persons can attain 10 Intro| then, as we have seen, no great number of men, whether poor 11 Intro| upon another question of great interest—the consciousness 12 Intro| general conception of two great arts of composition and 13 Intro| remark that knowledge is a great part of power. Plato does 14 Intro| chisel of the sculptor. Great changes occur in the history 15 Intro| the representation of a great country. There is reason 16 Intro| regulation. It may be a great evil that physicians should 17 Intro| may be reunited with the great body of the Platonic writings.~ 18 State| estimate formed of them by the great calculator and geometrician?~ 19 State| Neither let us be in too great haste to arrive quickly 20 State| and in the ponds of the Great King; or you may have seen 21 State| will find the intricacy too great.~YOUNG SOCRATES: How must 22 State| persons, and does not set the great above the small, but always 23 State| survive with difficulty great and serious changes of many 24 State| there necessarily occurs a great destruction of them, which 25 State| the evil was small, and great the good which he produced, 26 State| small was the good, and great was the admixture of evil, 27 State| seeing that the world was in great straits, and fearing that 28 State| these reasons they were in a great strait; wherefore also the 29 State| SOCRATES: What was this great error of which you speak?~ 30 State| have been a man; and this a great error. Again, we declared 31 State| second error was not so great as the first.~YOUNG SOCRATES: 32 State| must surely notice that a great error was committed at the 33 State| statuaries who, in their too great haste, having overdone the 34 State| which is a section of the great and manifold art of making 35 State| and form a division of the great art of adornment, may be 36 State| and also to one of the two great arts which are of universal 37 State| we must suppose that the great and small exist and are 38 State| on small matters than on great.~YOUNG SOCRATES: Very good.~ 39 State| all being to assert the great method of division according 40 State| implement in a State, whether great or small, may be regarded 41 State| and divers others who have great skill in various sorts of 42 State| while they observing the one great rule of distributing justice 43 State| STRANGER: We said that no great number of persons, whoever 44 State| And the principle that no great number of men are able to 45 State| unable to do either any great good or any great evil, 46 State| either any great good or any great evil, when compared with 47 State| STRANGER: And, considering how great and terrible the whole art 48 State| antagonistic throughout a great part of nature.~YOUNG SOCRATES: 49 State| SOCRATES: How so?~STRANGER: Too great sharpness or quickness or 50 State| violence or madness; too great slowness or gentleness is