Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
mythical 6
mythologers 2
mythological 12
mythology 61
myths 17
myths-telling 1
mythus 6
Frequency    [«  »]
61 improvement
61 interests
61 mistake
61 mythology
61 open
61 perfection
61 pericles
Plato
Partial collection

IntraText - Concordances

mythology

The Apology
   Part
1 Intro| according to the notions of mythology current in his age. Yet 2 Intro| to veil his ignorance in mythology and figures of speech. The Charmides Part
3 PreS | which is seen in the Greek mythology is common also in the language; Cratylus Part
4 Intro| is in his conception of mythology. (Compare Phaedrus.)~When 5 Intro| entertain conjecture. And mythology is a link between them, 6 Intro| have the after-growth of mythology, which, like language, is 7 Intro| should conceive the tales of mythology to mean only that men thought Critias Part
8 Intro| with the character of his mythology, and not more marvellous 9 Intro| telling the truth which mythology had corrupted.~The world, 10 Text | in times long past; for mythology and the enquiry into antiquity Euthyphro Part
11 Intro| dislike to these tales of mythology, and he fancies that this 12 Intro| process of forgetting. Greek mythology hardly admitted of the distinction 13 Intro| popular representations of mythology are denounced recalls Republic Gorgias Part
14 Intro| philosophy mingles with that of mythology; abstract ideas are transformed 15 Intro| substitute for poetry and mythology; and they are also a reform 16 Intro| they are also a reform of mythology. The moral of them may be 17 Intro| almost dropped, the garb of mythology. He suggests several curious Meno Part
18 Intro| we are in the clouds of mythology, at another among the abstractions 19 Intro| language, in philosophy, in mythology, in poetry, but we cannot Parmenides Part
20 Intro| sometimes veiled in poetry and mythology, then again emerging as Phaedo Part
21 Intro| thought should have confused mythology and philosophy, or have 22 Intro| he replaces the veil of mythology, and describes the soul 23 Intro| represents under the figures of mythology. Doubtless he felt that 24 Intro| curtain falls, and the veil of mythology descends upon the argument. Phaedrus Part
25 Intro| niceinterpretations of mythology, and he pities anyone who 26 Intro| introductory passage about mythology which is suggested by the 27 Intro| the locus classicus about mythology; (2) the tale of the grasshoppers.~ 28 Intro| had found in Homer and mythology hidden meanings. Plato, 29 Intro| to make use of poetry and mythology as a vehicle of thought 30 Intro| ridicules the interpreters of mythology; as in the Protagoras he Protagoras Part
31 Intro| same arts when applied to mythology in the Phaedrus, and with The Republic Book
32 2 | preventive; also in the tales of mythology, of which we were just now 33 3 | aware, I suppose, that all mythology and poetry are a narration 34 3 | to you, that poetry and mythology are, in some cases, wholly 35 9 | composite creations of ancient mythology, such as the Chimera, or The Sophist Part
36 Intro| different dialogues. Like mythology, Greek philosophy has a 37 Intro| Philology or of Comparative Mythology and Religion, which would The Statesman Part
38 Intro| First in the connection with mythology;—he wins a kind of verisimilitude 39 Intro| be observed between the mythology of the Statesman and the 40 Intro| this of him in his use of mythology and figures of speech. And 41 Intro| describes his work as a ‘mass of mythology,’ which was introduced in The Symposium Part
42 Intro| so much of the colour of mythology, and of the manner of sophistry 43 Intro| distinctions of language and of mythology was that of gender; and 44 Intro| especially in the appeals to mythology, in the reasons which are 45 Intro| discussion by an appeal to mythology, and distinguishes between 46 Intro| as in other places, from mythology and the opinions of men. 47 Intro| and Elegiac poets; and in mythology ‘the greatest of the Gods’ ( Theaetetus Part
48 Intro| philosophy into the region of mythology, and pointed out the similarities 49 Intro| surveyed the elements of mythology, nature, thought, which 50 Intro| materialistic sound; for old mythology was allied to sense, and Timaeus Part
51 Intro| lingers around the forms of mythology, which he uses as symbols 52 Intro| separated from poetry and mythology.~A greater danger with modern 53 Intro| eyes. The associations of mythology and poetry have to be added, 54 Intro| was the natural enemy of mythology, and yet mythological ideas 55 Intro| thought intermediate between mythology and philosophy and had a 56 Intro| ancient philosophers found in mythology many ideas which, if not 57 Intro| external nature, which, as in mythology, so also in philosophy, 58 Intro| nature. They pass out of mythology into philosophy. Early science 59 Intro| conceptions. The clouds of mythology are still resting upon him, 60 Intro| away or drops the veil of mythology, and presents her to us 61 Intro| passed out of the stage of mythology into that of rational religion.


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