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Alphabetical [« »] proceedings 7 proceeds 63 process 193 processes 59 procession 3 processions 6 proclaim 15 | Frequency [« »] 59 moved 59 occur 59 persuaded 59 processes 59 receiving 59 reputation 59 utmost | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances processes |
Cratylus Part
1 Intro| and are done by different processes. There is a natural way 2 Intro| represent natural objects or processes. Poetry and philosophy—these 3 Intro| we analyze our own mental processes, we find words everywhere 4 Intro| their influence. For in all processes of the mind which are conscious 5 Intro| not by familiar mental processes, but by the interruption 6 Intro| and individual actions or processes, and not attribute to the 7 Intro| expressions for new classes or processes of things. We are told that 8 Intro| 1) The first of these processes has been sometimes attended Gorgias Part
9 Intro| conversation. You remember the two processes—one which was directed to 10 Text | forgotten, that there were some processes which aim only at pleasure, 11 Text | worse, and there are other processes which know good and evil. 12 Text | there are not other similar processes which have to do with the 13 Text | with the soul—some of them processes of art, making a provision 14 Text | Callicles, there are such processes, and this is the sort of 15 Text | remember that there are two processes of training all things, Parmenides Part
16 Intro| really corresponding to the processes which a later logic designates 17 Intro| instruments of human thought.~The processes by which Parmenides obtains Phaedo Part
18 Text | not also two intermediate processes which are ever going on, 19 Text | And there are many other processes, such as division and composition, 20 Text | there their two intermediate processes also?~Of course.~Now, said 21 Text | and also its intermediate processes, and you shall analyze the 22 Text | true.~And one of the two processes or generations is visible— Phaedrus Part
23 Intro| into parts. These are the processes of division and generalization 24 Text | myself a great lover of these processes of division and generalization; Philebus Part
25 Intro| analytical and synthetical processes may be compared with his 26 Text | ridiculously clumsy at these processes of division and enumeration.~ 27 Text | originating severally in the two processes which we have described?~ The Republic Book
28 3 | attempted to cure by gradual processes of evacuation and infusion: The Sophist Part
29 Intro| clearly described, and the processes of induction and deduction 30 Intro| indicated by him. To all these processes of truth and error, Aristotle, 31 Intro| feels that this, like other processes of formal logic, presents 32 Intro| the like. All these are processes of division; and of division 33 Intro| cleaning and other humble processes, some of which have ludicrous 34 Text | all the previously named processes either like has been separated 35 Text | whether they suppose the processes of creation to be successive The Statesman Part
36 Intro| greater delight than in processes of division (compare Phaedr.); 37 Text | apply to weaving the same processes of division and subdivision 38 Text | the comb, and the other processes of wool-working which separate 39 Text | belong carding and the other processes of which I was just now The Symposium Part
40 Text | poetry or making, and the processes of all art are creative; Theaetetus Part
41 Intro| thing (for the intermediate processes of learning and forgetting 42 Intro| sense, also includes all the processes of reasoning and imagination 43 Intro| omitting the intermediate processes of learning and forgetting; 44 Intro| about ourselves, and mental processes are hardly distinguished 45 Intro| beyond them implied logical processes, of the correctness of which 46 Intro| Sensation, like all other mental processes, is complex and relative, 47 Intro| attention to himself and the processes of his individual mind. 48 Intro| degrees. We never see these processes of the mind, nor can we 49 Intro| describing faculties or processes of the mind, there are real 50 Intro| observation of its workings and processes which we can make for ourselves.~ 51 Intro| there more or less distinct processes which may be described by 52 Intro| endeavour,’ ‘I hope.’ These processes would seem to have the same 53 Intro| origination.~There are other processes of the mind which it is 54 Intro| positive. They show us, not the processes of mental action, but the 55 Text | And would you call the two processes by the same name, when there Timaeus Part
56 Intro| astronomical facts or contemplating processes of the human mind, or of 57 Intro| waters the marrow. When these processes take place in regular order 58 Intro| and, if given up to these processes when at rest, it is liable 59 Intro| varieties of substances and processes are hardly known or noticed.