Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] communicating 4 communication 4 communications 2 communion 59 communism 1 community 30 compact 8 | Frequency [« »] 59 behind 59 bound 59 cast 59 communion 59 courts 59 defined 59 discovery | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances communion |
Gorgias Part
1 Text | for he is incapable of communion, and he who is incapable 2 Text | and he who is incapable of communion is also incapable of friendship. 3 Text | tell us, Callicles, that communion and friendship and orderliness Laws Book
4 3 | freedom and friendship and communion of mind among them.~Cleinias. 5 5 | now, or will ever be, this communion of women and children and 6 8 | and has often no tie of communion; but that which, arises 7 8 | gentle, and has a tie of communion which lasts through life. 8 10 | influence of others—when she has communion with divine virtue and becomes 9 10 | holiness; but when she has communion with evil, then she also Parmenides Part
10 Intro| many; because they have no communion or participation in that 11 Text | sort or manner or way of communion with any sort of not-being, Phaedo Part
12 Intro| and we have entered into communion with Him, and been partakers 13 Text | dissever the soul from the communion of the body.~Very true.~ 14 Text | possible intercourse or communion with the body, and are not 15 Text | erring ways, and being in communion with the unchanging is unchanging. 16 Text | therefore no part in the communion of the divine and pure and Phaedrus Part
17 Intro| imagination, or idealism, or communion with God, which cannot be 18 Intro| to live more closely in communion with their fellow-men, to 19 Text | led to receive him into communion. For fate which has ordained 20 Text | he has received him into communion and intimacy, is quite amazed Philebus Part
21 Text | SOCRATES: And the union or communion of soul and body in one 22 Text | which arise out of the communion of external and internal The Republic Book
23 10 | now behold her, marred by communion with the body and other The Sophist Part
24 Intro| Acknowledging that there is a communion of kinds with kinds, and 25 Intro| or classes incapable of communion, we discover ‘Not-being’ 26 Intro| is the recognition of the communion of classes, which, although 27 Intro| all have indiscriminate communion? or (3) that there is communion 28 Intro| communion? or (3) that there is communion of some and not of others? 29 Intro| But (2) if all things have communion with all things, motion 30 Intro| hypothesis, that some things have communion and others not, and that 31 Intro| and that some may have communion with all, let us examine 32 Intro| found to be relation. In the communion of different kinds, being 33 Intro| unphilosophical than the denial of all communion of kinds. And we are fortunate 34 Intro| having established such a communion for another reason, because 35 Intro| discourse if there were no communion. For the Sophist, although 36 Text | things have the power of communion with one another—what will 37 Text | either all things have communion with all; or nothing with 38 Text | remaining hypothesis of the communion of some with some.~THEAETETUS: 39 Text | Quite true.~STRANGER: This communion of some with some may be 40 Text | determines where they can have communion with one another and where 41 Text | that some classes have a communion with one another, and others 42 Text | others not, and some have communion with a few and others with 43 Text | should not have universal communion with all, let us now pursue 44 Text | natures and their capacity of communion with one another, in order 45 Text | we affirm, incapable of communion with one another.~THEAETETUS: 46 Text | Whereas being surely has communion with both of them, for both 47 Text | the same, because having communion with the other, it is thereby 48 Text | not.~STRANGER: That such a communion of kinds is according to 49 Text | nature of classes to have communion with one another; and if 50 Text | conclusion [i.e., respecting the communion of ideas], and then he may 51 Text | saying, that there is a communion of classes, and that being, 52 Text | find also that they have communion with not-being, and, having The Statesman Part
53 Text | drawn the two minds into communion with one another by unanimity The Symposium Part
54 Text | divination, which is the art of communion between gods and men—these, 55 Text | divine? Remember how in that communion only, beholding beauty with Theaetetus Part
56 Intro| but also by sympathy and communion with other persons.~2. The 57 Intro| of man, by which he holds communion with the unseen world. Somehow, Timaeus Part
58 Intro| nature they seemed to hold communion?~Two other points strike 59 Text | bright surfaces. For from the communion of the internal and external