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Alphabetical [« »] condition 121 conditional 2 conditioned 2 conditions 56 conditores 2 condole 1 condones 1 | Frequency [« »] 57 tongue 57 writers 56 assembly 56 conditions 56 disgrace 56 disgraceful 56 falls | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances conditions |
Charmides Part
1 PreF | struggling with the unequal conditions of light and knowledge under 2 PreS | by them under different conditions of language and civilization; Cratylus Part
3 Intro| from them, laying down the conditions under which they are to 4 Intro| acquired; to what extent the conditions of human life were different; Gorgias Part
5 Intro| man against the ordinary conditions of human life. The greatest Laches Part
6 Text | are cowards under the same conditions, as I should imagine.~LACHES: Laws Book
7 3 | which all other forms and conditions of polities and cities concur.~ 8 3 | the rulers observed these conditions, they would never subvert 9 4 | even supposing all the conditions to be favourable which are 10 4 | pray rightly for certain conditions, and if these were granted 11 4 | say to him; “what are the conditions which you require in a state 12 5 | then hold his lot upon the conditions which we have mentioned.~ 13 6 | manner and under the same conditions as on the previous day; 14 8 | the times and nature and conditions of the choral contests and 15 8 | and be a metic on certain conditions; a foreigner, if he likes, 16 11 | only to two out of three conditions—nearness of kin and the 17 12 | him go abroad under these conditions. In the next place, the Lysis Part
18 Intro| may ask when and upon what conditions should they be dissolved. Menexenus Part
19 Text | of all sorts and unequal conditions of men, and therefore their Meno Part
20 Intro| to flow again under new conditions, at first confined between Parmenides Part
21 Intro| we know is subject to the conditions of human thought. To the Phaedo Part
22 Text | confusion of causes and conditions in all this. It may be said, Phaedrus Part
23 Intro| persons living under new conditions may lead to many new combinations 24 Text | the art in the preliminary conditions of it, and when these have Philebus Part
25 Intro| Fourthly, the external conditions of perfection,—health and 26 Text | their place and under what conditions they are generated. And Protagoras Part
27 Intro| man, who in his outward conditions is more helpless than the The Republic Book
28 3 | in all ignorance and evil conditions, and has no sense of propriety 29 4 | will find one of these two conditions realized; for the State, 30 5 | show how and under what conditions the possibility is highest, 31 6 | natures, when under alien conditions, receive more injury than 32 9 | tell me their respective conditions? ~What do you mean? he asked. ~ 33 10 | said, we have fulfilled the conditions of the argument; we have The Seventh Letter Part
34 Text | agreed to come again on these conditions.~When peace had been made, 35 Text | sentences to meet all these conditions, and the tenor of it was 36 Text | satisfies you; and on these conditions remain for the present year, The Sophist Part
37 Intro| subject to so many external conditions of climate, country, and The Statesman Part
38 Intro| animals, subjected to the conditions of his nature, and yet able 39 Intro| disappear under the necessary conditions of human society. The uselessness, 40 Intro| reduce the ideal state to the conditions of actual life. Thus in 41 Text | take a command under such conditions, deserves to suffer any 42 Text | about the winds, or other conditions of the atmosphere, contrary Theaetetus Part
43 Intro| seems rather to know the conditions than the causes. It can 44 Intro| mind?’~Leaving the a priori conditions of sensation we may proceed 45 Intro| succession of states or conditions.~Paragraph II. Another division 46 Intro| and matter...These are the conditions of this very inexact science, 47 Intro| and becomes adapted to new conditions of knowledge. It seeks to 48 Intro| of mental action, but the conditions of which when deprived the Timaeus Part
49 Intro| we neither appreciate the conditions of knowledge to which he 50 Intro| how, under such unequal conditions, he seems in many instances, 51 Intro| seem wholly to forget the conditions of the world and of the 52 Intro| separable from the intellectual conditions under which they lived. 53 Intro| the best is limited by the conditions of matter. In the generation 54 Text | understanding about the nature and conditions of rest and motion, he will 55 Text | alienated from their natural conditions, and pleasure when restored 56 Text | the combination of certain conditions—the non-existence of a vacuum,