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Alphabetical [« »] heracleitean 12 heracleiteanism 1 heracleiteans 3 heracleitus 54 heracleots 1 heracles 33 heraclid 1 | Frequency [« »] 54 fighting 54 freeman 54 goddess 54 heracleitus 54 include 54 intercourse 54 jest | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances heracleitus |
Cratylus Part
1 Intro| Sophist and the follower of Heracleitus are found to be not so far 2 Intro| reflected the philosophy of Heracleitus. His views are not like 3 Intro| Plato, but upon the flux of Heracleitus. Here, as in the Sophist 4 Intro| wisdom in the philosophy of Heracleitus;— the doctrine of the flux 5 Intro| Cratylus and the doctrines of Heracleitus’ in the days of his youth? 6 Intro| Theaetetus, the philosophy of Heracleitus by ‘unsavoury’ similes—he 7 Intro| allusion to the flux of Heracleitus—that antediluvian philosopher 8 Intro| something about the doctrine of Heracleitus. Moreover, there is a remarkable 9 Intro| of thinking I incline to Heracleitus.’ Then another day, my friend, 10 Intro| discovering the flux of Heracleitus in language. But he is covertly 11 Text | inclined to the opinion of Heracleitus, that all things flow and 12 Text | SOCRATES: I fancy to myself Heracleitus repeating wise traditions 13 Text | How do you mean?~SOCRATES: Heracleitus is supposed to say that 14 Text | much in the doctrine of Heracleitus? Is the giving of the names 15 Text | all in the direction of Heracleitus.~HERMOGENES: I think that 16 Text | whether the truth is what Heracleitus and his followers and many 17 Text | consideration is that I incline to Heracleitus.~SOCRATES: Then, another Euthyphro Part
18 Intro| out of the assembly, as Heracleitus more rudely proposed, at Meno Part
19 Intro| and in the fragments of Heracleitus. It was the natural answer Parmenides Part
20 Intro| the school of Cratylus and Heracleitus, may have seen that a contradiction Phaedo Part
21 Intro| and death, had occurred to Heracleitus. The Eleatic Parmenides The Republic Book
22 6 | extinguished more truly than Heracleitus's sun, inasmuch as they The Sophist Part
23 Intro| would not have said with Heracleitus, ‘All things are and are 24 Intro| poetry: the philosophy of Heracleitus, supposed to have a poetical 25 Intro| perpetually going on (e.g. Heracleitus); others (e.g. Empedocles) 26 Intro| respecting the writings of Heracleitus— ‘Noble is that which I 27 Intro| motion, from Xenophanes to Heracleitus. The opposition of Being 28 Intro| patrons of the flux’ before Heracleitus, Hegel’s order of thought 29 Intro| Being and Not-being’ of Heracleitus as the same with his own ‘ The Statesman Part
30 Intro| if they are bad.’ For, as Heracleitus says, ‘One is ten thousand The Symposium Part
31 Intro| opposites; and this is what Heracleitus meant, when he spoke of 32 Intro| Asclepiad, he is a disciple of Heracleitus, whose conception of the 33 Text | have been the meaning of Heracleitus, although his words are Theaetetus Part
34 Intro| attributed to the disciple of Heracleitus, not to speak of lesser 35 Intro| connexion of Protagoras and Heracleitus, or have raised the difficulty 36 Intro| in the perpetual flux of Heracleitus. The relativeness of sensation 37 Intro| doctrines of Protagoras and Heracleitus was not generally recognized 38 Intro| Parmenides; Empedocles, Heracleitus, and others, and all the 39 Intro| Thus the flux of Homer and Heracleitus, the great Protagorean saying 40 Intro| to pass into one another; Heracleitus, like his great successor 41 Intro| as Plato with the flux of Heracleitus. But Aristotle is only following 42 Intro| Plato is not speaking of Heracleitus, but of the Heracliteans, 43 Intro| nothing in the fragments of Heracleitus which at all justifies Plato’ 44 Intro| than in the life-time of Heracleitus—a phenomenon which, though 45 Intro| this argument any more than Heracleitus would have acknowledged 46 Intro| has first confused me with Heracleitus, and Heracleitus with his 47 Intro| me with Heracleitus, and Heracleitus with his Ephesian successors, 48 Text | philosophers— Protagoras, Heracleitus, Empedocles, and the rest 49 Text | whether with Homer and Heracleitus, and all that company, you 50 Text | strides; the disciples of Heracleitus are most energetic upholders 51 Text | About these speculations of Heracleitus, which, as you say, are Timaeus Part
52 Intro| out of one another. With Heracleitus, he acknowledges the perpetual 53 Intro| into another is common to Heracleitus and several of the Ionian 54 Intro| words of Parmenides and Heracleitus; but at times the old Eleatic