Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] gibraltar 1 giddiness 2 giddy 3 gift 49 gifted 15 gifts 71 gignomenon 1 | Frequency [« »] 49 deem 49 define 49 forward 49 gift 49 guard 49 heavy 49 institutions | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances gift |
The Apology Part
1 Text | condemning me, who am his gift to you. For if you kill Charmides Part
2 Text | declares, you have this gift of temperance already, and 3 Text | see whether you have this gift and can do without the charm; 4 Text | I have or have not this gift of wisdom and temperance; Cratylus Part
5 Intro| is man because he has the gift of speech; and he could 6 Intro| that such an inestimable gift would have immediately been Ion Part
7 Intro| unconscious, or spontaneous, or a gift of nature: that ‘genius 8 Text | the reason of this. The gift which you possess of speaking Laches Part
9 Text | eyes which possess this gift, and also were able to impart 10 Text | able to advise how this gift of sight may be best and 11 Text | consider in what way the gift of virtue may be imparted Laws Book
12 1 | you shall try to have the gift of understanding me. But 13 2 | and courage, and has the gift of immortality, and none 14 2 | then simply censure the gift of Dionysus as bad and unfit 15 4 | that which is the natural gift of children and animals, 16 4 | deprive himself of this gift, as he deliberately does 17 5 | honour the soul by word or gift, or any sort of compliance, 18 6 | regarded by us as a sacred gift of Heaven, corresponding 19 10 | and they, mollified by the gift, suffered them to tear the 20 12 | by the Gods as a nuptial gift when he married. Thetis, 21 12 | a courageous temper is a gift of nature and not of reason. Meno Part
22 Intro| incommunicable to others. This is the gift which our statesmen have, 23 Text | thing to be taught, or as a gift of nature, or as coming 24 Text | wealth, not by accident or gift, like Ismenias the Theban ( 25 Text | comes to the virtuous by the gift of God. But we shall never Parmenides Part
26 Intro| enthusiasm is a wonderful gift; but I fear that unless Phaedo Part
27 Text | to Apollo, they have the gift of prophecy, and anticipate Phaedrus Part
28 Intro| eloquence—this newly-found gift he can only attribute to 29 Intro| technical rules, but is the gift of genius. The real art 30 Intro| and in denying that this gift of reason can ever be obliterated 31 Intro| we seem to have lost the gift of creating them. Can we 32 Text | madness which is a divine gift, and the source of the chiefest 33 Text | he who has part in this gift, and is truly possessed Philebus Part
34 Text | what it is.~SOCRATES: A gift of heaven, which, as I conceive, Protagoras Part
35 Text | and this is a very rare gift. Now I, Protagoras, want 36 Text | says that God only has this gift. Now he cannot surely mean 37 Text | say that God only has this gift, and that this is the attribute The Republic Book
38 3 | them; but that without a gift he should not lay aside 39 5 | never do. ~One woman has a gift of healing, another not; 40 6 | only can pursue who has the gift of a good memory, and is 41 7 | and so make the natural gift of reason to be of any real The Second Alcibiades Part
42 Text | SOCRATES: I accept your gift, and shall be ready and 43 Text | us.’~And so I count your gift to be a token of good-fortune; The Seventh Letter Part
44 Text | which I knew to be a special gift of yours, enabling you to The Statesman Part
45 Intro| his style; at least his gift of expression does not keep 46 Intro| law was a sacred name, the gift of God, the bond of states. Theaetetus Part
47 Intro| of various qualities, the gift of Memory, the mother of 48 Text | say that this tablet is a gift of Memory, the mother of Timaeus Part
49 Intro| could have known that his gift of invention would have