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Alphabetical [« »] concentrated 3 concentration 2 conception 213 conceptions 49 conceptualism 3 concern 21 concerned 127 | Frequency [« »] 49 acts 49 anaxagoras 49 ancestors 49 conceptions 49 cowardice 49 deceived 49 deem | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances conceptions |
Cratylus Part
1 Intro| intelligence is able to frame conceptions, the organs are no longer 2 Intro| influence of sounds and conceptions on each other, like the 3 Intro| far as they furnish wider conceptions of the different branches Euthyphro Part
4 Intro| impiety with the popular conceptions of them. But when the popular 5 Intro| them. But when the popular conceptions of them have been overthrown, Gorgias Part
6 Intro| distinctness. Metaphysical conceptions easily pass into one another; 7 Intro| suffering is one of the conceptions which have exercised the Meno Part
8 Intro| begins with very simple conceptions. It is almost wholly a reflection Parmenides Part
9 Intro| Plato criticizing the very conceptions which have been supposed Phaedo Part
10 Intro| only in fact, but in our conceptions of them; and any philosophy 11 Intro| to assign any form to our conceptions of a future state.~There Philebus Part
12 Intro| consider the metaphysical conceptions which are presented to us. 13 Intro| analogy to purely intellectual conceptions. If we attend to the meaning 14 Intro| supreme law. Both these conceptions are realized chiefly by 15 Intro| passing to the more ideal conceptions of mental pleasure, happiness, 16 Intro| advance upon the metaphysical conceptions of the Republic. And we 17 Intro| merely verbal and trivial conceptions, whether of knowledge or 18 Intro| deny that about the general conceptions of morals there is a practical 19 Intro| thinking about man. The conceptions of harmony, happiness, right, 20 Intro| him, like the religious conceptions of faith or the spirit of 21 Intro| in religion, in law, in conceptions of nature, of an ideal good, The Republic Book
22 7 | endeavoring to meet the conceptions of those who have never The Sophist Part
23 Intro| show how the few elemental conceptions of the human mind admit 24 Intro| extends this relativity to the conceptions of just and good, as well 25 Intro| mind ever think or form conceptions in accordance with this 26 Intro| or a true infinite. The conceptions of the infinite and absolute 27 Text | for only by the union of conceptions with one another do we attain The Symposium Part
28 Intro| creates not children, but conceptions of wisdom and virtue, such 29 Text | contain. And what are these conceptions?—wisdom and virtue in general. Theaetetus Part
30 Intro| that there are universal conceptions of being, likeness, sameness, 31 Intro| reminded that the successive conceptions of knowledge are extracted 32 Intro| bite him, comparing his conceptions to wind-eggs, asserting 33 Intro| these are purely mental conceptions. Thus we are involved once 34 Intro| before had led men to form conceptions of the world, now led them 35 Intro| that the mind gains her conceptions of Being, sameness, number, 36 Intro| the past. Many erroneous conceptions of the mind derived from 37 Intro| common universe? In such conceptions there seems to be a confusion 38 Intro| synthesis of sensations, words, conceptions. In seeing or hearing or 39 Intro| experience having only such vague conceptions of the wisdom of the past 40 Intro| and phenomenon; the class conceptions of faculties and virtues, 41 Intro| virtue; also the primitive conceptions of unity, being, rest, motion, 42 Text | deliver Theaetetus of his conceptions about knowledge.~THEAETETUS: 43 Text | numbers and other arithmetical conceptions.~SOCRATES: You follow me 44 Text | of view the intermediate conceptions of learning and forgetting, 45 Text | been mistaken about pure conceptions of thought; and thus we 46 Text | am not mistaken, has the conceptions of number under his hand, Timaeus Part
47 Intro| intellectual, the great original conceptions of time and space, also 48 Intro| person. In their vaster conceptions of Chaos, Erebus, Aether, 49 Intro| manners he seeks to embody his conceptions. The clouds of mythology