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Alphabetical [« »] activity 10 actor 3 actors 12 acts 49 actual 76 actuality 1 actually 37 | Frequency [« »] 50 taste 50 train 50 walk 49 acts 49 anaxagoras 49 ancestors 49 conceptions | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances acts |
Charmides Part
1 Text | temperately or wisely?~Yes, he acts wisely.~But must the physician Cratylus Part
2 Text | action and has a relation to acts, is not naming also a sort Crito Part
3 Text | and dishonour to him who acts unjustly? Shall we say so Euthydemus Part
4 Text | pests, this art of their’s acts upon dicasts and ecclesiasts Euthyphro Part
5 Intro| But how do pious or holy acts make the gods any better? 6 Intro| explains that he means by pious acts, acts of service or ministration. 7 Intro| he means by pious acts, acts of service or ministration. 8 Text | there are many other pious acts?~EUTHYPHRO: There are.~SOCRATES: The First Alcibiades Part
9 Text | a further light: he who acts honourably acts well?~ALCIBIADES: 10 Text | he who acts honourably acts well?~ALCIBIADES: Yes.~SOCRATES: 11 Text | Yes.~SOCRATES: And he who acts well is happy?~ALCIBIADES: Gorgias Part
12 Intro| on the ground that such acts would be punished, but he 13 Text | SOCRATES: And therefore he acts justly?~POLUS: Justly.~SOCRATES: Laws Book
14 1 | the source of ten thousand acts of injustice, by making 15 5 | or altogether incurable acts of injustice done to him 16 6 | marriages, or any other sacred acts, relating either to future, 17 9 | deter him, and punish his acts, under the idea that he 18 9 | not say that all unjust acts are involuntary, or we must 19 9 | unlawful and unholy. But if acts of injustice cannot be divided 20 10 | assaults, let us sum up all acts of violence under a single 21 10 | degree (not to repeat the acts formerly mentioned), when 22 10 | abstaining from unrighteous acts, but upon doing them and 23 10 | small ones? Reflect; he who acts in this way, whether he 24 10 | lenient to the doers of unjust acts, if they divide the spoil 25 11 | this law. But any one who acts contrary to the law on these Phaedo Part
26 Text | is the way in which mind acts, and not from the choice Phaedrus Part
27 Text | secondly, the mode in which she acts or is acted upon.~PHAEDRUS: Philebus Part
28 Intro| imperatively declares certain acts to be right or wrong:—can 29 Intro| love, without succession of acts (ouch e genesis prosestin), Protagoras Part
30 Text | unreasonable fury of a beast acts in that manner. But he who The Republic Book
31 1 | private and public; for which acts of wrong, if he were detected 32 2 | while doing the most unjust acts, to have acquired the greatest 33 3 | declare either that these acts were done by them, or that The Seventh Letter Part
34 Text | my advice as to what your acts should be in the present 35 Text | and cannot see in those acts of plunder which are accompanied 36 Text | lawlessness, godlessness and acts of recklessness issuing 37 Text | in hatred of the reckless acts of those who shed the blood 38 Text | and his associate in the acts of religion. He probably The Statesman Part
39 Intro| body corporate, while he acts according to the rules of 40 Intro| the same evidence of their acts. Too many laws may be the 41 Text | impediments to thieving and acts of violence, and are concerned The Symposium Part
42 Text | near him, neither when he acts does he act by force. For Theaetetus Part
43 Intro| sensation is of all mental acts the most trivial and superficial. 44 Intro| may proceed to consider acts of sense. These admit of 45 Intro| subsequent sensation. The acts of seeing and hearing may 46 Intro| become crowded with names, acts, feelings, images innumerable, 47 Text | am sick, the wine really acts upon another and a different 48 Text | SOCRATES: Then, if that which acts upon me has relation to 49 Text | others of the truth about acts of robbery or violence,