Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
religion 78
religionist 1
religions 6
religious 48
relinquish 1
relinquished 1
relinquishes 1
Frequency    [«  »]
48 nearer
48 perplexity
48 previously
48 religious
48 variance
47 absence
47 along
Plato
Partial collection

IntraText - Concordances

religious

The Apology
   Part
1 Intro| performance of the least religious duties; and he must have Charmides Part
2 PreS | than other language, and a religious association, it disturbs Cratylus Part
3 Intro| slightly scoffs at contemporary religious beliefs. Lastly, he is impatient 4 Intro| thousands of years with a religious accuracy, so that to the 5 Text | example, when a good and religious man has an irreligious son, 6 Text | the irreligious son of a religious father should be called Critias Part
7 Intro| has given birth to endless religious or historical enquiries. ( Euthydemus Part
8 Intro| disputes carried on with religious earnestness and more than Euthyphro Part
9 Intro| equally serious in their religious beliefs and difficulties. 10 Intro| the deep insight into the religious world; the dramatic power 11 Text | had a great interest in religious questions, and now, as he The First Alcibiades Part
12 Intro| is not unlike that which religious writers describe under the Gorgias Part
13 Intro| regarded from a moral or religious point of view, is the greatest 14 Intro| parent consoling us. In religious diaries a sort of drama 15 Intro| with the sophistry of a religious order, or of a church in 16 Intro| city (shall we say in a religious and respectable society?) Laws Book
17 2 | has an excellent moral and religious tendency. And the opposite 18 10 | And is not man the most religious of all animals?~Cleinias. 19 10 | not be allowed to practise religious rites contrary to law. And 20 11 | piety and purity in their religious actions. But if a man will 21 12 | dead of either sex, the religious ceremonies which may fittingly Meno Part
22 Intro| their origin from a deep religious and contemplative feeling, Parmenides Part
23 Intro| the terms. The passions of religious parties have been roused 24 Intro| For we can analyze our religious as well as our other ideas; Phaedo Part
25 Intro| remembers that a trifling religious duty is still unfulfilled, 26 Intro| which, at any time, even religious people speak so little to 27 Intro| language of Hegel, and the religious and mythological into the 28 Intro| urged that the greatest religious interest of mankind could Phaedrus Part
29 Intro| them and contemplating with religious awe the forms of justice, Philebus Part
30 Intro| Under the influence of religious feeling or by an effort 31 Intro| new world to him, like the religious conceptions of faith or 32 Intro| Once more there are the religious principles of morals:—the 33 Intro| Socrates. Let us observe the religious and intellectual enthusiasm Protagoras Part
34 Intro| self-improvement; (7) the religious allegory should be noticed, 35 Intro| ascribed to him; he is the religious rather than the irreligious The Republic Book
36 4 | mother, or to fail in his religious duties? ~No one. ~And the The Sophist Part
37 Intro| divine mind is the leading religious thought of the later works 38 Intro| until they have acquired a religious character. They seem also 39 Intro| disarranged as his order of religious thought by recent discoveries The Statesman Part
40 Intro| power, would breathe a new religious life into the world.~c. The Symposium Part
41 Text | working by a knowledge of the religious or irreligious tendencies Theaetetus Part
42 Intro| great virtues, or that both religious and philosophical idealism 43 Intro| earthly nature.’ It loses the religious sense which more than any 44 Intro| wander into the region of religious or political controversy, 45 Intro| ideals, moral, political, or religious; 3rdly, Because it deprives Timaeus Part
46 Intro| was to come forth the most religious of animals, which would 47 Intro| all the animosities of a religious sect. Yet, doubtless, there 48 Text | and to come forth the most religious of animals; and as human


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