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Alphabetical [« »] being 1737 being-geometry 1 being-that 2 beings 63 belated 1 beleaguered 1 belie 1 | Frequency [« »] 63 asks 63 assert 63 behalf 63 beings 63 brave 63 chosen 63 description | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances beings |
The Apology Part
1 Text | excellence; but as they are human beings, whom are you thinking of 2 Text | things, and not of human beings?...I wish, men of Athens, 3 Text | yet if I believe in divine beings, how can I help believing Charmides Part
4 Intro| most temperate of human beings, is asked by Socrates, ‘ 5 Text | most temperate of human beings, and for his age inferior Euthydemus Part
6 Intro| of education are strange beings. Socrates consoles him with 7 Text | you as I would superior beings, and ask you to pardon the 8 Text | would mean by animals living beings?~Yes, I said.~You agree 9 Text | seem to be such outrageous beings: so that I do not know how Gorgias Part
10 Intro| everlasting punishment of human beings depend on a brief moment 11 Intro| are associated with human beings: they are also garnished Laches Part
12 Text | things which but a few human beings ever know by reason of their Laws Book
13 1 | most senseless of human beings. You will ask what the conclusion 14 1 | conceive each of us living beings to be a puppet of the Gods, 15 6 | may be born of reasonable beings; for on what day or night 16 6 | we hear of other human beings who did not even venture 17 10 | whether they are living beings and reside in bodies, and 18 10 | that God, the wisest of beings, who is both willing and 19 10 | no generation of living beings); and when he observed that 20 12 | to be, of all intelligent beings, when you are asked are 21 12 | head and senses of rational beings because possessing such Meno Part
22 Intro| and by one another. Human beings are included in the number 23 Intro| particles of matter are living beings which reflect on one another, Parmenides Part
24 Intro| he said. ‘And of human beings like ourselves, of water, Phaedo Part
25 Intro| some transposition of human beings in another, still the existence 26 Intro| chamber of horrors? And yet to beings constituted as we are, the 27 Intro| must will that all rational beings should partake of that perfection 28 Intro| most incredulous of human beings. It is Cebes who at the Phaedrus Part
29 Intro| grasshoppers were human beings themselves in a world before 30 Intro| and constitutions of human beings? Do we see as clearly as 31 Text | said to have been human beings in an age before the Muses. Philebus Part
32 Intro| as a law by all rational beings,’ may exercise on the mind 33 Text | deny that all percipient beings desire and hunt after good, 34 Text | make up the class of living beings, is pain, and that the process 35 Text | the condition of animated beings who are neither in process 36 Text | and destruction of living beings, as well as of the pain 37 Text | and appearing in living beings, which are still more false 38 Text | the true end of all living beings, at which all ought to aim, Protagoras Part
39 Text | Socrates, you are strange beings; there are you, Socrates, The Republic Book
40 7 | unenlightened: Behold! human beings living in an underground 41 9 | concerns human life, if human beings are concerned with days The Sophist Part
42 Text | give whole a place among beings, cannot speak either of The Statesman Part
43 Intro| are both bipeds, and human beings are running a race with 44 Text | management and control of living beings.~YOUNG SOCRATES: True.~STRANGER: 45 Text | breeding and tending of living beings may be observed to be sometimes 46 Text | What is it?~STRANGER: Human beings have come out in the same 47 Text | pigs compete with human beings and the pig-driver with 48 Text | greatest changes to the human beings who are the inhabitants 49 Text | agency of other creative beings, but as the world was ordained 50 Text | employed, has the care of human beings.~YOUNG SOCRATES: Very true.~ The Symposium Part
51 Intro| most wonderful of human beings, and absolutely unlike anyone 52 Intro| love between intelligent beings. His account of the origin 53 Intro| relation in which human beings stood to it. That the soul 54 Text | the soul—the most foolish beings are the objects of this 55 Text | not boys, but intelligent beings whose reason is beginning Timaeus Part
56 Intro| contained all intelligible beings, and the visible animal, 57 Intro| and to teach intelligent beings that knowledge of number 58 Intro| Three tribes of mortal beings have still to be created, 59 Intro| the sun and stars living beings and not masses of earth 60 Text | itself all intelligible beings, just as this world comprehends 61 Text | perfect of intelligible beings, framed one visible animal 62 Text | Three tribes of mortal beings remain to be created—without 63 Text | resemblances of all eternal beings ought to be devoid of any