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Alphabetical [« »] criticised 1 criticises 3 criticising 1 criticism 48 criticisms 4 criticize 10 criticized 2 | Frequency [« »] 48 aristophanes 48 century 48 creatures 48 criticism 48 cure 48 dialectical 48 disorder | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances criticism |
Charmides Part
1 PreS | indebted for an excellent criticism of the Parmenides; and, Critias Part
2 Text | are more precise in our criticism of mortal and human things. Euthydemus Part
3 Intro| fading away into literary criticism; (2) the science of language, 4 Intro| the general scheme. Such a criticism is like similar criticisms The First Alcibiades Part
5 Pre | which we have offered to the criticism of the reader may be partly Gorgias Part
6 Intro| is running away with us, criticism does a friendly office in 7 Intro| representation of Plato’s the criticism has been made, that the 8 Intro| temper of dissatisfaction and criticism springs up among those who 9 Intro| spirit of poetry and of criticism are not divided in him. Menexenus Part
10 Pre | which we have offered to the criticism of the reader may be partly Meno Part
11 Intro| to which may be added the criticism of them in the Parmenides, Parmenides Part
12 Intro| compare Cratylus, etc.). The criticism on his own doctrine of Ideas 13 Intro| considered, not as a real criticism, but as an exuberance of 14 Intro| without an anachronism, the criticism is appropriately placed 15 Intro| Socrates. Two points in his criticism are especially deserving 16 Intro| whole of nature.~The other criticism of Parmenides on Socrates 17 Intro| able to anticipate ‘the criticism of the morrow’ on their 18 Intro| It is the same kind of criticism which Plato has extended 19 Intro| is also the same, being a criticism on received opinions: first, 20 Intro| Parmenides is not only a criticism of the Eleatic notion of 21 Intro| been subjected to a similar criticism, which there takes the form 22 Intro| when we have carried our criticism to the furthest point, they Phaedo Part
23 Intro| become more sensitive to criticism. It has faded into the distance Phaedrus Part
24 Intro| the Parmenides between the criticism of the Platonic ideas and 25 Intro| the Dialogue, which is a criticism on the first. Rhetoric is 26 Intro| literature passing into criticism, just as Athenian literature 27 Intro| weary of literature and criticism, of making many books, of 28 Intro| himself. There is a latent criticism, and also a poetical sense 29 Intro| physical science, the want of criticism in history, the want of 30 Intro| the withering effect of criticism on original genius. No one 31 Text | and not with any view to criticism or instruction; and who Philebus Part
32 Intro| spirit which appears in his criticism of them in the Parmenides. 33 Intro| philosophers require the criticism of ‘the morrow,’ when the 34 Intro| them.~We may preface the criticism with a few preliminary remarks:—~ 35 Intro| philosophy has ever stood this criticism of the next generation, Protagoras Part
36 Intro| parallel to the ironical criticism of Simonides, and are conceived The Sophist Part
37 Intro| first submit their ideas to criticism and revision. He had once 38 Intro| Timaeus, does he offer any criticism on the views which are propounded 39 Intro| notions, might not extend his criticism to the syllogism.~The saying 40 Intro| The spirit of Hegelian criticism should be applied to his The Statesman Part
41 Intro| Philebus occurs the first criticism on the nature of classification. 42 Intro| kind of idolatry. Neither criticism nor experience allows us Theaetetus Part
43 Intro| only remember that in the criticism which follows of the thesis 44 Intro| are made by him on verbal criticism, and on the importance of 45 Intro| and Dialectic, is really a criticism of Plato on himself and 46 Intro| Plato on himself and his own criticism of Protagoras.~The difficulty Timaeus Part
47 Intro| know that mysticism is not criticism. The fancies of the Neo-Platonists 48 Intro| the first principles of criticism and fatal to any true understanding