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Alphabetical [« »] centrifugal 1 centripetal 1 centuries 7 century 48 ceos 4 cephalus 18 cephisodorus 1 | Frequency [« »] 48 accustomed 48 adapted 48 aristophanes 48 century 48 creatures 48 criticism 48 cure | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances century |
Cratylus Part
1 Intro| Heracleitean of the fourth century B.C., on the nature of language 2 Intro| any philologer of the last century. May we suppose that Plato, 3 Intro| other writers of the last century, would have substantially 4 Intro| other critics of the last century; but this does not prove 5 Intro| philosophers of the last century, after their manner, would The First Alcibiades Part
6 Pre | Alexandrian catalogues of a century later include manifest forgeries. 7 Pre | literature in the third century before Christ was almost Gorgias Part
8 Intro| of our own and the last century, which, together with the Menexenus Part
9 Pre | Alexandrian catalogues of a century later include manifest forgeries. 10 Pre | literature in the third century before Christ was almost Meno Part
11 Intro| enquirers of the seventeenth century, who to themselves appeared Parmenides Part
12 Intro| the Greeks of the fourth century before Christ, and is the 13 Intro| philosophy in the fourth century before Christ a panic might 14 Intro| which arose in the last century from Hume’s denial of our 15 Intro| philosopher of the nineteenth century should have lighted upon 16 Intro| experiment.~In the last century the educated world were Phaedrus Part
17 Intro| at Athens in the fourth century before Christ. As in the 18 Intro| to suppose that, in the century before the taking of Constantinople, 19 Intro| at the end of the present century no writer of the first class Philebus Part
20 Intro| men who have lived in this century, Bentham and J. S. Mill, 21 Intro| latter half of the fourth century B.C.; what eddies and whirlpools The Second Alcibiades Part
22 Pre | attributed to the second or third century before Christ.~ The Sophist Part
23 Intro| called Sophists in the fifth century before Christ. In Plato 24 Intro| Grote supposes, in the fifth century before Christ, have included 25 Intro| The Idealism of the fourth century before Christ in Greece, 26 Intro| The man of the seventeenth century is unfitted for the eighteenth, 27 Intro| the beginning of the sixth century before Christ,—the want The Statesman Part
28 Intro| kings has at the end of a century left the people an inert 29 Intro| of Spain during the last century were at least equal to any 30 Intro| with commerce in the last century or of clerical persecution The Symposium Part
31 Intro| to the Greek of the fifth century before Christ. The first 32 Intro| France in the nineteenth century. No one supposes certain Theaetetus Part
33 Intro| speculative philosophies, which a century earlier had so deeply impressed 34 Intro| The Greeks, in the fourth century before Christ, had no words 35 Intro| Greek mind in the fourth century before Christ was not another 36 Intro| The same impulse which a century before had led men to form 37 Intro| psychological discovery in the fifth century before Christ. Of this discovery, 38 Intro| living in the fifth or fourth century B.C. To this was often added, 39 Intro| i.e. to the eighteenth century, when men sought to explain Timaeus Part
40 Intro| philosopher of the fourth century before Christ is not easily 41 Intro| art; but from the sixth century onwards or even earlier 42 Intro| Anaximander in the sixth century before Christ (Plut. Symp. 43 Intro| Pythagoreans living in the fourth century B.C., there were already 44 Intro| latter half of the fifth century B.C., after the dispersion 45 Intro| early part of the eighteenth century, when the human mind, seeking 46 Intro| than the eighth or ninth century B.C. It is true that Proclus, 47 Intro| Proclus, writing in the fifth century after Christ, tells us of 48 Intro| sixteenth, but of the nineteenth century A.D.). The commentary is