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Alphabetical    [«  »]
machinery 1
mackail 1
macrocosm 1
mad 47
madden 1
maddened 5
maddening 1
Frequency    [«  »]
47 inspiration
47 involuntary
47 likewise
47 mad
47 mingled
47 nations
47 praised
Plato
Partial collection

IntraText - Concordances

mad

Euthydemus
   Part
1 Text | said Ctesippus; I should be mad to say anything else.~And Euthyphro Part
2 Text | EUTHYPHRO: You will think me mad when I tell you.~SOCRATES: The First Alcibiades Part
3 Text | would think that we were mad, Alcibiades, when she compared Ion Part
4 Intro| opinion that a man must be mad who behaves in this way 5 Intro| Socrates would never think him mad if he could only hear his 6 Text | praise Homer only when I am mad and possessed; and if you Laws Book
7 2 | and in order to make him mad; but our present doctrine, 8 3 | afterwards, the slayer himself, mad with wine and brutality, 9 6 | remember what a courageously mad and daring creation this 10 7 | own. For a state would be mad which gave you this licence, 11 10 | half of mankind should go mad in their lust of pleasure, 12 11 | example, to take a wife who is mad, or has some other terrible 13 11 | have us give.~If a man is mad he shall not be at large Lysis Part
14 Text | talking nonsense, and is stark mad.~O Hippothales, I said, Meno Part
15 Text | stranger, will ever be so mad as to allow himself to be Phaedrus Part
16 Intro| and is therefore deemed mad. Such a recollection of 17 Intro| afraid of being thought mad he would fall down and worship. 18 Intro| secondly, of disinterested or mad love, fixed on objects of 19 Text | one is sane, and the other mad. It might be so if madness 20 Text | divine, the vulgar deem him mad, and rebuke him; they do 21 Text | therefore thought to be mad. And I have shown this of 22 Text | savagely, ‘Fool, you are mad!’ But like a musician, in Philebus Part
23 Text | pain, sleeping or waking, mad or lunatic?~PROTARCHUS: Protagoras Part
24 Text | relations think that he is mad and go and admonish him; 25 Text | really not courageous, but mad; and in that case the wisest The Republic Book
26 1 | if I had escaped from a mad and furious master. His 27 1 | from the grasp not of one mad master only, but of many. 28 2 | able to resist; he would be mad if he did. Such is the received 29 2 | friends who are senseless or mad? ~But no mad or senseless 30 2 | senseless or mad? ~But no mad or senseless person can 31 3 | of men or women who are mad or bad; for madness, like 32 3 | love? ~Certainly not. ~Then mad or intemperate pleasure The Second Alcibiades Part
33 Text | foolish, and that some are mad?~ALCIBIADES: Yes.~SOCRATES: 34 Text | all who are senseless are mad. For example, if among persons 35 Text | certainly are,—they are mad. For tell me, by heaven, 36 Text | the foolish, whom you call mad, are many?~ALCIBIADES: I The Sophist Part
37 Text | expect that you will deem me mad, when you hear of my sudden The Statesman Part
38 Intro| degenerate; the one become mad, and the other feeble and The Symposium Part
39 Intro| same excitable, or rather ‘madfriend of Socrates, who 40 Text | reason why I am said to be mad, and out of my wits, is 41 Text | am in bodily fear of his mad and passionate attempts.~ Theaetetus Part
42 Intro| Ephesians are downright mad about the flux; they cannot 43 Intro| where the people ‘were mad about them’) than in the 44 Text | go darting about, and are mad rather than courageous; 45 Text | know them, are downright mad, and you cannot talk with Timaeus Part
46 Intro| of them is more or less mad. He is often thought bad, 47 Text | anything rightly; but he is mad, and is at the time utterly


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