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Alphabetical [« »] impressible 2 impressing 1 impression 84 impressions 45 impressive 2 impressiveness 1 imprinted 3 | Frequency [« »] 45 generated 45 grown 45 hot 45 impressions 45 intelligent 45 lies 45 moves | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances impressions |
Gorgias Part
1 Text | could ever communicate our impressions to one another. I make this Meno Part
2 Intro| it has been unaffected by impressions derived from outward nature: The Republic Book
3 7 | I meant when I spoke of impressions which invited the intellect, 4 7 | simultaneous with opposite impressions, invite thought; those which The Seventh Letter Part
5 Text | my first visit. My first impressions on arrival were those of Theaetetus Part
6 Intro| proportion as he has better impressions. Neither do I deny the existence 7 Intro| superior knowledge. For the impressions of the sick are as true 8 Intro| sick are as true as the impressions of the healthy; and the 9 Intro| do judge of one another’s impressions, and think some wise and 10 Intro| the hard, for there the impressions have no depth of wax, and 11 Intro| generalized notion of feelings and impressions of sense, without determining 12 Intro| subject.~(b) The fixedness of impressions of sense furnishes a link 13 Intro| change of circumstances and impressions; and he who can effect this 14 Intro| working upon the feelings or impressions of sense. In this manner 15 Intro| the distinction between impressions on the mind and impressions 16 Intro| impressions on the mind and impressions on the senses to be admitted) 17 Intro| figure of the mind receiving impressions is one of those images which 18 Intro| of speech: they receive impressions, but do not produce them, 19 Intro| uncertain power of recalling impressions from the past.~Thus begins 20 Intro| recollection of sensible impressions as they are represented 21 Intro| science. They and not the mere impressions of sense are the truth of 22 Intro| hard to say how much our impressions of hearing may be affected 23 Intro| of sight, or how far our impressions of sight may be corrected 24 Intro| only the poor recipient of impressions—not the heir of all the 25 Intro| language contains the first impressions or the oldest experience 26 Intro| respecting himself. These impressions are not accurate representations 27 Intro| rests only on the general impressions of mankind, and there is 28 Text | knowledge does not consist in impressions of sense, but in reasoning 29 Text | present to one of the seals or impressions but not to the other, and 30 Text | true when the seals and impressions of sense meet straight and 31 Text | perfectly tempered, then the impressions which pass through the senses 32 Text | of room, and having clear impressions of things, as we term them, 33 Text | their composition, have the impressions indistinct, as also the 34 Text | are indistinct, for their impressions are easily confused and 35 Text | right objects to the right impressions—in their stupidity they Timaeus Part
36 Intro| and of abstractions; his impressions are taken almost at random 37 Intro| them. And when external impressions enter in, they are really 38 Intro| pleasant nor painful. The impressions of sight afford an example 39 Intro| yet, probably, their first impressions, the illusions and mirages 40 Intro| personify nature, then they form impressions of nature, at last they 41 Intro| certain extent only, the first impressions of nature, which mankind, 42 Intro| incapable of resisting the impressions which flowed in upon it. 43 Text | arising out of irresistible impressions; in the second place, they 44 Text | natural recipient of all impressions, and is stirred and informed 45 Text | far as she receives the impressions of them.~Let us consider