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Alphabetical [« »] assortment 1 assuage 1 assume 104 assumed 45 assumes 16 assuming 41 assumption 26 | Frequency [« »] 46 surface 46 unwilling 45 aside 45 assumed 45 attributes 45 chaerephon 45 chaos | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances assumed |
Charmides Part
1 Intro| one’s own business,’ is assumed to have been borrowed by 2 Text | have studied, may well be assumed to know the meaning of them; 3 Text | science, for this has been assumed to be the province of wisdom.~ Cratylus Part
4 Intro| secondary cause; and God is assumed to have worked a miracle 5 Intro| therefore not be silently assumed.~‘Natural selection’ and Crito Part
6 Text | principle in us which may be assumed to be improved by justice Gorgias Part
7 Intro| 406), and therefore the assumed date of the dialogue has 8 Intro| opinions cannot always be assumed to be those which he puts Lysis Part
9 Text | good nor evil.~That may be assumed to be certain.~And does Meno Part
10 Text | teachers nor disciples exist be assumed to be incapable of being Parmenides Part
11 Intro| Aristotle to be hastily assumed; there is at least a doubt 12 Intro| non-existence of the one are equally assumed to involve the existence 13 Text | since the one, which we have assumed, is, must not the whole, Phaedo Part
14 Text | the uncompounded may be assumed to be the same and unchanging, 15 Text | which I adopted: I first assumed some principle which I judged Phaedrus Part
16 Text | our two discourses, alike assumed, first of all, a single Philebus Part
17 Intro| pleasure to be the good, and assumed them to be one nature; I 18 Intro| forms which the enquiry assumed among the Socratic schools. Protagoras Part
19 Intro| this knowledge, which is assumed to be a knowledge of pleasures 20 Intro| by the different attitude assumed towards the teaching and 21 Text | understands?~Yes, that may be assumed.~And what is that which 22 Text | of knowledge which may be assumed equally to be the condition 23 Text | to agree if everything is assumed to have only one opposite The Republic Book
24 1 | Polemarchus? I asked. ~We assumed that he is a friend who 25 3 | loveliest? ~That may be assumed. ~And the man who has the 26 4 | in a certain way may be assumed to be justice. Can you tell 27 5 | dangerous? ~That may be assumed. ~And they will take them 28 5 | not-being, ignorance was assumed to be the necessary correlative; 29 10 | destruction? ~That may be assumed. ~Well, I said, and is there 30 10 | injustice, like disease, must be assumed to be fatal to the unjust, The Sophist Part
31 Intro| honourable name which they have assumed, or applies it to them only 32 Intro| many forms which he has assumed: (1) he was the paid hunter 33 Intro| nature and reason. They are assumed, as he is fond of repeating, The Statesman Part
34 Intro| Statesman, which can hardly be assumed without proof, since the 35 Intro| close connexion which is assumed by Plato to exist between 36 Text | proved, and may therefore be assumed.~STRANGER: The king is clearly Theaetetus Part
37 Intro| between his real and his assumed wisdom. No one is the superior 38 Intro| sensible perception,’ may be assumed to be a current philosophical 39 Text | Protagoras on the ground that he assumed all to be equal and sufficient 40 Text | SOCRATES: And wisdom is assumed by them to be true thought, 41 Text | knowledge, of which we are assumed not to know the nature.~ 42 Text | SOCRATES: The definition was assumed to be the interpretation Timaeus Part
43 Intro| forms of air and earth, assumed various shapes. By the motion 44 Text | discussion: one, which we assumed, was a pattern intelligible 45 Text | of the triangles which we assumed at first, that which has