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Alphabetical [« »] psychological 8 psychologically 1 psychologie 2 psychology 44 pterothoiton 1 public 210 public-spirited 1 | Frequency [« »] 44 proceeded 44 profession 44 provide 44 psychology 44 readily 44 refute 44 reverence | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances psychology |
Charmides Part
1 PreS(7)| Psychology.~ 2 PreS | and Hegelian philosophies, Psychology, and the Origin of Language. ( Cratylus Part
3 Intro | by a rational theory of psychology. (See introductions to the Euthydemus Part
4 Intro | most gracious aids’ to psychology, or that the methods of Meno Part
5 Intro | This is a true fact of psychology, which is recognized by 6 Intro | backwards from philosophy to psychology, from ideas to numbers. Parmenides Part
7 Intro | establishment of a rational psychology; and this is a work which Phaedo Part
8 Intro | Plato had the wonders of psychology just opening to him, and Phaedrus Part
9 Intro | the threefold division of psychology. The image of the charioteer Philebus Part
10 Intro | indicates a great progress in psychology; also between understanding 11 Intro | have escaped many errors in psychology. We may contrast the contempt Theaetetus Part
12 Intro | advance has been made in psychology when the senses are recognized 13 Intro | foundation of a rational psychology, which is to supersede the 14 Intro | foundation of a system of psychology. Only they lead us to dwell 15 Intro | between ancient and modern psychology, and we have a difficulty 16 Intro | comprehensive is modern psychology, seeming to aim at constructing 17 Intro | variations’ of body and mind. Psychology, on the other hand, treats 18 Intro | THE NATURE AND LIMITS Of PSYCHOLOGY.~O gar arche men o me oide, 19 Intro | appeared, many books on Psychology have been given to the world, 20 Intro | The phenomena of which Psychology treats are familiar to us, 21 Intro | of studying the mind. But Psychology has also some other supports, 22 Intro | more to review the bases of Psychology, lest we should be imposed 23 Intro | Plato,—the oldest work on Psychology which has come down to us. 24 Intro | first, of the true bases of Psychology; secondly, of the errors 25 Intro | not claim for the popular Psychology the position of a science 26 Intro | into the vernacular.~I.a. Psychology is inseparable from language, 27 Intro | Cratylus.)~b. This primitive psychology is continually receiving 28 Intro | broken some of the idols of Psychology: they have challenged the 29 Intro | the mind of Europe.~d. The Psychology which is found in common 30 Intro | of individuals. The real Psychology is that which shows how 31 Intro | immeasurably increased.~II. The new Psychology, whatever may be its claim 32 Intro | Hence the firmer ground of Psychology is not the consciousness 33 Intro | them.’~e. A science such as Psychology is not merely an hypothesis, 34 Intro | may throw a new light on Psychology is a dream in which scientific 35 Intro | remarks has been to show that Psychology is necessarily a fragment, 36 Intro | are able to rehabilitate Psychology to some extent, not as a 37 Intro | The principal subjects of Psychology may be summed up as follows:—~ 38 Intro | included within the domain of Psychology.~IV. We admit that there 39 Intro | there is no perfect or ideal Psychology. It is not a whole in the 40 Intro | to the enquiry into them.~Psychology should be natural, not technical. 41 Intro | that we are concerned in Psychology. The facts relating to the 42 Intro | microscope. The elements of Psychology can still only be learnt Timaeus Part
43 Intro | There will remain, (5) the psychology, (6) the physiology of Plato, 44 Intro | such as physiology and psychology. For the sciences were not