Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] proen 1 prof 1 profane 3 profess 43 professed 16 professedly 2 professes 30 | Frequency [« »] 43 legislators 43 opportunity 43 plain 43 profess 43 properly 43 prose 43 refuted | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances profess |
The First Alcibiades Part
1 Text | wholesome,’ although you do not profess to be a physician: and when 2 Text | subject is one of which you profess to have knowledge, and about Gorgias Part
3 Text | what is the art which you profess?~GORGIAS: Rhetoric, Socrates, 4 Text | that is exactly what I profess to make them, not only at 5 Text | Very good then; as you profess to be a rhetorician, and 6 Text | say, Gorgias? Since you profess to be a rhetorician and 7 Text | Nay, Socrates, for you profess to be a votary of the truth, 8 Text | say, why talk of men who profess to be rulers, and declare 9 Text | good to those whom they profess to benefit. Is not this Laches Part
10 Text | if not, and if those who profess to teach it are deceivers Laws Book
11 8 | course; and if any stranger profess two arts, let them chastise 12 9 | whom at any rate we should profess a desire to differ, agree 13 10 | for them. When lawgivers profess that they are gentle and Meno Part
14 Intro| rest of the world do not profess to teach). But there is 15 Text | sending him to those who profess the art, rather than to 16 Text | for teaching the art, and profess to teach it to any one who 17 Text | to send him to those who profess to teach the art for money, 18 Text | should send him to those who profess and avouch that they are 19 Text | Anytus? Of all the people who profess that they know how to do 20 Text | teach the young? and do they profess to be teachers? and do they 21 Text | not many things which I profess to know, but this is most Parmenides Part
22 Intro| facts, even by writers who profess to base truth entirely upon Phaedo Part
23 Text | time, however much you may profess or promise at the moment, Phaedrus Part
24 Intro| character, he must, however, profess that the speech which he Philebus Part
25 Intro| None of them are, or indeed profess to be, the only principle 26 Intro| people. All parties alike profess to aim at this, which though Protagoras Part
27 Intro| thought a madman if he did not profess a virtue which he had not. ( 28 Text | say that all men ought to profess honesty whether they are 29 Text | ours, and men such as we profess to be, do not require the The Republic Book
30 3 | allow those for whom we profess a care and of whom we say 31 3 | but also those who would profess to have had a liberal education? 32 9 | bow down before them: they profess every sort of affection The Sophist Part
33 Intro| in return are fed; others profess to teach virtue and receive 34 Text | And about what does he profess that he teaches men to dispute? 35 Text | STRANGER: And do they not profess to make men able to dispute 36 Text | Suppose that a person were to profess, not that he could speak 37 Text | like that to which they profess to be like? May we not call The Statesman Part
38 Intro| of the science which they profess.~Let us next ask, which 39 Text | hand to anything, will not profess to share in royal science?~ The Symposium Part
40 Text | oppose your motion, who profess to understand nothing but Theaetetus Part
41 Text | that I neither know, nor profess to know, anything of these 42 Text | Certainly, Socrates, he used to profess in the strongest manner 43 Text | Ephesians themselves, who profess to know them, are downright