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Alphabetical    [«  »]
contact 35
contacts 8
contagion 1
contain 43
contained 81
containing 30
contains 35
Frequency    [«  »]
44 working
43 approve
43 caused
43 contain
43 contests
43 control
43 depart
Plato
Partial collection

IntraText - Concordances

contain

Charmides
   Part
1 PreS | uses of words. They also contain historical blunders, such 2 PreS | the Meno and the Apology, contain allusions to one another. 3 Text | Then I could no longer contain myself. I thought how well Cratylus Part
4 Intro| whole, the Cratylus seems to contain deeper truths about language 5 Intro| however really exceptions, but contain in themselves indications 6 Text | male) and aner (man) also contain a similar allusion to the Euthydemus Part
7 Intro| Dialogue concludes probably contain allusions to tricks of language The First Alcibiades Part
8 Pre | Hippias does not appear to contain anything beyond the power Gorgias Part
9 Intro| Aeneid of Virgil, appear to contain reminiscences of the mysteries. Menexenus Part
10 Pre | Hippias does not appear to contain anything beyond the power 11 Intro| Thucyd., which seems to contain the germ of the idea); we Meno Part
12 Intro| all the Dialogues which contain allusions to the trial and 13 Text | here four equal lines which contain this space?~BOY: There are.~ Parmenides Part
14 Intro| adulteration or alloy which they contain. We cannot call a new metaphysical 15 Text | anything which does not contain it.~Impossible.~But then, 16 Text | with the whole one, or will contain the one?~Clearly.~If it 17 Text | than the one, because they contain the one, which will be less 18 Text | the others neither are nor contain two or three, if entirely Phaedo Part
19 Intro| notions appeared to him to contain a contradiction. For how 20 Text | not in themselves opposed, contain opposites; these, I say, Phaedrus Part
21 Intro| The two Dialogues together contain the whole philosophy of Philebus Part
22 Intro| custom, yet they seem also to contain other essential elements Protagoras Part
23 Intro| Io and the lesser Hippias contain discussions of the Poets, The Republic Book
24 8 | which are common to all, and contain nothing private, or individual; The Sophist Part
25 Intro| later dialogues of Plato contain many references to contemporary 26 Intro| many, may be supposed to contain a reference to their views, 27 Intro| outline large enough to contain all future knowledge, and 28 Intro| this complex nature can contain, even in outline, all the 29 Intro| one or two great thinkers contain the secret of the universe? 30 Text | in what other way can it contain them?~STRANGER: Or that The Statesman Part
31 Intro| deserted by the gods, may contain some higher elements of 32 Intro| which followed. He cannot contain his disgust at the contemporary The Symposium Part
33 Intro| may be truly thought to contain more than any commentator 34 Text | the soul to conceive or contain. And what are these conceptions?— Theaetetus Part
35 Intro| may be indeed imagined to contain the body, in the same way 36 Intro| history. The Homeric poems contain no word for it; even the Timaeus Part
37 Intro| of which the first will contain an outline of the dialogue: ( 38 Intro| forces. And as he was to contain all things, he was made 39 Intro| bodies; and (3) may possibly contain an allusion to the music 40 Intro| covering to the bones which contain the marrow or source of 41 Text | incomplete, for it will not contain every kind of animal which 42 Text | animal which it ought to contain, if it is to be perfect. 43 Text | that which was intended to contain the remaining and mortal


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