Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] habitable 1 habitation 19 habitations 8 habits 42 habitual 4 habitually 2 habituated 5 | Frequency [« »] 42 faculties 42 generals 42 grant 42 habits 42 heroes 42 interpreters 42 involved | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances habits |
Cratylus Part
1 Intro| association of the nature and habits of the animal is more distinctly Euthydemus Part
2 Intro| allusion to his money-getting habits. There is the youth Cleinias, Gorgias Part
3 Intro| colours, figures, laws, habits, studies, must they not 4 Intro| old division of empirical habits, or shams, or flatteries, 5 Intro| overvalued doing. But the habits and discipline received Laws Book
6 1 | force of his own nature and habits, and believing that he had 7 1 | knowledge of the natures and habits of men’s souls will be of 8 2 | which is given by suitable habits to the first instincts of 9 2 | whose natures, or ways, or habits are unsuited to them, cannot 10 2 | natures are right and their habits wrong, or whose habits are 11 2 | their habits wrong, or whose habits are right and their natures 12 4 | we should not teach bad habits, least of all to the best 13 5 | mean states of all these habits are by far the safest and 14 5 | man of experience and good habits. For in such an order of 15 5 | to health and temperate habits, that law must clearly be 16 6 | should have been trained in habits of law, and be well educated, 17 7 | the gifts of nature by bad habits.~Education has two branches— 18 7 | management of our bodies and the habits of our minds—true of all 19 11 | will not readily fall into habits of unbridled shamelessness 20 11 | repugnant to the laws and habits of the living and to their 21 11 | and to their own previous habits, if a person were simply 22 12 | studies and dispositions and habits are well fitted for the Phaedo Part
23 Text | obliged to have the same habits and haunts, and is not likely Philebus Part
24 Intro| they must accord with the habits of our minds.~When we are The Republic Book
25 3 | life, at length grow into habits and become a second nature, 26 3 | he resumes his ordinary habits, and either gets well and 27 3 | healthy constitution and habits of life, had a definite 28 3 | healthy and regular in his habits; and even though he did 29 3 | or contamination of evil habits when young. And this is 30 4 | will not leave off their habits of intemperance? ~Exactly. ~ 31 4 | the same principles and habits which there are in the State; 32 7 | also opposite maxims and habits of pleasure which flatter 33 7 | will be unaffected by the habits of their parents; these 34 7 | will train in their own habits and laws, I mean in the 35 8 | has trained him in his own habits? ~Exactly. ~And, like his The Seventh Letter Part
36 Text | and disapproval of the habits which this manner of life 37 Text | produces. For with these habits formed early in life, no 38 Text | are following any regular habits of life which please them 39 Text | country and his temperate habits of daily life, and to try The Symposium Part
40 Text | also of the soul, whose habits, tempers, opinions, desires, Theaetetus Part
41 Intro| is endued with faculties, habits, instincts, and a personality Timaeus Part
42 Text | In consequence of these habits of theirs they had their