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Alphabetical [« »] paragon 1 paragraph 8 paragraphs 5 parallel 41 paralleled 2 parallelism 4 parallelisms 1 | Frequency [« »] 41 obvious 41 occurs 41 offered 41 parallel 41 plants 41 refer 41 returns | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances parallel |
Charmides Part
1 Text | proposition is, my friend: in any parallel case, the impossibility Cratylus Part
2 Intro| about language which were parallel to other questions about 3 Intro| Socrates, but the cases are not parallel; for if you subtract or 4 Intro| consciousness of themselves.~Parallel with this mental process 5 Intro| know, any more than in the parallel case of the origin of species, 6 Intro| which words we notice a parallel composition of sounds in 7 Intro| spring, sting, which are parallel to one another and may be Crito Part
8 Text | Socrates.~SOCRATES: Take a parallel instance:—if, acting under Gorgias Part
9 Intro| able to illustrate best by parallel notions, which, whether 10 Intro| offers a contrast than a parallel. The character of Protagoras 11 Text | burned or cut:—Is not that a parallel case?~POLUS: Yes, truly.~ 12 Text | these appear to be the exact parallel of the statesmen whom you Meno Part
13 Intro| here, again, we may find a parallel with the ancients. He goes Parmenides Part
14 Intro| view of the ideas by the parallel of the day, which is one 15 Intro| is nothing.~Involving two parallel consequences respecting Phaedo Part
16 Intro| variance with this. (Compare a parallel difficulty in Theaet.) For 17 Intro| belief in the other. The parallel, as Socrates would say, Phaedrus Part
18 Intro| work of art, and has no parallel elsewhere.~In the second 19 Intro| further developed in the parallel oration of Socrates. First, Philebus Part
20 Intro| Here, then, and in the parallel passages of the Phaedrus 21 Text | all along been seeking a parallel to pleasure, and true to Protagoras Part
22 Intro| that the two cases are not parallel. For Socrates admits his 23 Intro| the Poets, which offer a parallel to the ironical criticism The Republic Book
24 6 | desolate? ~A most exact parallel. ~What will be the issue 25 7 | want you, I said, by way of parallel, to imagine a supposititious 26 9 | ask you not to forget the parallel of the individual and the The Sophist Part
27 Intro| species; secondly, in the parallel precept of the Philebus, The Statesman Part
28 Intro| few moments underwent a parallel change and disappeared. 29 Intro| are about to attempt. As a parallel to the king we select the 30 Intro| that there are not only parallel, but opposite virtues, and 31 Intro| revolutions, and not without parallel in modern times, that the 32 Intro| generally inferior to the parallel passages in his earlier Theaetetus Part
33 Intro| also Theaet. and Soph. for parallel turns of thought.) Secondly, 34 Intro| But would this hold in any parallel case? Can a man see and 35 Intro| thinker often repeats the parallel axiom, ‘All knowledge is 36 Intro| singular, is not without a parallel in the history of philosophy 37 Intro| the human mind, like the parallel difficulty respecting Not-being. 38 Intro| with them, is (like the parallel question about space) unmeaning. 39 Text | SOCRATES: But is there any parallel to this?~THEAETETUS: What Timaeus Part
40 Intro| world (Greek), we have a parallel to the Phaedrus. His distinction 41 Intro| and which are without any parallel, to be deemed worthy of