Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
speculated 2
speculates 1
speculation 28
speculations 38
speculative 10
speech 324
speech-gifted 1
Frequency    [«  »]
38 severally
38 simplicity
38 soil
38 speculations
38 successive
38 truer
38 truest
Plato
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speculations

The Apology
   Part
1 Text | nothing to do with physical speculations. Very many of those here Charmides Part
2 Intro| trouble himself with the speculations of Socrates.~In this Dialogue Cratylus Part
3 Intro| Antisthenes upon words, or the speculations of Cratylus, or some other 4 Intro| admiration, half belief, to the speculations of Socrates.~Cratylus is 5 Intro| proceed to compare modern speculations respecting the origin and 6 Intro| is the result of recent speculations about the origin and nature Euthydemus Part
7 Intro| more. But to pursue such speculations further, though not irrelevant, Euthyphro Part
8 Text | up rash innovations and speculations, in which I indulged only Gorgias Part
9 Intro| charge of intolerance. No speculations had as yet arisen respecting 10 Intro| carried a step further his speculations concerning the abolition Laws Book
11 4 | afraid that the course of my speculations is leading me to say something Parmenides Part
12 Intro| Zeno should hear the novel speculations of Socrates with mixed feelings 13 Intro| resemblance to some modern speculations, in which an attempt is 14 Intro| suppose them to be like the speculations of some of the Schoolmen, Phaedrus Part
15 Intro| ideal and imaginative of speculations. Socrates, half in jest 16 Intro| entered on the more abstract speculations of the Sophist or the Philebus. Philebus Part
17 Intro| Being?’ To these ancient speculations the moderns have added a 18 Intro| perhaps, is another of those speculations which intelligent men might ‘ The Sophist Part
19 Intro| thought. And there are many speculations of Plato which would have 20 Intro| are not mere opinions or speculations, but stages or moments of 21 Intro| thinkers may be traced to his speculations. In the theology and philosophy 22 Text | difficult, and all their dreamy speculations are overturned by the facts Theaetetus Part
23 Intro| fix them. Are not these speculations charming, Theaetetus, and 24 Intro| secondly, in relation to modern speculations.~(a) In the age of Socrates 25 Intro| The attractiveness of such speculations arises out of their true 26 Text | Theaetetus, are not these speculations sweet as honey? And do you 27 Text | Certainly we are. About these speculations of Heracleitus, which, as Timaeus Part
28 Intro| and the Laws. There are no speculations on physics in the other 29 Intro| by no means confined to speculations on physics. The deeper foundations 30 Intro| improving the philosophical speculations of others. In all three 31 Intro| the earlier dialogues. His speculations about the Eternal, his theories 32 Intro| phenomena. To these a priori speculations he would add a rude conception 33 Intro| undervalue or disparage the speculations of ancient philosophers, 34 Intro| connect the physiological speculations of Plato either with ancient 35 Intro| how far in any of these speculations Plato approximated to the 36 Intro| a favourable view of the speculations of the Timaeus. We should 37 Intro| figures. Plato adopted their speculations and improved upon them by 38 Intro| affinity to certain Pythagorean speculations, which gives it a character


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