Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] present 465 present-nothing 1 presentations 1 presented 38 presentiment 6 presenting 3 presently 4 | Frequency [« »] 38 owing 38 peculiar 38 pious 38 presented 38 proverb 38 severally 38 simplicity | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances presented |
Euthydemus Part
1 Intro| infancy of philosophy. They presented the same kind of difficulty Gorgias Part
2 Intro| and countries. They are presented in the most lively and graphic Laws Book
3 3 | interests, than are here presented to his view.~Athenian. Then 4 11 | this profession which is presented to us under the fair name 5 12 | which the poet says were presented to Peleus by the Gods as Meno Part
6 Intro| idealism of Plato is here presented in a less developed form Parmenides Part
7 Intro| affirmed that the not many presented a different aspect of the 8 Intro| words; and words when once presented to the mind exercised a Phaedo Part
9 Intro| person when a diagram is presented to him. Again, there is 10 Intro| immortality is most naturally presented to us. It is clear that Philebus Part
11 Intro| metaphysical conceptions which are presented to us. These are (I) the 12 Intro| principles of morals may be presented to us are many and various. 13 Intro| Phaedrus, Republic, etc.) it is presented to us in a manner playful 14 Intro| metaphysical thought which presented themselves from time to 15 Text | generally true pictures presented to them, and the bad false Protagoras Part
16 Intro| Protagoras is consistently presented to us throughout as the The Republic Book
17 7 | for dialectic, should be presented to the mind in childhood; 18 9 | he may have his own words presented before his eyes. ~Of what The Seventh Letter Part
19 Text | being merely the thing presented to the soul in each particular 20 Text | with whatever images are presented to us, we are not held up The Sophist Part
21 Intro| things,’ which Socrates presented in a new form as the study 22 Intro| which a succession of ideas presented themselves to the mind of 23 Text | of forms in which he has presented himself, I begin to doubt 24 Text | STRANGER: And when opinion is presented, not simply, but in some The Statesman Part
25 Intro| must view him, (2) as he is presented to us in a famous ancient The Symposium Part
26 Text | they sent empty away, and presented to him an apparition only Theaetetus Part
27 Intro| which the mind had reached presented other difficulties hardly 28 Intro| philosophy of sensation presented great attraction to the 29 Intro| or not know that which is presented to the mind or to sense. 30 Intro| which truth is so often presented to us. To assert that man 31 Intro| resist an idea which is presented to him in a general form 32 Intro| vacant is the image which is presented to him. Henceforward all Timaeus Part
33 Intro| how Plato’s cosmos may be presented to the reader in a clearer 34 Intro| aspects of nature which presented themselves to Plato and 35 Intro| the help of sense. This is presented to us in a dreamy manner, 36 Intro| in the aspect which she presented to a Greek philosopher of 37 Intro| unlike. This opposition is presented to us in many forms, as 38 Text | affections which accompany these, presented a strange variety of appearances;