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Alphabetical [« »] masculine 3 mask 6 masma 2 mass 38 masse 1 masses 11 massive 1 | Frequency [« »] 38 hair 38 hunger 38 lines 38 mass 38 metaphysics 38 morality 38 outside | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances mass |
The Apology Part
1 Text | expect to get rid of such a mass of calumny all in a moment. Gorgias Part
2 Text | mingle in an indiscriminate mass. And now I have told you Laws Book
3 3 | impose such laws as the mass of the people will be ready 4 3 | because affecting the great mass of the human soul; for the 5 3 | the individual is like the mass or populace in a state. 6 9 | and most prevalent among mass of mankind: I mean where 7 10 | things were at rest in one mass, which of the above–mentioned 8 11 | to a large gain. But the mass of mankind are the very 9 12 | idea that all this lifeless mass of flesh which is in process 10 12 | lies? do indeed excuse the mass of the citizens, who only Phaedo Part
11 Intro| cherished instinct. The mass of mankind went on their Philebus Part
12 Text | wisdom the one which the mass of mankind are always claiming, 13 Text | superior in truth to a great mass which is impure. And now The Republic Book
14 3 | silently gather a festering mass of corruption in their own 15 4 | overwhelmed by the greater mass of the worse -in this case 16 5 | and constraining to the mass of mankind. ~True, I said; 17 8 | him, and thus the great mass of the citizens become lovers 18 8 | always being severed from the mass. ~What is that? ~They are The Second Alcibiades Part
19 Text | making his petition. The mass of mankind would not decline The Statesman Part
20 Intro| describes his work as a ‘mass of mythology,’ which was 21 Intro| people an inert and unchanged mass. The Roman world was not 22 Text | there remain in a confused mass the valuable elements akin Theaetetus Part
23 Intro| assured. And having such a mass of acknowledged truth in Timaeus Part
24 Intro| proceeded to divide the entire mass into portions related to 25 Intro| and condenses the liquid mass. This process is called 26 Intro| in turn presses upon the mass of earth, and the earth, 27 Intro| purpose, and in a separate mass.~Section 8.~We have now 28 Intro| lightness proportioned to the mass and distance of the bodies 29 Text | they will form one large mass of another kind. So much 30 Text | itself or perhaps in some mass of air or water, is borne 31 Text | liquid and still moveable mass into the place which was 32 Text | itself. Thus compressed the mass resumes its equability, 33 Text | having been poured around the mass of earth, forcibly compresses 34 Text | flow around the entire mass and leave it undissolved; 35 Text | where there is the great mass of fire to which fiery bodies 36 Text | could compel the smaller mass more readily than the larger; 37 Text | opposite cause, when the mass of entering particles, immersed 38 Text | together and yet the whole mass is soft and delicate, being