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Alphabetical [« »] peradventure 5 perceivable 1 perceive 115 perceived 37 perceives 36 perceiving 29 percentage 1 | Frequency [« »] 37 needed 37 oration 37 partaking 37 perceived 37 perpetual 37 poems 37 related | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances perceived |
Cratylus Part
1 Intro| like; the imposer of names perceived that the tongue is most 2 Intro| animal is more distinctly perceived. The picture passes into Laws Book
3 10 | around them all, but is perceived by mind; and therefore by Lysis Part
4 Intro| need of it has not been perceived until too late. ‘Oh if he Parmenides Part
5 Intro| uttered, nor known, nor perceived, nor imagined. But can all Phaedo Part
6 Text | reality of them ever been perceived by you through the bodily 7 Text | seen or heard or in any way perceived anything, knows not only Phaedrus Part
8 Intro| colourless, intangible, perceived by the mind only, dwelling 9 Intro| ambiguities which were not perceived by Plato himself. For example, Philebus Part
10 Intro| antecedent pains are scarcely perceived by us, being almost done 11 Intro| of the public, are hardly perceived by us; but in the conflict The Republic Book
12 5 | asserted, then the man was perceived to be a fool who directs 13 7 | unity could be adequately perceived by the sight or by any other 14 10 | each as he took his lot perceived the number which he had The Seventh Letter Part
15 Text | come to Sicily, when they perceived that Dion had been misrepresented The Symposium Part
16 Intro| age (Athenaeus), was not perceived by Plato himself. We are 17 Text | strike me dumb. And then I perceived how foolish I had been in Theaetetus Part
18 Intro| facts of sense which are perceived through the organs of the 19 Intro| if I knew one only, and perceived neither; or if I knew and 20 Intro| neither; or if I knew and perceived neither, or in any other 21 Intro| external results, and is dimly perceived by each man for himself. 22 Intro| proposition.~The elements may be perceived by sense, but they are names, 23 Intro| nowhere and nothing, if not perceived by the sense, and the sense 24 Intro| from one object, which is perceived directly, to many which 25 Intro| directly, to many which are perceived indirectly or in a less 26 Intro| their true nature not being perceived. They are veiled in graceful 27 Intro| differences of actions begin to be perceived, more and more names are 28 Text | SOCRATES: Of things learned and perceived, that is?~THEAETETUS: Certainly.~ 29 Text | for example, cannot be perceived through sight, or the objects 30 Text | know will sometimes not be perceived by him and sometimes will 31 Text | him and sometimes will be perceived and only perceived?~THEAETETUS: 32 Text | will be perceived and only perceived?~THEAETETUS: That is also 33 Text | does not know and has never perceived, but only in things which 34 Text | things which are known and perceived; in these alone opinion Timaeus Part
35 Intro| is indestructible, and is perceived by a kind of spurious reason 36 Text | with it, and like to it, perceived by sense, created, always 37 Text | all other things which are perceived by sense through the parts