Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] imagery 4 images 87 imaginable 2 imaginary 37 imagination 47 imaginations 2 imaginative 11 | Frequency [« »] 37 healthy 37 honours 37 hurtful 37 imaginary 37 improve 37 inner 37 instances | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances imaginary |
Cratylus Part
1 Intro| of ludicrous fear of his imaginary wisdom. When he is arguing 2 Intro| hypothesis which by a series of imaginary transitions will bridge 3 Intro| of philology, unlike that imaginary abstract unity of which Critias Part
4 Text | described as those of our imaginary guardians. Concerning the Euthydemus Part
5 Intro| included.~To continue dead or imaginary sciences, which make no 6 Intro| to be contradictory and imaginary; in which the nature of Gorgias Part
7 Intro| the Island of Atlantis, an imaginary history, which is a fragment Laws Book
8 1 | would lead them amid these imaginary terrors, and prove them, Meno Part
9 Intro| of ideas has attained an imaginary clearness and definiteness 10 Intro| though he has drawn the imaginary line by which they are divided Parmenides Part
11 Intro| Plato has been using an imaginary method to work out an unmeaning Phaedo Part
12 Intro| could only answer by an imaginary hypothesis. Nor is it difficult Phaedrus Part
13 Intro| Praxiteles; and not rather of an imaginary beauty, of a sort which 14 Text | And this state, my dear imaginary youth to whom I am talking, 15 Text | to the authors of such an imaginary art, their superior wisdom Philebus Part
16 Text | not endeavour to make an imaginary separation of wisdom and Protagoras Part
17 Intro| argument is drawn out in an imaginary ‘dialogue within a dialogue,’ 18 Intro| difficulties. These are partly imaginary and partly real. The imaginary 19 Intro| imaginary and partly real. The imaginary ones are (1) Chronological,— 20 Intro| this Plato is depicting an imaginary Protagoras; he seems to The Republic Book
21 6 | evil, nor will this our imaginary State ever be realized? ~ The Sophist Part
22 Intro| hidden himself. He is the imaginary impersonation of false opinion. 23 Intro| is speaking of a being as imaginary as the wise man of the Stoics, 24 Intro| to have passed into an imaginary science of essence, and 25 Intro| out of them has merely an imaginary symmetry, and is really 26 Intro| growth of the mind, but the imaginary growth of the Hegelian system, 27 Intro| abstractions, and above imaginary possibilities, which, as The Statesman Part
28 Intro| considered by us:—~a. The imaginary ruler, whether God or man, 29 Intro| the world.~c. Besides the imaginary rule of a philosopher or Theaetetus Part
30 Intro| philosophy and religion the imaginary figure or association easily 31 Intro| lines or points, real or imaginary. By the help of mathematics 32 Intro| rests. The have been many imaginary subjects of knowledge of 33 Intro| has come down to us. The imaginary science may be called, in Timaeus Part
34 Intro| the entire narrative. The imaginary State which you were describing 35 Intro| and number, a fanciful or imaginary relation was superadded. 36 Intro| transformations of real solids, but of imaginary geometrical figures; in 37 Intro| things been explained by imaginary entities, such as life or