Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
erroneous 29
erroneously 2
error 145
errors 36
errs 6
ersch 1
erudition 1
Frequency    [«  »]
36 desirous
36 easier
36 envy
36 errors
36 ethics
36 expresses
36 fate
Plato
Partial collection

IntraText - Concordances

errors

Charmides
   Part
1 PreS | fifty-one. These palpable errors and absurdities are absolutely Cratylus Part
2 Intro| him above and beyond the errors of his contemporaries.~The 3 Intro| to us, ‘Too late.’ And, errors excepted, we may still affirm 4 Intro| all.~(2) There are other errors besides the figment of a 5 Intro| sufficient to show the sort of errors which grammar introduces 6 Intro| conception of it dispels many errors, not only of metaphysics Euthydemus Part
7 Intro| liable to fall into the errors which are expressed by them. Gorgias Part
8 Intro| the consideration of the errors to which the idea may have Laws Book
9 5 | and not himself, for the errors which he has committed from 10 7 | which there spring up other errors of the same family.~Cleinias. 11 9 | punishments greater of voluntary errors and crimes and less for 12 9 | will only result in the errors of children and old men; 13 9 | and these he will treat as errors, and will make laws accordingly Lysis Part
14 Text | not guilty of all these errors in writing poetry. For I Phaedo Part
15 Intro| finally released from the errors and follies and passions Phaedrus Part
16 Intro| analogy with reference to the errors and prejudices which prevail Philebus Part
17 Intro| would have escaped many errors in psychology. We may contrast The Sophist Part
18 Intro| falsehoods and fall into errors. And this is Plato’s reply, 19 Intro| may help to dispel some errors and to awaken an interest 20 Text | great source of all the errors of the intellect.~THEAETETUS: 21 Text | roughly reproving their errors, or of gently advising them; The Statesman Part
22 Intro| attention to common dialectical errors. The Eleatic stranger, here, 23 Intro| myth, which may show us two errors of which we were guilty Theaetetus Part
24 Intro| the great detector of the errors and fallacies of others. 25 Intro| him and to point out his errors to him, whether arising 26 Intro| to him:—May there not be errors where there is no confusion 27 Intro| covered by his theory, viz. errors in arithmetic. For in numbers 28 Intro| thought and sense, and yet errors may often happen. Hence 29 Intro| the sense of inveterate errors familiarized by language, 30 Intro| Psychology; secondly, of the errors into which the students 31 Intro| facts and corrected many errors, which without it would 32 Text | necessary, telling him the errors into which he has fallen Timaeus Part
33 Intro| the world, has led to many errors, but has also had an elevating 34 Intro| into strange and fanciful errors: the time had not yet arrived 35 Intro| source of evil, seen in the errors of man and also in the wanderings 36 Intro| taken in these volumes the errors of ancient physicists were


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