Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] associated 22 associates 10 associating 2 association 36 associations 20 assortment 1 assuage 1 | Frequency [« »] 36 admixture 36 alternative 36 assist 36 association 36 calls 36 censure 36 compound | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances association |
Charmides Part
1 PreS | language, and a religious association, it disturbs the even flow Cratylus Part
2 Intro| hope to obtain by constant association with him. He is the perfect 3 Intro| the laws of euphony and association by which imitation must 4 Intro| tell us something about the association of ideas, they occasionally 5 Intro| come with a new force and association to every lively-minded person. 6 Intro| suggestiveness and the play of association are essential characteristics 7 Intro| becomes less vivid, while the association of the nature and habits 8 Intro| new meaning caught up by association may become more important Meno Part
9 Intro| one time or other, is by association out of one thing capable 10 Intro| of knowledge, and of the association of ideas. Knowledge is prior 11 Intro| mental phenomenon of the association of ideas (compare Phaedo) 12 Intro| reminiscence (anamnesis) or association from sensible things. The 13 Intro| than the ordinary law of association, by which in daily life Phaedo Part
14 Intro| Again, there is a power of association, which from seeing Simmias 15 Text | corporeal, which the continual association and constant care of the Philebus Part
16 Intro| pleasures of smell, having no association of mind, or perhaps to have 17 Intro| analyze the nature of this association.~Opinion is based on perception, The Republic Book
18 4 | owing to evil education or association, the better principle, which The Sophist Part
19 Intro| the word; the additional association, if any, was only that of 20 Intro| sensible world. Led by this association and by the common use of 21 Intro| a sacredness from their association with the Divine Being. Yet 22 Intro| between them vary from a mere association up to a necessary connexion. 23 Intro| to a great extent due to association, and to their correlation Theaetetus Part
24 Intro| the imaginary figure or association easily takes the place of 25 Intro| Hence memory is dependent on association. The act of recollection 26 Intro| attaching to them some colour or association of sense. The power of recollection 27 Intro| before it. Some feeling or association calls them up, and they 28 Intro| arrangement of them, like the association of objects in a landscape. 29 Intro| mind: (b) of the power of association, by which the appearance 30 Intro| to be always called up by association. Yet it is probable, or 31 Intro| because it is more assisted by association. We have known and forgotten, 32 Intro| their circumstances.~f. Association is another of the ever-present 33 Intro| We speak of the laws of association, but this is an expression 34 Intro| follows. The simplest case of association is that of sense. When we 35 Intro| instant. The long train of association by which we pass from one 36 Intro| isolation as well as in association; we do not mean that they