Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] discouraged 5 discouraging 1 discourse 164 discourses 34 discoursing 22 discourteous 2 discourtesy 1 | Frequency [« »] 34 coward 34 deep 34 differs 34 discourses 34 dramatic 34 duties 34 dwelling | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances discourses |
The Apology Part
1 Text | citizens, cannot endure my discourses and words, and have found Euthydemus Part
2 Intro| with his satire.~The two discourses of Socrates may be contrasted 3 Intro| whereas the Sophistical discourses are wholly irrelevant: ( The First Alcibiades Part
4 Pre | The traditions of the oral discourses both of Socrates and Plato Laws Book
5 1 | and with these and similar discourses we will beguile the way. 6 2 | their songs and tales and discourses all their life long. But 7 4 | this reason:—Because all discourses and vocal exercises have 8 7 | pleasure, for of all the discourses which I have ever learnt 9 7 | he come across unwritten discourses akin to ours, he should 10 9 | remark upon us that he who discourses about laws, as we are now 11 10 | proposes; for if impious discourses were not scattered, as I Lysis Part
12 Text | your beautiful love, your discourses and songs will be a glory Menexenus Part
13 Pre | The traditions of the oral discourses both of Socrates and Plato 14 Intro| is truly Platonic.~Such discourses, if we may form a judgment Phaedrus Part
15 Text | delicacy was shown in the two discourses; I mean, in my own and in 16 Text | love and to philosophical discourses.~PHAEDRUS: I join in the 17 Text | carver might. Just as our two discourses, alike assumed, first of 18 Text | art of writing, and his discourses, and the rhetorical skill 19 Text | the speaking or writing of discourses, and how they might be rightly 20 Text | in the form of political discourses which they would term laws— Protagoras Part
21 Intro| be taught by rhetorical discourses or citations from the poets. The Republic Book
22 5 | assign to the hearing of such discourses. But never mind about us; The Seventh Letter Part
23 Text | pupil and listener to my discourses on philosophy, fearing the The Sophist Part
24 Text | therefore we say that he discourses, and to this connexion of The Statesman Part
25 Intro| that the Eleatic Stranger discourses to us, not only concerning 26 Text | who censures the length of discourses on such occasions and cannot The Symposium Part
27 Intro| person who had heard of the discourses in praise of love spoken 28 Intro| He had imagined that the discourses were recent. There he is 29 Intro| Menexenus).~The last of the six discourses begins with a short argument 30 Intro| himself as a pander, and also discourses of the difference between 31 Text | walked, and talked of the discourses on love; and therefore, Timaeus Part
32 Intro| words of Parmenides when he discourses of being and of essence, 33 Intro| forms of government and evil discourses are superadded, and there 34 Text | government are added and evil discourses are uttered in private as