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Alphabetical [« »] apparently 10 apparition 6 apparitions 8 appeal 33 appealed 5 appealing 10 appeals 15 | Frequency [« »] 33 absurdity 33 affirms 33 amid 33 appeal 33 arrangement 33 attaining 33 bitter | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances appeal |
The Apology Part
1 Text | truth of this, and to them I appeal. Speak then, you who have Cratylus Part
2 Intro| only be ascertained by an appeal to etymology. The truth 3 Intro| fitness of names?’ To this appeal, Cratylus replies ‘that 4 Text | no other names to which appeal can be made, but obviously Gorgias Part
5 Intro| Socrates dismisses the appeal to numbers; Polus, if he 6 Intro| proof of another sort; his appeal is to one witness only,— 7 Intro| was to hold the court of appeal. Now death is the separation 8 Intro| likeness after death. (3) The appeal of the authority of Homer, 9 Intro| paradoxical; the substance is an appeal to the higher reason. He 10 Intro| reason, to their feelings the appeal must be made. They must 11 Text | and I need not go far or appeal to antiquity; events which 12 Text | he shall hold a court of appeal, in case either of the two Laws Book
13 9 | to try the cause, on the appeal of the criminal or his advocate, 14 11 | not skilled, let the buyer appeal for restitution within six 15 11 | of epilepsy, and then the appeal may be made within a year. Meno Part
16 Intro| teachable.~In this dilemma an appeal is made to Anytus, a respectable Phaedrus Part
17 Intro| Our misogamist will not appeal to Anacreon or Sappho for Philebus Part
18 Intro| dialectic. And do not let us appeal to Gorgias or Philebus or 19 Text | so.~PROTARCHUS: You may appeal to us; we too will be the Protagoras Part
20 Text | come to his aid. I must appeal to you, like the river Scamander The Republic Book
21 2 | authorities to whom they appeal, now smoothing the path 22 4 | saying. And we may once more appeal to the words of Homer, which 23 5 | anything is one-to him I would appeal, saying, Will you be so The Sophist Part
24 Intro| reply would probably be an appeal to experience. Ten thousands, 25 Intro| But, before making this appeal to common sense, Plato propounds 26 Intro| disguised from us by his own appeal to fact and the opinions 27 Intro| defend themselves by an appeal to one-sided or abstract The Statesman Part
28 Text | contentious disputants, who appeal to popular opinion.~YOUNG The Symposium Part
29 Intro| begins his discussion by an appeal to mythology, and distinguishes Theaetetus Part
30 Intro| solve them, not through an appeal to facts, but by the help 31 Intro| Theaetetus is affected by the appeal to geometry, and Socrates 32 Intro| has discovered that his appeal to the fallibility of sense Timaeus Part
33 Intro| diet and exercise, he might appeal to nearly all the best physicians