Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] affirmed 63 affirming 25 affirming-that 1 affirms 33 affix 1 affixed 1 afflict 1 | Frequency [« »] 34 whither 34 wits 33 absurdity 33 affirms 33 amid 33 appeal 33 arrangement | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances affirms |
Charmides Part
1 PreS | of Professor Zeller, who affirms that none of the passages Cratylus Part
2 Intro| are conventional. Cratylus affirms that his own is a true name, 3 Intro| addition. Onoma, a name, affirms the real existence of that 4 Intro| have no luck in him, he affirms this to be the name of somebody 5 Intro| distinction.~(4) Plato distinctly affirms that language is not truth, 6 Text | anything is that which any one affirms to be the name?~HERMOGENES: 7 Text | Scamandrius and Astyanax, which he affirms to have been the names of Gorgias Part
8 Intro| of these things, while he affirms at the same time that no 9 Intro| out the principle which he affirms in the Republic, that ‘God 10 Text | only custom but nature also affirms that to do is more disgraceful Laws Book
11 2 | right reason, which the law affirms, and which the experience 12 7 | another’s words. The argument affirms that any change whatever Parmenides Part
13 Intro| relation to phenomena. Still he affirms the existence of such ideas; Phaedo Part
14 Text | an ancient doctrine which affirms that they go from hence 15 Text | to be true which the body affirms to be true; and from agreeing Phaedrus Part
16 Text | proved to be immortal, he who affirms that self-motion is the Philebus Part
17 Intro| advance of Plato; for he affirms that pleasure is not in 18 Text | propositions; and he who affirms either is very open to attack.~ Protagoras Part
19 Text | argument is absurd which affirms that a man often does evil The Republic Book
20 1 | who is a favorite of his, affirms that ~"He was excellent The Second Alcibiades Part
21 Text | deed, but rather him who affirms the contrary, if the act The Sophist Part
22 Intro| both exist? Does he who affirms this mean to say that motion 23 Intro| third (3) remains, which affirms that only certain things 24 Intro| place for every science, and affirms that no philosophy of a 25 Text | and not divine—any one who affirms the real Sophist to be of The Statesman Part
26 Intro| holds up the ideal, and affirms that in some sense science Theaetetus Part
27 Intro| for all,’~as Parmenides affirms. Thus we are in the midst 28 Text | element who at one time affirms and at another time denies Timaeus Part
29 Intro| from the Laws, in which he affirms their wanderings to be an 30 Intro| doctrine of equipoise. Plato affirms, almost in so many words, 31 Intro| Plato, following his master, affirms this principle of the best, 32 Intro| of the world, he rather affirms the modern thesis that nature 33 Text | perfected. And if any one affirms that in which these two