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Alphabetical [« »] posidesmos 2 position 83 positions 2 positive 32 positively 6 positiveness 1 possess 62 | Frequency [« »] 32 obliged 32 occupied 32 passionate 32 positive 32 preceding 32 prevail 32 punish | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances positive |
Cratylus Part
1 Text | SOCRATES: I am by no means positive, Cratylus, in the view which Laws Book
2 7 | regard them as matters of positive law is a great absurdity. Meno Part
3 Intro| the like. Nor is Socrates positive of anything but the duty Parmenides Part
4 Intro| negative as well as the positive hypothesis, with reference 5 Intro| very likely to become a positive one. Still we retain the Philebus Part
6 Intro| true existence. Of that positive infinity, or infinite reality, 7 Intro| upon respectively both as positive and negative (compare ‘Omnis 8 Intro| strengthens our sense of positive duties towards others, but Protagoras Part
9 Text | of trouble: of this I am positive.~I said: I also incline The Republic Book
10 6 | said, with the assurance of positive certainty; he has no right 11 9 | cessation of pain, and not any positive enjoyment, are extolled The Seventh Letter Part
12 Text | mere conjecture but from positive knowledge. For when I made The Sophist Part
13 Intro| negative as well as the positive idea had sunk deep into 14 Intro| Not-being as of Being. To every positive idea—‘just,’ ‘beautiful,’ 15 Intro| altogether annihilate the positive meaning of the word ‘just’: 16 Intro| passed into an undefined positive. To say that ‘not-just’ 17 Intro| cannot be separated from the positive, and ‘Being’ and ‘Not-being’ 18 Intro| because he is not. Besides the positive class to which he belongs, 19 Intro| mere modification of the positive, as in the example of ‘not 20 Intro| negative there is also a positive element, and that oppositions 21 Intro| alike lost in a higher or positive infinity, and the absolute 22 Intro| that every negative is a positive, that differences of kind 23 Intro| absolutely at rest. But the positive had its negative, the conception The Statesman Part
24 Intro| are two sides from which positive laws may be attacked:—either Theaetetus Part
25 Intro| negative as well as the positive a place in human thought. 26 Intro| assigning to error a sort of positive existence. But error or 27 Intro| course of ages has become positive. It is originally derived 28 Intro| infinity of space, becomes positive. Whether time is prior to 29 Intro| are negative rather than positive. They show us, not the processes 30 Text | only out of heart, but in positive despair; for I do not know Timaeus Part
31 Intro| hardly separable from the positive, and even seems to pass 32 Intro| necessary, sometimes as a positive or malignant principle?