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Alphabetical [« »] treasuring 1 treasury 4 treat 26 treated 31 treaties 1 treating 5 treatise 11 | Frequency [« »] 31 tame 31 toward 31 translation 31 treated 31 unchangeable 31 unjustly 31 vast | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances treated |
Charmides Part
1 PreF | the nature of the subjects treated of in them.) On the other 2 Text | cured, his head must be treated; and then again they say Cratylus Part
3 Intro| is omitted here, but is treated of in the Sophist. These The First Alcibiades Part
4 Intro| the Symposium, should have treated them in so thin and superficial Gorgias Part
5 Intro| certain dignity, and is treated by Socrates with considerable 6 Intro| soul, like the body, may be treated in two ways—there is the 7 Text | it was said that rhetoric treated of discourse, not (like 8 Text | be in no danger of being treated unjustly: he alone can safely 9 Text | SOCRATES: And I too shall be treated in the same way, as I well Ion Part
10 Intro| Phaedr.), and should be treated with every sort of respect ( Laws Book
11 1 | might be, “has your state treated us”; and having always had 12 3 | the subjects, and being treated as equals, the soldiers Lysis Part
13 Intro| Phaedrus and Symposium, and treated, with a manifest reference Meno Part
14 Intro| similar experiment. He is treated by Socrates in a half-playful Parmenides Part
15 Text | the argument appears to be treated by you, Zeno, in a very Phaedrus Part
16 Intro| to whether the Phaedrus treated of love or rhetoric. But 17 Text | subject can be set forth or treated by rules of art, whether Philebus Part
18 Intro| mental, which is hardly treated of elsewhere in Plato, is The Republic Book
19 3 | the world below should be treated has been already laid down. ~ 20 3 | will have been completely treated. ~I do not understand what 21 3 | the best those who have treated the greatest number of constitutions, 22 4 | altogether beside the mark if you treated them all as a single State. 23 6 | in which the best men are treated in their own States is so 24 7 | however, is not a theme to be treated of in passing only, but The Sophist Part
25 Text | subjects are to be adequately treated, they must be studied in Theaetetus Part
26 Intro| Protagoras much as he himself is treated by Aristotle; that is to 27 Text | immense extent, and will be treated unfairly if only considered 28 Text | considered by the way; or if treated adequately and at length, Timaeus Part
29 Intro| of the body too must be treated in the same way—they should 30 Intro| and cannot be adequately treated as an appendage to another. 31 Text | separate parts should be treated in the same manner, in imitation