Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
demus 8
den 10
denaturalized 1
denial 31
denied 39
denies 19
denominate 1
Frequency    [«  »]
31 dances
31 dangerous
31 date
31 denial
31 development
31 discussions
31 dry
Plato
Partial collection

IntraText - Concordances

denial

Euthydemus
   Part
1 Intro| has already heard of the denial of contradiction, and would 2 Text | kind and public-spirited denial of all differences, whether The First Alcibiades Part
3 Text | your mind, and therefore my denial will have no effect upon Laws Book
4 12 | like manner should give his denial to the magistrates in writing, 5 12 | but all cases in which a denial confirmed by an oath clearly 6 12 | of burial, or again the denial of burial, which is to be Meno Part
7 Intro| reason or intellect, in the denial of the voluntariness of 8 Intro| central principle is the denial of the relation of cause Parmenides Part
9 Intro| also which follow from the denial of the hypothesis. For example, 10 Intro| of what follows from the denial of the existence of the 11 Intro| what would follow from the denial of it, to that which is 12 Intro| Parmenides both admit, the denial of abstract ideas is the 13 Intro| panic might arise from the denial of universals, similar to 14 Intro| last century from Hume’s denial of our ideas of cause and 15 Intro| consequences which flow from the denial as well as from the assertion 16 Intro| Probably no more than of Zeno’s denial of the many, or of Parmenides’ 17 Intro| acknowledgment that the denial of ideas will be the destruction Phaedo Part
18 Intro| sufficient grounds. The denial of the belief takes the 19 Intro| statement and a clearer denial of the belief in modern 20 Intro| destruction is really the denial of them. For this he would Philebus Part
21 Intro| classification against the denial of plurality in unity which 22 Intro| Protarchus reclaims.~Leaving his denial for the present, Socrates Protagoras Part
23 Intro| and elsewhere, or to his denial of the existence of the The Sophist Part
24 Intro| undermining philosophy; the denial of the existence of Not-being, 25 Intro| included in Being, as the denial of some particular class 26 Intro| authority of Aristotle, the denial of predication, while the 27 Intro| unphilosophical than the denial of all communion of kinds. 28 Intro| only the silent assent or denial which follows this, and 29 Intro| to the Megarian and Cynic denial of predication, because 30 Text | When the affirmation or denial takes Place in silence and Timaeus Part
31 Intro| the Phaedrus. (Compare his denial of the ‘blasphemous opinion


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