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Alphabetical    [«  »]
dash 1
dass 10
data 1
date 31
dates 4
dating 1
datis 4
Frequency    [«  »]
31 cycle
31 dances
31 dangerous
31 date
31 denial
31 development
31 discussions
Plato
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date

The Apology
   Part
1 Text | against me are of ancient date, and they were made by them Charmides Part
2 Intro| time, indications of the date supplied either by Plato Cratylus Part
3 Intro| indicates a comparatively early date. The imaginative element 4 Intro| referred to are already out of date, and that the study of Greek Euthyphro Part
5 Intro| can any evidence of the date be obtained.~ The First Alcibiades Part
6 Pre | uncertainty concerning the date and authorship of the writings Gorgias Part
7 Intro| and therefore the assumed date of the dialogue has been 8 Intro| have been an old man. The date is clearly marked, but is 9 Intro| Plato, a precise dramatic date is an invention of his commentators ( Menexenus Part
10 Pre | uncertainty concerning the date and authorship of the writings 11 Intro| occurring forty years after the date of the supposed oration. Meno Part
12 Intro| which we can determine the date of the Meno. There is no 13 Intro| to have been of a later date by the allusion of Anytus.~ Parmenides Part
14 Intro| not expressly stated. The date is uncertain; the relation 15 Intro| circumstance as determining the date of Parmenides and Zeno; Phaedrus Part
16 Intro| subject, the second to the date of the Dialogue.~There seems 17 Intro| criteria for determining the date of the Dialogue are (1) 18 Intro| he went there. The late date of the Phaedrus will have 19 Intro| grounds for assigning a later date. (Compare Tim., Soph., Laws.) Philebus Part
20 Intro| given for assigning a late date to the Philebus. That the 21 Intro| to the Philebus. That the date is probably later than that Protagoras Part
22 Intro| among the Dialogues, and the date of composition, have also 23 Intro| grounds for determining the date of composition; and the 24 Text | human and of very ancient date, and may be as old as Simonides The Symposium Part
25 Intro| There is no criterion of the date of the Symposium, except Theaetetus Part
26 Intro| thought.) Secondly, the later date of the dialogue is confirmed 27 Intro| direct indications of a date amount to no more than this: 28 Intro| of age. No more definite date is indicated by the engagement 29 Intro| years 390-387. The later date which has been suggested, Timaeus Part
30 Intro| other indication of its date, except this uncertain one 31 Text | that Plato gives the same date (9000 years ago) for the


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