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Alphabetical [« »] concomitant 2 concord 2 concords 2 concrete 31 concretions 1 concubine 1 concupiscent 6 | Frequency [« »] 31 believed 31 believing 31 bright 31 concrete 31 corrupt 31 customs 31 cycle | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances concrete |
Charmides Part
1 PreS | abstract Greek into the more concrete English, or vice versa, 2 Intro| dividing the abstract from the concrete, and asks how this knowledge 3 Intro| difficulty of the abstract and concrete, and one of the earliest Gorgias Part
4 Intro| from the abstract to the concrete, from poetry to reality. Meno Part
5 Intro| applied to particular and concrete natures.~Not very different 6 Intro| or the abstract from the concrete, or theory from fact, or Parmenides Part
7 Intro| of like and unlike in the concrete, though like and unlike 8 Intro| no contradiction in the concrete, but in the abstract; and Phaedo Part
9 Intro| but of opposition in the concrete—not of life and death, but 10 Text | greatness in us or in the concrete will never admit the small 11 Text | speaking of opposites in the concrete, and now of the essential 12 Text | exclude one another, but also concrete things, which, although Philebus Part
13 Intro| pass unconsciously from the concrete to the abstract conception 14 Intro| mental qualities are in the concrete undefined; they are nevertheless 15 Intro| one is compared with the concrete experience of the other. 16 Intro| number; setting up his own concrete conception of good against 17 Intro| either to their use in the concrete, or to their nature in the 18 Text | and when unity is of this concrete nature, there is, as I was The Sophist Part
19 Intro| contradiction employed in the concrete. Because Not-being is identified 20 Intro| abstract and goes on to the concrete, not in the lower sense 21 Intro| objects, but to the Hegelian concrete or unity of abstractions. 22 Intro| together and again become concrete in a new and higher sense. 23 Intro| seem to be never really concrete; they are a metaphysical 24 Intro| or a tree or in any other concrete object, and that any conception 25 Intro| right in preferring the concrete to the abstract, in setting 26 Intro| advantage of viewing in the concrete what mankind regard only The Symposium Part
27 Intro| confusion begins in the concrete, was the natural feeling 28 Intro| idea of good, through the concrete to the abstract, and, by Theaetetus Part
29 Intro| whether he meant ‘man’ in the concrete or man in the abstract, 30 Text | expression. Then I will take concrete instances: I mean to say Timaeus Part
31 Intro| from the abstract to the concrete. We are searching into things