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Alphabetical    [«  »]
science 414
sciences 141
sciences-as 1
scientific 29
scientifically 6
scimitar 1
scimus 1
Frequency    [«  »]
29 rewards
29 rites
29 scarcely
29 scientific
29 sex
29 shoes
29 simplest
Plato
Partial collection

IntraText - Concordances

scientific

Cratylus
   Part
1 Intro| dreamed of a technical or scientific language, in words which 2 Intro| and is very natural to the scientific philologist. For he, like 3 Text | derivation is, I think, more scientific than the other.~SOCRATES: 4 Text | manner, if we are to attain a scientific view of the whole subject, Laws Book
5 2 | excellence of the body, this scientific training may be called gymnastic.~ 6 7 | these things in a strictly scientific manner, but only a few, 7 12 | higher, or better, or more scientific principle than this for Meno Part
8 Intro| our minds, and by which in scientific enquiry from any part of Phaedo Part
9 Intro| survive the conflict with a scientific age in which the rules of Philebus Part
10 Intro| an empirical part and a scientific part, of which the first The Sophist Part
11 Intro| made, as the result of a scientific division. His descent in 12 Intro| procedure of the mind by which scientific truth is detected and verified. 13 Text | coexists with science, a scientific or learned imitation.~THEAETETUS: The Statesman Part
14 Intro| government is that which has scientific rulers, who are irresponsible 15 Intro| and are we to suppose that scientific government is secured by 16 Intro| provided they govern on some scientific principle,—it makes no difference. 17 Intro| superior to the law. This is scientific government, and all others 18 Text | present view, to rule on some scientific principle; just as the physician, 19 Text | true government of the one scientific ruler, is to do nothing The Symposium Part
20 Intro| that of Eryximachus as the scientific, that of Aristophanes as Theaetetus Part
21 Intro| of many historical and scientific facts he may be absolutely 22 Intro| of the world. This is the scientific method of studying the mind. 23 Intro| divisions were not really scientific, but rather based on popular 24 Intro| Psychology is a dream in which scientific men are always tempted to Timaeus Part
25 Intro| a method with which your scientific training will have made 26 Intro| heavens, a certain amount of scientific truth imperceptibly blends, 27 Intro| unintelligent sense. Of all scientific truths the greatest and 28 Intro| if he had any fixed or scientific conception of them at all.~ 29 Intro| more imaginative and less scientific than any other of the Platonic


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