Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] immaterial 1 immeasurable 2 immeasurably 3 immediate 27 immediately 34 immemorial 1 immense 4 | Frequency [« »] 27 governments 27 grasp 27 hephaestus 27 immediate 27 implanted 27 indicated 27 insist | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances immediate |
Cratylus Part
1 Text | only what was at hand and immediate, —or in other words, pelas ( Gorgias Part
2 Intro| which they can compass their immediate ends. We pity them, and Parmenides Part
3 Intro| digressing further from the immediate subject of the Parmenides, 4 Intro| there is one at all,’ is the immediate rejoinder—‘You know nothing Philebus Part
5 Intro| more and more the form of immediate intuition. The moral sense 6 Intro| no more regard to our own immediate interest than is required Protagoras Part
7 Text | they occasion the greatest immediate suffering and pain; or because, 8 Text | says: ‘Yes, Socrates, but immediate pleasure differs widely The Republic Book
9 7 | this visible world, and the immediate source of reason and truth The Seventh Letter Part
10 Text | for a future time, whereas immediate action is called for by The Sophist Part
11 Intro| can hardly be matter of immediate intuition. Neither can we 12 Intro| opposite principles, of immediate experience and of those 13 Intro| words, the first sphere is immediate, the second mediated by 14 Intro| and is both mediate and immediate. As Luther’s Bible was written The Statesman Part
15 Intro| them it is governed by an immediate Providence, and receives 16 Intro| his Creator, under whose immediate guidance, while he remained 17 Intro| universe is governed by the immediate providence of God,—this 18 Intro| between his more and less immediate government of the world.~ The Symposium Part
19 Intro| extending beyond the mere immediate relation of the sexes. He Theaetetus Part
20 Intro| Admitting, with Protagoras, that immediate sensations of hot, cold, 21 Intro| can disprove the truth of immediate states of feeling. But this 22 Intro| is liable to forget, the immediate knowledge to which Protagoras 23 Intro| operations of the mind which are immediate or intuitive. Of the five 24 Intro| have disappeared from our immediate recollection and yet continue 25 Intro| which are seen by us in our immediate neighbourhood, although 26 Text | that most things, and all immediate sensations, such as hot, Timaeus Part
27 Intro| conception of matter and his own immediate experience of health and