Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] indelicacy 1 indenture 1 independence 3 independent 26 independently 10 indescribable 6 indestructible 8 | Frequency [« »] 26 gently 26 harmonies 26 illusion 26 independent 26 interpretation 26 introducing 26 issue | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances independent |
Charmides Part
1 PreS | genuine, unless there be some independent ground for thinking them 2 PreS | rather as there is no early independent testimony by which they Cratylus Part
3 Intro| distinct natures, and are independent of our notions about them. 4 Intro| effect that words have an independent existence; thus anticipating 5 Intro| associations, and has an independent existence. The imitation 6 Intro| majority of sentences are independent and in apposition to one 7 Text | our fancy, but they are independent, and maintain to their own Gorgias Part
8 Intro| and innocent, simple and independent; he can know what he does, 9 Intro| men have made themselves independent of circumstances, past, Laws Book
10 3 | and of which the coward is independent and fearless. If this fear Lysis Part
11 Intro| two friends are equal and independent, or when they are engaged Parmenides Part
12 Intro| criterion of a truth beyond and independent of them? Parmenides draws Phaedo Part
13 Intro| with the body and still be independent? Is the soul related to Philebus Part
14 Intro| idea or law is held to be independent of space and time, such The Sophist Part
15 Intro| account of ‘Not-being,’ is independent of it. He clearly saw that 16 Intro| with language, was wholly independent of it. It is not the actual 17 Intro| individual, whether he be independent of circumstances or not, Theaetetus Part
18 Intro| plays a different and less independent part. And there is no allusion 19 Intro| assumes the existence of ideas independent of the mind (Parm.). Yet 20 Intro| when once ascertained are independent of the discoverer. Further 21 Intro| these truths are not really independent of the mind; there is an 22 Intro| space, which is altogether independent of experience. Geometry 23 Intro| German philosophers, partly independent of them. The subject has 24 Intro| It recognizes that it is independent of the external world. It 25 Intro| which we suppose to be thus independent and which we call ourselves? Timaeus Part
26 Intro| conscious that knowledge is independent of time, that truth is not