Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] assumed 45 assumes 16 assuming 41 assumption 26 assumptions 2 assurance 8 assure 13 | Frequency [« »] 26 accusation 26 apparent 26 asia 26 assumption 26 attendant 26 blows 26 ceases | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances assumption |
Charmides Part
1 Text | of science; whether the assumption is right or wrong may hereafter 2 Text | not know at all; for our assumption was, that he knows that Gorgias Part
3 Intro| good is only based on the assumption of its objective character. Menexenus Part
4 Intro| transparent.~The ironical assumption of Socrates, that he must Meno Part
5 Intro| direction of knowledge. Upon the assumption just made, then, virtue Parmenides Part
6 Intro| fanciful, and rests on the assumption that the doctrine of the 7 Intro| answer them, is a groundless assumption. The real progress of Plato’ 8 Intro| supposed to follow from the assumption that being is many.’ ‘Such 9 Intro| which are involved in the assumption of absolute ideas; the learner 10 Intro| example, what follows from the assumption of the existence of the 11 Intro| consequences which follow on the assumption that the one is. If one 12 Intro| consequences are shown in the assumption of either, which prove that 13 Intro| sense (i.e. more a priori assumption) than in any other, because 14 Text | and being destroyed, the assumption of being and the loss of Phaedo Part
15 Intro| found on a philosophical assumption that all opposites—e.g. 16 Intro| generation and corruption; the assumption of hypotheses which proceed 17 Text | seem to follow from the assumption that the soul is a harmony?~ Philebus Part
18 Text | great impropriety in the assumption of either alternative. But Protagoras Part
19 Intro| Socrates is not merely a hasty assumption, but may be also deemed The Republic Book
20 4 | I mean to begin with the assumption that our State, if rightly 21 4 | that hereafter, if this assumption turn out to be untrue, all 22 10 | What did I borrow? ~The assumption that the just man should The Sophist Part
23 Intro| cannot get rid of by an assumption that we have already discovered 24 Intro| order of thought. But the assumption that there is a correspondence Timaeus Part
25 Intro| beginning of reasoning; the assumption of the most fanciful of 26 Text | of the other elements—the assumption by any of these of a wrong