Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
apparatus 3
apparel 3
apparelled 1
apparent 26
apparently 10
apparition 6
apparitions 8
Frequency    [«  »]
27 wrestling
26 absent
26 accusation
26 apparent
26 asia
26 assumption
26 attendant
Plato
Partial collection

IntraText - Concordances

apparent

The Apology
   Part
1 Intro| personal character, and this apparent haughtiness as flowing from Cratylus Part
2 Intro| the reign of law becomes apparent. Yet the law is but partially The First Alcibiades Part
3 Pre | mixed character which is apparent in Aristotle and Hippocrates, Gorgias Part
4 Intro| defect of clearness is also apparent in Socrates himself, unless 5 Intro| pleasure, the real and the apparent, the infinite and finite, Laws Book
6 7 | little things, not always apparent, arising out of the pleasures 7 7 | and the varieties are only apparent. Nor are we right in supposing Menexenus Part
8 Pre | mixed character which is apparent in Aristotle and Hippocrates, Meno Part
9 Intro| philosophy which is most apparent in it is scepticism; we Phaedo Part
10 Text | reflected that all these apparent equals strive to attain Philebus Part
11 Intro| utility and right are in apparent conflict any amount of utility The Republic Book
12 1 | advantage of the unjust is most apparent; and my meaning will be 13 10 | the difference is only apparent. ~Now let me ask you another 14 10 | the beauty of them-and the apparent greater or less, or more 15 10 | others, there occurs an apparent contradiction? ~True. ~But The Sophist Part
16 Intro| sense under the false and apparent, so Plato appears to identify 17 Intro| and his imitations are apparent and not real. But how can 18 Text | a sort of conjectural or apparent knowledge only of all things, The Statesman Part
19 Intro| same love of divisions is apparent in the Gorgias. But in a The Symposium Part
20 Intro| Athens and Sparta there is an apparent contradiction about them. Theaetetus Part
21 Intro| analysis of the real and apparent (Schleiermacher); and both 22 Intro| describes their nature as apparent to the outward eye; by the Timaeus Part
23 Intro| the same general spirit is apparent; there is the same dualism 24 Intro| without always making it apparent that he is changing his 25 Intro| thought are probably more apparent to us than to him. He would, 26 Intro| There is no principle so apparent in the physics of the Timaeus,


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