Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] extravagant 11 extreme 55 extremely 15 extremes 24 extremest 1 extremities 8 extremity 25 | Frequency [« »] 24 equivalent 24 essential 24 expressing 24 extremes 24 fain 24 faint 24 forbid | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances extremes |
Cratylus Part
1 Intro| after him.~Between these two extremes, which have both of them Gorgias Part
2 Intro| elsewhere, that the two extremes of human character are rarely Laws Book
3 11 | forsaken and fell into the extremes of poverty in any tolerably Parmenides Part
4 Intro| is equidistant from the extremes; and one is therefore of 5 Text | intercepts the view of the extremes?~True.~Then the one would 6 Text | having limits, also having extremes?~Certainly.~And if a whole, 7 Text | be equidistant from the extremes; or it would not be in the Phaedo Part
8 Text | applies generally to all extremes, whether of great and small, 9 Text | anything else, few are the extremes, but many are in the mean The Republic Book
10 5 | their proper faculty-the extremes to the faculties of the 11 5 | to the faculties of the extremes and the mean to the faculty 12 8 | oligarchies have both the extremes of great wealth and utter 13 9 | They are the opposite extremes, he said, for one is the 14 10 | choose the mean and avoid the extremes on either side, as far as The Sophist Part
15 Text | then being has a centre and extremes, and, having these, must The Statesman Part
16 Text | standard removed from the extremes.~YOUNG SOCRATES: Here are Theaetetus Part
17 Intro| they are not pushed to extremes; they stop where the human Timaeus Part
18 Intro| exceeded by equal parts of the extremes, e.g. 1, 4/3, 2; the other 19 Intro| is equidistant from the extremes—2, 4, 6. In this manner 20 Intro| of bone on account of the extremes of heat and cold, nor be 21 Intro| fire and earth, the two extremes, he remarks that there are 22 Text | from a lathe, having its extremes in every direction equidistant 23 Text | exceeded by equal parts of its extremes (as for example 1, 4/3, 24 Text | bones, on account of the extremes of heat and cold in the