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Alphabetical [« »] esse-percipi 1 essence 128 essences 8 essential 24 essentially 10 essentials 1 est 6 | Frequency [« »] 24 distribute 24 equals 24 equivalent 24 essential 24 expressing 24 extremes 24 fain | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances essential |
Charmides Part
1 PreS | unmistakable manner that the most essential principle of his philosophy Cratylus Part
2 Intro| play of association are essential characteristics of language. 3 Text | movement of the soul to the essential nature of each thing—just Lysis Part
4 Intro| as disease, which is not essential but only accidental to it ( 5 Intro| it (for if the evil were essential the body would cease to Phaedo Part
6 Text | concrete, and now of the essential opposite which, as is affirmed, 7 Text | name to them; and these essential opposites will never, as 8 Text | I am aiming:—not only do essential opposites exclude one another, 9 Text | agree that God, and the essential form of life, and the immortal Phaedrus Part
10 Intro| times and countries into the essential nature of man; and his words Philebus Part
11 Intro| seem also to contain other essential elements which cannot be 12 Text | superior in this particular of essential truth; as in the comparison The Republic Book
13 2 | verse or prose the true essential nature of either of them 14 2 | one point only: I mean the essential good and evil which justice 15 3 | until we and they know the essential forms of temperance, courage, 16 6 | were deemed by us to be essential rarely grow together; they 17 7 | of months and years is as essential to the general as it is 18 8 | it does us good and it is essential to the continuance of life? ~ 19 9 | in learning the nature of essential truth, greater experience The Seventh Letter Part
20 Text | Further, he thought it essential that I should come to Syracuse 21 Text | Sicily, it seemed to me essential that an account of it must The Symposium Part
22 Text | and rhythm. Again, in the essential nature of harmony and rhythm Theaetetus Part
23 Text | to one another, and the essential nature of this opposition, Timaeus Part
24 Intro| the accidental from the essential. He could not isolate phenomena,