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Alphabetical    [«  »]
subject-the 1
subjected 27
subjection 6
subjective 23
subjectivity 1
subjects 126
subjects-and 1
Frequency    [«  »]
23 stop
23 strains
23 strongest
23 subjective
23 surrounding
23 swear
23 troublesome
Plato
Partial collection

IntraText - Concordances

subjective

Charmides
   Part
1 PreS | gradations of objective and subjective thought—(Greek) and the 2 Intro| subject and object, and of the subjective element in knowledge—a ‘ Gorgias Part
3 Intro| principle of pleasure, which is subjective. For the assertion of the 4 Intro| nature of good, but on the subjective consciousness of happiness, Meno Part
5 Intro| rest may be recovered. The subjective was converted by him into Parmenides Part
6 Intro| will affirm that they are subjective.’ ‘That would be a contradiction.’ ‘ 7 Intro| Clearly.’ ‘And there is a subjective knowledge which is of subjective 8 Intro| subjective knowledge which is of subjective truth, having many kinds, 9 Intro| ideas themselves are not subjective, and therefore are not within 10 Intro| philosophy, ‘Every subject or subjective must have an object.’ Here 11 Intro| nor in motion, but neither subjective nor objective.’~This is Philebus Part
12 Intro| chief difference between subjective pleasure and subjective 13 Intro| subjective pleasure and subjective knowledge in respect of 14 Intro| less abstract; from the subjective to the objective; until 15 Intro| ideas so different as the subjective feeling of pleasure or happiness 16 Intro| Perhaps we answer, ‘The subjective feeling of them.’ But this 17 Intro| motive power.~There are three subjective principles of morals,—sympathy, Theaetetus Part
18 Intro| But because knowledge is subjective or relative to the mind, 19 Intro| perception.’ This was the subjective which corresponded to the 20 Intro| of the immutable into the subjective side of the antithesis seems Timaeus Part
21 Intro| to be translated into the subjective, before we can attach any 22 Intro| this objective was really a subjective, and involved the subjectivity 23 Intro| distinction of objective and subjective, he passes imperceptibly


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