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Alphabetical [« »] printing 5 prints 3 prior 63 priori 21 priority 3 prism 1 prison 35 | Frequency [« »] 21 politician 21 posterity 21 preface 21 priori 21 properties 21 puzzle 21 rarely | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances priori |
Meno Part
1 Intro| poetry, but we cannot argue a priori about them. We may attempt Parmenides Part
2 Intro| Kantian conception of an a priori synthetical proposition ‘ 3 Intro| common sense (i.e. more a priori assumption) than in any Philebus Part
4 Intro| moral sense, innate ideas, a priori, a posteriori notions, the 5 Intro| duty of benevolence from a priori principles. In politics The Sophist Part
6 Intro| and of those general or a priori truths which are supposed 7 Intro| abrogates the distinction of a priori and a posteriori truth. The Statesman Part
8 Intro| writings; and we might a priori have expected that, if altered, Theaetetus Part
9 Intro| sometimes regarded as the a priori intuition of space is really 10 Intro| time are described as ‘a priori forms or intuitions added 11 Intro| quality of the mind. The a priori intuitions of Kant would 12 Intro| unintelligible to Plato as his a priori synthetical propositions 13 Intro| abstractions to be the a priori condition of all the others? 14 Intro| the mind?’~Leaving the a priori conditions of sensation Timaeus Part
15 Intro| atoms with numbers; his a priori notions were out of all 16 Intro| in a confused heap of a priori notions. And yet, probably, 17 Intro| It is the beginning of a priori thought, and indeed of thinking 18 Intro| of phenomena. To these a priori speculations he would add 19 Intro| haphazard fancies and a priori assumptions of ancient teachers, 20 Intro| greater progress by the high a priori road than could have been 21 Intro| physics generally— this high a priori road was based upon a posteriori