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Alphabetical [« »] physicians 50 physicist 3 physicists 2 physics 26 physicus 1 physiker 1 physiological 5 | Frequency [« »] 26 passions 26 permanent 26 phenomenon 26 physics 26 polemarchus 26 politicians 26 possesses | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances physics |
Parmenides Part
1 Intro| there also a universal of physics?—of the meanest things in Phaedo Part
2 Intro| had puzzled himself with physics: he had enquired into the Philebus Part
3 Intro| described as eminent in physics. There is unfortunately 4 Intro| they necessarily were in physics. But this, though often 5 Intro| reducing morals, as in reducing physics, to a few very simple truths. 6 Intro| Philebus of Plato, and the Physics or Metaphysics of Aristotle. 7 Intro| division of causes in the Physics and Metaphysics of Aristotle, The Sophist Part
8 Intro| as ‘being very skilful in physics, and as maintaining pleasure 9 Intro| describing them as skilful in physics, which appear to have been 10 Intro| has sometimes interpreted physics by metaphysics, and confused Theaetetus Part
11 Intro| growing up by the side of Physics, Ethics, and other really 12 Intro| unlike the hypotheses of Physics, can never be verified. Timaeus Part
13 Intro| There are no speculations on physics in the other dialogues of 14 Intro| impiety in ranking theories of physics first in the order of knowledge, 15 Intro| confined to speculations on physics. The deeper foundations 16 Intro| them: (3) the theology and physics of the Timaeus, including 17 Intro| surface. To the ancient physics they stood much in the same 18 Intro| equally to those parts of physics, such as astronomy or mechanics, 19 Intro| When we remark that Greek physics soon became stationary or 20 Intro| secundum, as say that Greek physics were a failure because they 21 Intro| principle so apparent in the physics of the Timaeus, or in ancient 22 Intro| the Timaeus, or in ancient physics generally, as that of continuity. 23 Intro| questions of astronomy and physics, so also about medicine? 24 Intro| to the general ideas of physics, or supplied the notions 25 Intro| remark applies to ancient physics generally— this high a priori 26 Intro| condescend to the crudest physics.~(c) The morality of the