Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] perjuries 4 perjury 5 permanence 11 permanent 26 permanently 2 permanere 1 permeate 1 | Frequency [« »] 26 objections 26 observing 26 passions 26 permanent 26 phenomenon 26 physics 26 polemarchus | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances permanent |
Cratylus Part
1 Text | you say that things have a permanent essence of their own?~HERMOGENES: 2 Text | have their own proper and permanent essence: they are not in 3 Text | there is nothing stable or permanent, but only flux and motion, Gorgias Part
4 Intro| supposed to consist in the permanent nature of the one compared 5 Intro| knows also that there are permanent principles of politics which Laws Book
6 1 | rather than accept as the permanent condition of his life? Are 7 6 | state thus trained not being permanent.~Cleinias. A reasonable 8 8 | heart when I said that the permanent establishment of these things Lysis Part
9 Intro| expect friendship to be permanent, or must we acknowledge 10 Intro| It is most likely to be permanent when the two friends are 11 Intro| friendships cannot be always permanent, we may ask when and upon Meno Part
12 Intro| now prevail; and also more permanent. And we seem to see at a Phaedrus Part
13 Intro| the transitory from the permanent; nor can we translate the 14 Intro| contrast of the sensible and permanent which is afforded by them; 15 Intro| times; the other is more permanent, more concentrated, and Philebus Part
16 Text | destruction, but retaining a permanent individuality, can be conceived 17 Text | perishing, and others the permanent and imperishable and everlasting The Seventh Letter Part
18 Text | names, nothing will be less permanent (than a name). Again with The Sophist Part
19 Intro| Eleatic thinks likely to be permanent, that the course of events The Statesman Part
20 Intro| in politics, are the most permanent.~b. Whether the best form The Symposium Part
21 Text | of these things are of a permanent or lasting nature; not to Theaetetus Part
22 Intro| themselves, what was really permanent and original could not be Timaeus Part
23 Intro| space is also of a very permanent or even eternal nature; 24 Intro| the investigation has a permanent value:—~1. Did Plato derive 25 Text | relate to the lasting and permanent and intelligible, they ought 26 Text | which represents them as permanent. We ought not to apply ‘