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Alphabetical    [«  »]
paradisiacal 1
paradiso 2
paradox 33
paradoxes 17
paradoxical 15
paragon 1
paragraph 8
Frequency    [«  »]
17 obedient
17 objective
17 odysseus
17 paradoxes
17 passive
17 performance
17 perished
Plato
Partial collection

IntraText - Concordances

paradoxes

Gorgias
   Part
1 Intro| such as the two famous paradoxes of Socrates (paradoxes as 2 Intro| famous paradoxes of Socrates (paradoxes as they are to the world 3 Intro| and hence arise the three paradoxes already mentioned. Although 4 Intro| question, and he listens to the paradoxes, as they appear to him, 5 Intro| condemnations are not mere paradoxes of philosophers, but the Meno Part
6 Intro| some other philosophical paradoxes, it would have been better Parmenides Part
7 Intro| youthful Socrates on the paradoxes of Zeno. He perfectly understands 8 Intro| to be rather truisms than paradoxes. For every one must acknowledge 9 Intro| in seeking to apply the paradoxes of Zeno to ideas; and this 10 Intro| been already given that the paradoxes of Zeno admitted of a higher 11 Intro| parts of the dialogue.~The paradoxes of Parmenides seem trivial 12 Intro| what is the object of these paradoxes, some have answered that Philebus Part
13 Text | common and acknowledged paradoxes about the one and many, The Sophist Part
14 Intro| which Cynic and Megarian paradoxes have temporarily afforded 15 Intro| of man. The effect of the paradoxes of Zeno extended far beyond Theaetetus Part
16 Intro| unintelligible Heraclitean paradoxes.’~IV. Still at the bottom 17 Text | involved even in greater paradoxes than these. Shall I explain


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