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(...) The Symposium
Part
1001 Intro| contrast of great powers and great vices, which meets us in
1002 Intro| summed up in the words ‘Great is Socrates’—he has heard
1003 Intro| individuals ever do any good or great work.’ But he soon passes
1004 Intro| universal phenomenon and the great power of nature; from Aristophanes,
1005 Intro| compare Eph. ‘This is a great mystery, but I speak concerning
1006 Intro| in teachers or statesmen great good may often arise.~Yet
1007 Intro| modern times, at bringing his great master and hero into connexion
1008 Intro| for than was possible in a great household of slaves.~It
1009 Intro| innocent friendship of a great man for a noble youth into
1010 Intro| in this matter there is a great gulf fixed between Greek
1011 Intro| and Cephisodorus with the great Epaminondas in whose companionship
1012 Text | made in their honour, the great and glorious god, Love,
1013 Text | praises! So entirely has this great deity been neglected.’ Now
1014 Text | individuals ever do any good or great work. And I say that a lover
1015 Text | honourable. Consider, too, how great is the encouragement which
1016 Text | and is heavenly, and of great price to individuals and
1017 Text | medicine, whence I learn how great and wonderful and universal
1018 Text | as in my own art it is a great matter so to regulate the
1019 Text | human loves. Such is the great and mighty, or rather omnipotent
1020 Text | of the ills which are the great impediment to the happiness
1021 Text | roll over and over at a great pace, turning on his four
1022 Text | thoughts of their hearts were great, and they made an attack
1023 Text | and these only, which is a great proof of the truth of what
1024 Text | you would, indeed, be in a great strait.~You want to cast
1025 Text | or Gorgonian head of the great master of rhetoric, which
1026 Text | Very good. Would he who is great, desire to be great, or
1027 Text | who is great, desire to be great, or he who is strong, desire
1028 Text | admitted by all to be a great god.’ ‘By those who know
1029 Text | be acknowledged to be a great god by those who say that
1030 Text | is he, Diotima?’ ‘He is a great spirit (daimon), and like
1031 Text | and happiness is only the great and subtle power of love;
1032 Text | Homer and Hesiod and other great poets, would not rather
1033 Text | when suddenly there was a great knocking at the door of
1034 Text | in the court; he was in a great state of intoxication, and
1035 Text | whether they are played by a great master or by a miserable
1036 Text | heard Pericles and other great orators, and I thought that
1037 Text | be jealous, for I have a great desire to praise the youth.~
1038 Text | made themselves at home; great confusion ensued, and every
Theaetetus
Part
1039 Intro| remark, that ‘he would be a great man if he lived.’~In this
1040 Intro| disciple of Theodorus, the great geometrician, whose science
1041 Intro| and enthusiasm about the great question. Like a youth,
1042 Intro| discussion which turns up. His great dialectical talent is shown
1043 Intro| that Socrates has got a great deal more out of him than
1044 Intro| At the commencement of a great discussion, the reflection
1045 Intro| fallacy himself, and is the great detector of the errors and
1046 Intro| writer. In this dialogue a great part of the answer of Protagoras
1047 Intro| nor does he imagine that a great philosophical problem can
1048 Intro| original chaos. The two great speculative philosophies,
1049 Intro| of him that he would be a great man if he lived.’ ‘How true
1050 Intro| as others see them, to be great fools. Aristides, the son
1051 Intro| be relative; nothing is great or small, or heavy or light,
1052 Intro| Homer and Heracleitus, the great Protagorean saying that “
1053 Intro| that he did not begin his great work on Truth with a declaration
1054 Intro| dispute; and there is a great difference between reasoning
1055 Intro| is clear that there are great differences in the understandings
1056 Intro| too much reverence for the great Parmenides lightly to attack
1057 Intro| another; Heracleitus, like his great successor Hegel, has both
1058 Intro| philosophy of sensation presented great attraction to the ancient
1059 Intro| truism to us, but was a great psychological discovery
1060 Intro| all things.’ Like other great thinkers, he was absorbed
1061 Intro| unfairness which is worthy of the great ‘brainless brothers,’ Euthydemus
1062 Intro| succeeded him; nor of the great original ideas of the master,
1063 Intro| been the case with other great philosophers, and with Plato
1064 Intro| thoughts, like those of the great Eleatic, soon degenerated
1065 Intro| nature, in which they meet. A great advance has been made in
1066 Intro| influenced the minds of great thinkers. Also there are
1067 Intro| sight of an object at a great distance which we have previously
1068 Intro| And language, which is the great educator of mankind, is
1069 Intro| can divide the nerves or great nervous centres from the
1070 Intro| or composer’s mind, so a great principle or leading thought
1071 Intro| any other sense, of the great complexity of the causes
1072 Intro| complexity of the causes and the great simplicity of the effect.~
1073 Intro| first intoxication of a great thought. But he soon finds
1074 Intro| have been associated with great virtues, or that both religious
1075 Intro| that they were doing, a great deal more.~The philosophies
1076 Intro| Physical Science and has great expectations from its near
1077 Intro| knowledge and may be of great value in education. We may
1078 Intro| itself in the glass. The great, if not the only use of
1079 Intro| of the mind is not to any great extent derived from the
1080 Intro| literature and philosophy. A great, perhaps the most important,
1081 Intro| nations, as it is renovated by great movements, which go beyond
1082 Intro| is created or renewed by great minds, who, looking down
1083 Intro| the reflection how these great ideas or movements of the
1084 Intro| tends to hinder the other great source of our knowledge
1085 Intro| probability can never make any great progress or attain to much
1086 Intro| of knowledge which has a great interest for us and is always
1087 Intro| philosophy, and religion, the great thoughts or inventions or
1088 Text | would most certainly be a great man, if he lived.~TERPSION:
1089 Text | follow, and I see that a great many of them follow you,
1090 Text | grown-up man, who was a great runner—would the praise
1091 Text | as others see them, to be great fools. Aristeides, the son
1092 Text | that you are in labour—great with some conception. Come
1093 Text | anything by any name, such as great or small, heavy or light,
1094 Text | heavy or light, for the great will be small and the heavy
1095 Text | you in this. Summon the great masters of either kind of
1096 Text | take up arms against such a great army having Homer for its
1097 Text | apprehend by touch, were great or white or hot, it could
1098 Text | apprehending subject were great or white or hot, could this,
1099 Text | the use of the term. But great philosophers tell us that
1100 Text | I think that there is a great deal in what you say, and
1101 Text | motion and flux, or with the great sage Protagoras, that man
1102 Text | alive; he would have had a great deal to say on their behalf.
1103 Text | questions: for there is great inconsistency in saying
1104 Text | philosophical enquiry than a great many men who have long beards?~
1105 Text | about his meaning, for a great deal may be at stake?~THEODORUS:
1106 Text | deny is, that there are great differences in the understandings
1107 Text | again, he observes that the great man is of necessity as ill-mannered
1108 Text | with one another; their great care is, not to allow of
1109 Text | ridiculous position, having so great a conceit of our own poor
1110 Text | proceeding when the danger is so great?~THEODORUS: Nay, Socrates,
1111 Text | and at rest,’ as for the great leader himself, Parmenides,
1112 Text | same name, when there is so great a difference between them?~
1113 Text | often troubles me, and is a great perplexity to me, both in
1114 Text | which is well done, than a great deal imperfectly.~THEAETETUS:
1115 Text | issue; but as we are in a great strait, every argument should
1116 Text | But, seeing that we are no great wits, shall I venture to
1117 Text | SOCRATES: The profession of the great wise ones who are called
1118 Text | be cowards and betray a great and imposing theory.~THEAETETUS:
1119 Text | aught of the things which great and famous men know or have
Timaeus
Part
1120 Intro| telescope or microscope; the great science of chemistry is
1121 Intro| while that which was truly great and truly characteristic
1122 Intro| power not only of creating great works, but of understanding
1123 Intro| and not-being, or to the great political problems which
1124 Intro| have felt that there was as great an impiety in ranking theories
1125 Intro| sensible and intellectual, the great original conceptions of
1126 Intro| contradictions in the one as great as those which have been
1127 Intro| dialogues will not appear to be great. It is probable that the
1128 Intro| prose composition; for the great master of language was speaking
1129 Intro| how she behaved in some great struggle. But he is unable
1130 Intro| brought about by the two great agencies of fire and water.
1131 Intro| in the times before the great flood Athens was the greatest
1132 Intro| island of Atlantis. This great island lay over against
1133 Intro| to other islands and to a great ocean of which the Mediterranean
1134 Intro| while afterwards there were great earthquakes and floods,
1135 Intro| into the earth; and the great island of Atlantis also
1136 Intro| truth of the story is a great advantage.’ Then now let
1137 Intro| philosophy, which is the great blessing of human life;
1138 Intro| ask a question in which a great principle is involved: Is
1139 Intro| longer side three times as great as the square of the lesser
1140 Intro| destroy the marrow by too great rigidity and susceptibility
1141 Intro| danger, however, is not so great when the foundation remains,
1142 Intro| body, which gets about the great sinews of the shoulders—
1143 Intro| abundant, the body has too great pleasures and pains; and
1144 Intro| and pains; and during a great part of his life he who
1145 Intro| education. The subject is a great one and cannot be adequately
1146 Intro| attainments, but also a great intelligence having an insight
1147 Intro| builder engaged in some great design, who could only dig
1148 Intro| and philosophy and had a great influence on the beginnings
1149 Intro| men parted into the two great divisions of those who saw
1150 Intro| always present to them.~The great source of error and also
1151 Intro| reason why numbers had so great an influence over the minds
1152 Intro| were acquainted are not as great upon the whole as those
1153 Intro| single step in astronomy as great as that of the nameless
1154 Intro| Greek art was not real or great, because it had nihil simile
1155 Intro| future. This is one of the great thoughts of early philosophy,
1156 Intro| consciousness of them had led the great Eleatic philosopher to describe
1157 Intro| idea of eternity was for a great part a negation. There are
1158 Intro| matter, which has played so great a part in the metaphysical
1159 Intro| of similars towards the great masses of similar substances;
1160 Intro| moves slowly is grave. A great body of sound is loud, the
1161 Intro| He never reflects, how great a thing it was to have formed
1162 Intro| together they seem to imply a great advance and almost maturity
1163 Intro| nevertheless have had a great influence in promoting system
1164 Intro| own day, and has been a great peace-maker between theology
1165 Intro| which he seems to touch great discoveries of modern times—
1166 Intro| has been thought to be so great as to create a suspicion
1167 Intro| are so many aspects of the great opposition between ideas
1168 Intro| for the understanding of a great author.~It has not, however,
1169 Intro| dialogues have grown into a great legend, not confined to
1170 Intro| it has coincided with a great historical fact. Like the
1171 Intro| Arthur, which has had so great a charm, it has found a
1172 Intro| probably neither of those great men were at all imposed
1173 Intro| truth of the story is a great advantage,’ if we read between
1174 Intro| tradition was sustained by the great authority of Plato, and
1175 Intro| contributed indirectly to the great discovery.~The Timaeus of
1176 Text | There were of old, he said, great and marvellous actions of
1177 Text | district of Sais, and the great city of the district is
1178 Text | Hellenes call Athene; they are great lovers of the Athenians,
1179 Text | was received there with great honour; he asked the priests
1180 Text | priests, who was of a very great age, said: O Solon, Solon,
1181 Text | around the earth, and a great conflagration of things
1182 Text | were any actions noble or great or in any other way remarkable,
1183 Text | time, Solon, before the great deluge of all, when the
1184 Text | disciples of the gods.~Many great and wonderful deeds are
1185 Text | of Atlantis there was a great and wonderful empire which
1186 Text | goddess, and has the very great advantage of being a fact
1187 Text | enterprise, whether small or great, always call upon God. And
1188 Text | the six directions. For great as was the advancing and
1189 Text | that time create a very great and mighty movement; uniting
1190 Text | right in undertaking so great and difficult a task. Remembering
1191 Text | possible to set forth a great principle in a few words,
1192 Text | resolved into one another, a great number of small bodies being
1193 Text | also lighter because of the great interstices which it has
1194 Text | the condensation be very great, the water above the earth
1195 Text | and where there is the great mass of fire to which fiery
1196 Text | emptyings of their nature, and great and sudden replenishments,
1197 Text | the reverse is harsh. A great body of sound is loud, and
1198 Text | and so the animal grows great, being nourished by a multitude
1199 Text | disorder is only half as great, and there is still a prospect
1200 Text | and so twists back the great tendons and the sinews which
1201 Text | liable. For a man who is in great joy or in great pain, in
1202 Text | who is in great joy or in great pain, in his unreasonable
1203 Text | pleasures and pains are so very great; his soul is rendered foolish
1204 Text | frame is the vehicle of a great and mighty soul, or conversely,