| Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
| Alphabetical [« »] workmen 11 works 144 workshop 1 world 933 world-animal 3 world-plenty 1 world-the 1 | Frequency [« »] 972 does 958 mean 952 both 933 world 929 again 915 evil 905 up | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances world |
The Apology
Part
1 Intro| calling of cross-examining the world from the Oracle of Delphi;
2 Intro| public opinion. All the world from their earliest years
3 Intro| or a journey to another world in which the souls of the
4 Intro| and all the rest of the world the improvers of the youth;
5 Intro| the Trojan war in another world. On the other hand, his
6 Text | across a man who has spent a world of money on the Sophists,
7 Text | nothing. And so I go about the world, obedient to the god, and
8 Text | do them harm and all the world good? Is not the exact opposite
9 Text | and all the rest of the world were their improvers. But
10 Text | envy and detraction of the world, which has been the death
11 Text | I know but little of the world below, I do not suppose
12 Text | in private which all the world has not heard, let me tell
13 Text | or not, at any rate the world has decided that Socrates
14 Text | migration of the soul from this world to another. Now if you suppose
15 Text | the pilgrim arrives in the world below, he is delivered from
16 Text | professors of justice in this world, and finds the true judges
17 Text | false knowledge; as in this world, so also in the next; and
18 Text | them questions! In another world they do not put a man to
Charmides
Part
19 PreS | held in much honour by the world of scholars; yet he himself
20 PreS | ancient philosophy. The world has grown older in two thousand
21 PreS | be invented. The ancient world swarmed with them; the great
22 PreS | they easily crept into the world.~(b) When one epistle out
23 PreS | famous in Hellas and the world. It may have created one
24 PreS | upon Greece and upon the world by Aristotle and his philosophy.
25 Intro| the grown-up man of the world, having a tincture of philosophy.
26 Text | beauty and stature; all the world seemed to be enamoured of
Cratylus
Part
27 Intro| cannot believe that the world is like ‘a leaky vessel,’
28 Intro| attributes the flux of the world to the swimming in some
29 Intro| a man by the rest of the world? But, surely, there is in
30 Intro| few very good men in the world, and a great many very bad;
31 Intro| stone over his head in the world below, and the misery which
32 Intro| talk with horror of the world below from which no one
33 Intro| benefactor of the other world; for he has much more than
34 Intro| take place in the external world. You have no doubt remarked,
35 Intro| moves in harmony with the world (sumphora, sumpheronta).
36 Intro| leaky vessel, or that the world is a man who has a running
37 Intro| latter calls the second world of abstract terms into existence,
38 Intro| severance of the inner and outer world, of the idea and the object
39 Intro| that the languages of the world are organic structures,
40 Intro| enlarged; how the inner world took the place of outer;
41 Intro| describing them better. The world before the flood, that is
42 Intro| flood, that is to say, the world of ten, twenty, a hundred
43 Intro| impulse to bind together the world in ideas beginning in the
44 Intro| the transfiguration of the world in thought, the meeting-point
45 Intro| all the languages in the world, as the expressions or varieties
46 Intro| have often governed the world. But in such representations
47 Intro| the silent notes of the world’s history; they mark periods
48 Intro| language, but the whole world, both visible and intellectual.
49 Intro| has introduced into the world a new science which more
50 Text | this he replies—‘If all the world were to call you Hermogenes,
51 Text | a man by the rest of the world; and a horse again would
52 Text | by me and a horse by the world:—that is your meaning?~HERMOGENES:
53 Text | skilled artisans in the world is the rarest.~HERMOGENES:
54 Text | talanteia) over his head in the world below—all this agrees wonderfully
55 Text | like all the rest of the world, have been laid under his
56 Text | inhabitants of the other world; and even to us who are
57 Text | seeing that all things in the world are in motion (pheromenon),
58 Text | then they imagine that the world is going round and round
59 Text | and motion, and that the world is always full of every
60 Text | word neos implies that the world is always in process of
61 Text | is also the cause of the world: now a cause is that because
62 Text | there no justice in the world when the sun is down?’ And
63 Text | battle;—this battle is in the world of existence, and according
64 Text | the soul accompanying the world, and things which are done
65 Text | are carried round with the world.~HERMOGENES: That is probable.~
66 Text | pot, or imagine that the world is a man who has a running
Critias
Part
67 Intro| brought down the origin of the world to the creation of man,
68 Intro| the most fertile in the world, and abounded in rich plains
69 Intro| mythology had corrupted.~The world, like a child, has readily,
70 Text | land was the best in the world, and was therefore able
71 Text | compare with any region in the world for the variety and excellence
72 Text | had a soil the best in the world, and abundance of water,
73 Text | Gades in that part of the world, he gave the name which
74 Text | placed in the centre of the world, beholds all created things.
Crito
Part
75 Intro| he not brought into the world and educated by their help,
76 Intro| brethren the Laws of the world below will receive him as
77 Intro| but to posterity and the world at large.~Whether such an
78 Intro| professed in his life. Not ‘the world,’ but the ‘one wise man,’
79 Intro| brethren the Laws in the world below, is one of the noblest
80 Text | bring children into the world who is unwilling to persevere
81 Text | than all the rest of the world: and if we desert him shall
82 Text | you were brought into the world and nurtured and educated
83 Text | having brought you into the world, and nurtured and educated
84 Text | inhabitant of the other world that they will not take
85 Text | before the princes of the world below. For neither will
86 Text | brethren, the laws in the world below, will receive you
Euthydemus
Part
87 Intro| was long before the new world of ideas which had been
88 Intro| by them. The intellectual world has become better assured
89 Intro| their secret to all the world: they should be more reserved,
90 Intro| and Swift in the modern world, is the natural enemy. Nor
91 Text | natives of this part of the world, and have migrated from
92 Text | he replied, I and all the world are in a difficulty about
Euthyphro
Part
93 Intro| Plato would like to put the world on their trial, and convince
94 Intro| insight into the religious world; the dramatic power and
95 Text | readily received by the world, as I myself know too well;
96 Text | wonderful still, of which the world is in ignorance.~SOCRATES:
The First Alcibiades
Part
97 Text | years, when the rest of the world were wearying you with their
98 Text | upon these terms; but the world, as I may say, must be filled
99 Text | from the whole Hellenic world, and often from the barbarian
100 Text | either in man or in the world, and not to what resembles
Gorgias
Part
101 Intro| at any rate in another world. These two aspects of life
102 Intro| paradoxes as they are to the world in general, ideals as they
103 Intro| of injustice against the world. He has never heard the
104 Intro| philosopher, but man of the world, and an accomplished Athenian
105 Intro| Like other men of the world who are of a speculative
106 Intro| sympathy with other men of the world; the Athenian statesmen
107 Intro| contending, the spirit of the world, the spirit of the many
108 Intro| the manner of men of the world, he wishes to preserve the
109 Intro| go to war with the whole world, and that in the courts
110 Intro| will be justified in the world below. Then the position
111 Intro| wicked, and yet all the world, including Socrates, would
112 Intro| tyrant who is the envy of the world, and of the wretch who,
113 Intro| manhood will never know the world. Philosophers are ridiculous
114 Intro| no evil, but to go to the world below laden with offences
115 Intro| altogether ceased to haunt the world at the present day (compare
116 Intro| already admitted that the world is against him. Neither
117 Intro| crowns of glory in another world, when their enemies and
118 Intro| Sufferer, whose words the world would not receive, the man
119 Intro| the victory of good in the world, may have supported the
120 Intro| the stories about another world are true, he will insist
121 Intro| man to be begun in this world, and to be continued in
122 Intro| questions about a future world, but to place in antagonism
123 Intro| condemning a state of the world which always has existed
124 Intro| derived. To Plato the whole world appears to be sunk in error,
125 Intro| regarded with reference to this world or to another. Statesmen,
126 Intro| uttered, have found the world unprepared for them. A further
127 Intro| happier than the wicked. The world, represented by Polus, is
128 Intro| individuals—to them, too, the world occasionally speaks of the
129 Intro| present age. For as the world has grown older men have
130 Intro| every side he is met by the world, which is not an abstraction
131 Intro| obliged to descend to the world, he is not of the world.
132 Intro| world, he is not of the world. His thoughts are fixed
133 Intro| that he cannot take the world by force—two or three moves
134 Intro| what is the opinion of the world—not what is right, but what
135 Intro| is to fight against the world; he must enlighten public
136 Intro| always consistent, for the world is changing; and though
137 Intro| modern times, though the world has grown milder, and the
138 Intro| Cavour, have created the world in which they moved. The
139 Intro| better acquainted with the world around them. True poetry
140 Intro| from the best imaginable world at present, Plato here,
141 Intro| few in the course of the world’s history —Christ himself
142 Intro| of the better part of the world, and of the philosopher,
143 Intro| which is to the visible world what the idea of good is
144 Intro| continue and to be in another world what it has become in this.
145 Intro| the judgments of another world there is no possibility
146 Intro| moment or two and behold a world beyond. The earth which
147 Intro| particles which drop from the world above, and is to that heavenly
148 Intro| Plato which relate to the world below have a place for repentant
149 Intro| parable relating to the unseen world, is consistent with itself.
150 Intro| had more experience of the world and of evil. It is a more
151 Intro| outside of the intellectual world. They are very simple in
152 Intro| before it was born in this world. Our present life is the
153 Intro| was then carried on. This world is relative to a former
154 Intro| is relative to a former world, as it is often projected
155 Intro| truth. The new order of the world was immediately under the
156 Intro| in which the order of the world and of human life is once
157 Intro| government of himself. The world begins again, and arts and
158 Intro| innocence, the existence of a world without traditions, and
159 Text | matter about the rest of the world. For there are two ways
160 Text | is yours and that of the world in general; but mine is
161 Text | But have not you and the world already agreed that to do
162 Text | aye, or that the whole world should be at odds with me,
163 Text | is what the rest of the world think, but do not like to
164 Text | Hades, meaning the invisible world (aeides), these uninitiated
165 Text | yet, like the rest of the world, I am not quite convinced
166 Text | wrong. For to go to the world below having one’s soul
167 Text | are improved, as in this world so also in another, by pain
168 Text | the prison-house of the world below, a spectacle and a
169 Text | everlasting punishment in the world below: such were Tantalus
170 Text | the honours at which the world aims, I desire only to know
171 Text | would in the courts of this world, and very likely some one
172 Text | does not profit in another world as well as in this. And
Ion
Part
173 Text | happens in heaven and in the world below, and the generations
174 Text | in my own self, and the world agrees with me in thinking
Laches
Part
175 Text | courage those whom all the world acknowledges to be courageous.~
176 Text | very like the rest of the world, looking at your neighbour
Laws
Book
177 1 | to me to have thought the world foolish in not understanding
178 1 | me to be the best in the world; for that which leads mankind
179 1 | people in their part of the world, or as the Athenians have
180 2 | present exist anywhere in the world.~Cleinias. Certainly.~Athenian.
181 2 | may say, indeed, from the world in general. For tell me,
182 2 | somehow crept about the world, that Dionysus was robbed
183 3 | survivors of the animal world; and there might be a few
184 3 | the race multiplied, the world came to be what the world
185 3 | world came to be what the world is.~Cleinias. Very true.~
186 3 | power of doing in the whole world, Hellenic and barbarian,
187 4 | Athenian. In the primeval world, and a long while before
188 5 | having a notion that the world below is all evil, he yields
189 5 | for aught she knows, the world of the Gods below, instead
190 6 | tale wandering all over the world without a head;—a headless
191 6 | legislator in your parts of the world, Megillus and Cleinias,
192 6 | drinks always, and in all the world, and all sorts of changes
193 7 | people in our part of the world do—getting together, as
194 8 | sing; but the rest of the world shall not have this liberty.
195 8 | impossible laws, and fills the world with his outcry. And therefore
196 9 | will be punished in the world below, and also that when
197 9 | perpetrators return to this world they will pay the natural
198 9 | that are spoken of in the world below, but transgresses
199 9 | said to pursue them in the world below. But although they
200 9 | the punishments of this world which are inflicted during
201 9 | possible, of the terrors of the world below. Let our enactment
202 10 | of the heavens and of the world, and not far from the beginning
203 10 | may say, throughout the world, there would have been no
204 10 | and earth, and the whole world?—that it is a principle
205 10 | best soul takes care of the world and guides it along the
206 10 | True.~Athenian. But if the world moves wildly and irregularly,
207 10 | but now the ruler of the world has a wonderfully easy task.~
208 10 | and other places in the world below, of which the very
209 10 | penalty, either here or in the world below or in some still more
210 10 | For as we acknowledge the world to be full of many goods
211 10 | besides believing that the world is devoid of Gods are intemperate,
212 11 | herald in the face of the world, or of sons who think that
213 11 | mind than the rest of the world are—but this is not observable,
214 12 | time proclaiming to all the world that the city of the Magnetes,
215 12 | and to the rest of the world is likely to appear ruthless
216 12 | well of by the rest of the world is no light matter; for
217 12 | a good reputation in the world, for there is no truth greater
218 12 | there always are in the world a few inspired men whose
219 12 | sins to be punished in the world below. If this be true,
220 12 | If a man look upon the world not lightly or ignorantly,
221 12 | once more overturned the world, or rather, I should say,
Lysis
Part
222 Intro| modern than in the ancient world, partly because a higher
223 Intro| stand by him, when all the world are against him; he can
224 Intro| They will not admit the world to share in their difference
225 Text | best cock or quail in the world: I would even go further,
Menexenus
Part
226 Text | country.~Thus born into the world and thus educated, the ancestors
227 Text | deeds famous over the whole world. They were the deeds of
228 Text | earth or after death in the world below. Remember our words,
Meno
Part
229 Intro| existence, returning into this world when she has paid the penalty
230 Intro| places of the upper and under world, and seen and known all
231 Intro| learnt geometry in this world; nor was it born with him;
232 Intro| teachers, and the rest of the world do not profess to teach).
233 Intro| be like Tiresias in the world below,—‘he alone has wisdom,
234 Intro| only attainable in this world, is of all things the most
235 Intro| wisdom which governs the world with a higher wisdom. There
236 Intro| narrow-minded man of the world, who is indignant at innovation,
237 Intro| whose help God made the world. And the idea of good (Republic)
238 Intro| aspirations after an unknown world. They derive their origin
239 Intro| had never learned in this world. He must therefore have
240 Intro| and all men come into the world, if not ‘trailing clouds
241 Intro| laws according to which the world is created. But though the
242 Intro| recollection from an elder world. Of this the enquirers of
243 Intro| between the inward and outward world. The substance of Spinoza
244 Intro| the ideas of Plato and the world of sense.~Removed from Spinoza
245 Intro| annihilated the outward world, but it instantly reappears
246 Intro| has been forgotten by the world, and did not any more than
247 Intro| incapable of proof. The world has often been led away
248 Text | poor as the rest of the world; and I confess with shame
249 Text | that exist, whether in this world or in the world below, has
250 Text | in this world or in the world below, has knowledge of
251 Text | been ready to tell all the world again and again that the
252 Text | men in this part of the world, but whether virtue can
253 Text | Socrates; like the rest of the world, I am in doubt, and sometimes
Parmenides
Part
254 Intro| are nought. To deceive the world by saying the same thing
255 Intro| is the idea? And if the world partakes in the ideas, and
256 Intro| knowledge and authority in their world only, as we have in ours.’ ‘
257 Intro| the meanest things in the world as well as of the greatest?
258 Intro| If God is or is not the world; or if God is or is not
259 Intro| or is or is not in the world, or in time; or is or is
260 Intro| finite or infinite. Or if the world is or is not; or has or
261 Intro| and all the objects in the world, if placed in a series,
262 Intro| aware of the debt which the world owes to him or his school.
263 Intro| more controversy in the world than any other. But no one
264 Intro| their application in the world. If we once ask how they
265 Intro| any way with the external world; secondly, against two idols
266 Intro| last century the educated world were astonished to find
267 Intro| call a new metaphysical world into existence any more
268 Intro| imagine His relation to the world or to ourselves? Innumerable
269 Intro| in ourselves and in the world.~‘A little philosophy takes
270 Text | And so you deceive the world into believing that you
271 Text | intention of deceiving the world. The truth is, that these
Phaedo
Part
272 Intro| desires death—which the wicked world will insinuate that he also
273 Intro| souls of the dead are in the world below, and that the living
274 Intro| abstraction. In her fear of the world below she lingers about
275 Intro| carries with him into the world below that which he is or
276 Intro| through the windings of the world below; but the impure soul
277 Intro| comparison of the other world. But the heavenly earth
278 Intro| been a benefactor to the world, whether in a higher or
279 Intro| will be forgotten and the world will get on without him.~
280 Intro| in the light of another world? But our second thought
281 Intro| having any place in a future world, and if not all, why should
282 Intro| filling up the void of another world with our own fancies. Again,
283 Intro| the attempt to frame the world according to a rule of divine
284 Intro| love and reverence in this world. And after all has been
285 Intro| by the terrors of another world when he is nearer to them,
286 Intro| the present state of this world to another, but from the
287 Intro| physiology transform the world? Again, the majority of
288 Intro| us vindictively in this world, and therefore we have no
289 Intro| All the analogies of this world would be against unmeaning
290 Intro| we are creating another world after the image of this,
291 Intro| see the beginnings in the world and in ourselves will cease
292 Intro| honest to go out of the world professing more than they
293 Intro| Others when they quit this world are comforted with the hope ‘
294 Intro| observable in the history of the world and of the human mind; of
295 Intro| higher religions of the world, including Buddhism, notwithstanding
296 Intro| He is dead even in this world who has no belief in another.’~
297 Intro| there any mansion, in this world or another, in which the
298 Intro| is, and the cares of this world touch them no more. Secondly,
299 Intro| childlike, unaffected by the world; when the eye was single
300 Intro| end of the intellectual world’ (Republic), he replaces
301 Intro| acknowledge that another world is beyond the range of human
302 Intro| dead in an upper or under world. Darius and Laius are still
303 Intro| expression as well as the world. Either the soul was supposed
304 Intro| sensible, and of God to the world, supplied an analogy which
305 Intro| or love or friend in the world below (Phaedo) was a natural
306 Intro| no avenging power of this world could reach. The voice of
307 Intro| also a fragment of a former world, which has no place in the
308 Intro| intelligence and order in the world. When Simmias and Cebes
309 Intro| impurities of sense, to leave the world and the things of the world,
310 Intro| world and the things of the world, and to find his higher
311 Intro| of their crimes in this world. The manner in which this
312 Intro| disciples. He is a man of the world who is rich and prosperous (
313 Intro| ideas, and belongs to the world of the invisible and unknown.
314 Intro| sensible and the intellectual world, and saw no way of connecting
315 Text | that in going to the other world he could not be without
316 Text | greatest good in the other world. And how this may be, Simmias
317 Text | Simmias, the rest of the world are of opinion that to him
318 Text | been willing to go to the world below animated by the hope
319 Text | manner that only in the world below he can worthily enjoy
320 Text | and uninitiated into the world below will lie in a slough,
321 Text | myself arrive in the other world—such is my belief. And therefore
322 Text | you and my masters in this world, for I believe that I shall
323 Text | masters and friends in another world. But most men do not believe
324 Text | death are or are not in the world below. There comes into
325 Text | from hence into the other world, and returning hither, are
326 Text | must exist in the other world, for if not, how could they
327 Text | that our souls exist in the world below?~That is true.~And
328 Text | birth of the dead into the world of the living?~Quite true.~
329 Text | wanders and is confused; the world spins round her, and she
330 Text | she passes into the other world, the region of purity, and
331 Text | is lying in the visible world, and is called a corpse,
332 Text | departs to the invisible world—to the divine and immortal
333 Text | down again into the visible world, because she is afraid of
334 Text | the invisible and of the world below—prowling about tombs
335 Text | lovers of money, and the world in general; nor like the
336 Text | at her departure to the world below, but is always infected
337 Text | for the reason which the world gives.~Certainly not.~Certainly
338 Text | the good things of another world, wherefore they sing and
339 Text | which is ignorance of the world. Misanthropy arises out
340 Text | will fare better in the world below than one who has led
341 Text | discover another Atlas of the world who is stronger and more
342 Text | better have recourse to the world of mind and seek there the
343 Text | will truly exist in another world!~I am convinced, Socrates,
344 Text | when on her progress to the world below takes nothing with
345 Text | given they pass into the world below, following the guide,
346 Text | to conduct them from this world to the other: and when they
347 Text | Now this way to the other world is not, as Aeschylus says
348 Text | the lifeless frame and the world of sight, is after many
349 Text | much purer and fairer the world above is than his own. And
350 Text | the water and sees this world, he would see a world beyond;
351 Text | this world, he would see a world beyond; and, if the nature
352 Text | acknowledge that this other world was the place of the true
353 Text | the fairer sights of this world. And still less is this
354 Text | And still less is this our world to be compared with the
355 Text | the nature of the other world; and when the dead arrive
356 Text | go on her journey to the world below, when her hour comes.
357 Text | journey from this to the other world—even so—and so be it according
Phaedrus
Part
358 Intro| and published all over the world when he is drunk. At length
359 Intro| downward element into the upper world—there to behold beauty,
360 Intro| they have a vision of the world beyond. But the others labour
361 Intro| towards the earth. Of the world which is beyond the heavens,
362 Intro| difficulty the things of another world, but the mind of the philosopher
363 Intro| they followed in the other world; and they choose their loves
364 Intro| choose their loves in this world accordingly. The followers
365 Intro| human beings themselves in a world before the Muses, and when
366 Intro| to all composers in the world, poets, orators, legislators,
367 Intro| ever present to us in this world and in another; and the
368 Intro| other. For insight into the world, for sustained irony, for
369 Intro| the younger ‘part of the world be ready to take off its
370 Intro| persons, ignorant of the world and of one another, how
371 Intro| withdraw you from the great world and stirring scenes of life
372 Intro| Then they would see the world transformed into a scene
373 Intro| which are found in this world, but justice absolute in
374 Intro| Rather it is the love of the world. But there is another kingdom
375 Intro| love, a kingdom not of this world, divine, eternal. And this
376 Intro| knowledge—an inner and unseen world, which seemed to exist far
377 Intro| to some god in a former world. The singular remark that
378 Intro| apply equally to the modern world and to the Athenians of
379 Intro| about to disappear from the world. And would not a great painter,
380 Intro| by which He governs the world—seeking for a ‘private judgment’
381 Intro| audience, but to all the world. In the Politicus the paradox
382 Intro| literary history of the world. How could there have been
383 Intro| language or in art. The Greek world became vacant, barbaric,
384 Intro| the better of the literary world. There are those who prophesy
385 Intro| time the great men of the world should die out, and originality
386 Intro| gifts to men such as the world has never received before.
387 Intro| religions and literatures of the world will be open books, which
388 Intro| the future. So far is the world from becoming exhausted,
389 Text | Attica, and over the wide world. And now having arrived,
390 Text | without a friend in the world; or if, out of a regard
391 Text | escape the censure of the world. Now love ought to be for
392 Text | are published all over the world in all their indelicacy
393 Text | upward, and orders the whole world; whereas the imperfect soul,
394 Text | charioteer into the outer world, and is carried round in
395 Text | longing after the upper world and they all follow, but
396 Text | upward and careless of the world below; and he is therefore
397 Text | the things of the other world; they may have seen them
398 Text | any image of that other world, are rapt in amazement;
399 Text | easily rise out of this world to the sight of true beauty
400 Text | many glories in the other world, is amazed when he sees
401 Text | and with the rest of the world during the first period
402 Text | leave you a fool in the world below.~And thus, dear Eros,
403 Text | the applause of the whole world.~PHAEDRUS: Certainly.~SOCRATES:
Philebus
Part
404 Intro| existing both in and out of the world would to ourselves. Nor
405 Intro| out of his transcendental world, and proceeds to lay down
406 Intro| Substance, and the like. The world of knowledge is always dividing
407 Intro| kinds in the creation of the world; the first vague impression
408 Intro| phenomena of the external world, he extended their principles
409 Intro| ascribes the order of the world. Reasoning from man to the
410 Intro| the final cause with the world, which is His work. But
411 Intro| confounding God with the world, tends to identify the first
412 Intro| the help of the material world; and therefore when we pass
413 Intro| family which had spent ‘a world of money’ on the Sophists (
414 Intro| can they enter into the world of generation? How, as units,
415 Intro| revelation of the order of the world, which some Prometheus first
416 Intro| lovers of disorder in the world should ridicule my attempt.~
417 Intro| three first exist in the world, must not the fourth or
418 Intro| noblest of them, exist in the world? And this cause is wisdom
419 Intro| passion of this sensible world. But the highest truth is
420 Intro| veriest impostor in the world, and the perjuries of lovers
421 Intro| though all the animals in the world assert the contrary.~...~
422 Intro| the individual, or of the world?’ This little addition has
423 Intro| ordinary men who live in the world of appearance; they are
424 Intro| calling to them out of another world; or the life and example
425 Intro| but the better part of the world has been slow to receive
426 Intro| legislator, by the opinion of the world. Whatever may be the hypothesis
427 Intro| ideas. In the history of the world, which viewed from within
428 Intro| moments’ of thought to the world. The life of Christ has
429 Intro| handed down to us, the modern world has received a standard
430 Intro| our moral ideas, as the world grows older, perhaps as
431 Intro| mind, the opinion of the world, familiarizes them to us;
432 Intro| they have grown up in the world from the manner in which
433 Intro| in which the whole moral world has been regarded by different
434 Intro| the sum of pleasure in the world. But all pleasures are not
435 Intro| the better for them. The world was against them while they
436 Intro| been a benefactor to the world. But there is a danger that,
437 Intro| truism to the rest of the world; or may degenerate in the
438 Intro| the mind of the civilized world; none of them occupy that
439 Intro| looking for a new moral world which has no marrying and
440 Intro| often seem to open a new world to him, like the religious
441 Intro| in a perfect state of the world my own happiness and that
442 Intro| himself, but to all the world, makes none whatever in
443 Intro| contribute to the pleasure of the world. In that very expression
444 Intro| The upright man of the world will desire above all things
445 Intro| instruments of thought? Would the world have been better if there
446 Intro| benefits conferred by it on the world. All philosophies are refuted
447 Intro| family, my country, the world? may check the rising feeling
448 Intro| his creatures and in this world only, but of all of them
449 Intro| present mixed state of the world, not wholly evil or wholly
450 Intro| he is. It lives in this world and is known to us only
451 Intro| through the phenomena of this world, but it extends to worlds
452 Intro| alloyed with motives of this world may easily be in excess,
453 Intro| eternal will of God in this world and in another,—justice,
454 Intro| the will of God in this world, and co-operation with his
455 Intro| best and fairest in this world and in the human soul.~...~
456 Intro| the Mind of God and of the World. The great distinction between
457 Intro| of the better mind of the world, or of the one ‘sensible
458 Intro| Chance Medley created the world; or the significance of
459 Intro| which it has puzzled the world to find a use in so many
460 Text | multiplied in the infinity of the world of generation, or as still
461 Text | such is the order of the world, we too ought in every enquiry
462 Text | worthy of the aspect of the world, and of the sun, and of
463 Text | the constitution of the world.~PROTARCHUS: The proverb
464 Text | with the things of this world, how created, how acting
465 Text | beauty and virtue all the world over.~PROTARCHUS: True.~
466 Text | veriest impostor in the world; and it is said that in
467 Text | horses and animals in the world by their pursuit of enjoyment
Protagoras
Part
468 Intro| than all the rest of the world’—and in which the learned
469 Intro| part, and the rest of the world on the other. Hippias and
470 Text | he ought not to be in the world.~I have been showing that
471 Text | rascality of this part of the world. You, Socrates, are discontented,
472 Text | there is nothing in the world that I should like better
473 Text | than anywhere else in the world. This, however, is a secret
474 Text | thought that they rule the world by wisdom, like the Sophists
475 Text | Protagoras, like the rest of the world, call some pleasant things
476 Text | agree with the rest of the world. Now the rest of the world
477 Text | world. Now the rest of the world are of opinion that knowledge
478 Text | that the majority of the world are of another mind; and
479 Text | said Protagoras, that the world in general would answer
480 Text | again, I said, that the world says to me: ‘Why do you
481 Text | is of odd and even? The world will assent, will they not?~
482 Text | to be our answer to the world in general: And now I should
483 Text | I am the last man in the world to be envious. I cannot
The Republic
Book
484 1 | had before; the tales of a world below and the punishment
485 1 | and when he departs to the world below he is not in any apprehension
486 1 | you have? ~Nothing in the world, I said; and if you are
487 2 | take them down into the world below, where they have the
488 2 | punished. "But there is a world below in which either we
489 2 | although no one in the world would be a good dice or
490 3 | slavery, who believes the world below to be real and terrible? ~
491 3 | but rather to commend the world below, intimating to them
492 3 | names which describe the world below-Cocytus and Styx,
493 3 | demigods and heroes and the world below should be treated
494 3 | attendants, and with the world in general. ~I do not deny
495 3 | and not know where in the world he is. ~Yes, he said; that
496 3 | secondly the rest of the world. ~How was that? he said. ~
497 3 | poets say, and have made the world believe), though not in
498 4 | luxurious fancy, which, as the world goes, is thought to be happiness;
499 4 | propitiate the inhabitants of the world below. These are matters
500 4 | characteristic of our part of the world, or of the love of money,