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The Apology
Part
1 Text | myself to differ from men in general, and may perhaps claim to
Charmides
Part
2 PreF | Dialogue. The hypothesis of a general plan which is worked out
3 PreS | take shape. He must form a general idea of the two languages,
4 PreS | out of keeping with the general character of his work. He
5 PreS | connected, and passes into the general character of the style.
6 PreS | if an exception to the general style, is of itself a disturbing
7 PreS | surrounding language. In general the style of one author
8 PreS | Greek scholar but for the general reader, their worst fault
9 PreS | that they sacrifice the general effect and meaning to the
10 PreS | contemporaries, and with the general state of thought and feeling
11 Text | the subjects of opinion in general?~Certainly not.~But surely
12 Text | not, or any physician or general, or any one else pretending
13 Text | sea, and the art of the general in war?~Quite so.~And yet,
Cratylus
Part
14 Intro| convenient introduction to the general subject of the dialogue.~
15 Intro| the Cratylus he gives a general account of the nature and
16 Intro| his etymologies, and, in general, the manner in which the
17 Intro| the same idea of leader or general, like the words Iatrocles
18 Intro| rest.’ Now that we have a general notion, how shall we proceed?
19 Intro| all good things. Men in general are foolishly afraid of
20 Intro| appears to me to be the general instrument which the legislator
21 Intro| seething, shaking, and in general of what is windy. The letters
22 Intro| legislators, and like artists in general, some of them are better
23 Intro| invention of the arts in general, we only entertain conjecture.
24 Intro| these anticipations of the general principles of philology,
25 Intro| use. Such are a few of the general reflections which the present
26 Intro| sentence or cadence to the general meaning or spirit of the
27 Text | awl, and of instruments in general?~HERMOGENES: To be sure.~
28 Text | is true of instruments in general.~HERMOGENES: Yes.~SOCRATES:
29 Text | are several names for a general, as, for example, Agis (
30 Text | of heroes and of men in general are apt to be deceptive
31 Text | earth beneath. People in general appear to imagine that the
32 Text | I was saying, there is a general agreement about the nature
33 Text | existing in the soul has the general name of kakia, or vice,
34 Text | appears to me to be the general instrument expressing all
35 Text | described, so long as the general character of the thing which
36 Text | SOCRATES: Good; and when the general character is preserved,
Euthydemus
Part
37 Intro| seeking the knowledge of the general. For the general makes over
38 Intro| of the general. For the general makes over his prey to the
39 Intro| as inconsistent with the general scheme. Such a criticism
40 Text | about war,—all that a good general ought to know about the
41 Text | risk—in company with a wise general, or with a foolish one?~
42 Text | or other, to agree in a general conclusion, that he who
43 Text | think that the art of the general is above all others the
44 Text | I said.~The art of the general is surely an art of hunting
45 Text | Certainly, he said; just as a general when he takes a city or
46 Text | or takes, the art of the general is not the one, and some
47 Text | including the art of the general, seemed to render up the
48 Text | the last question; for in general you and your brother seem
49 Text | money-making and the art of the general, noble arts?~CRITO: Certainly
Euthyphro
Part
50 Intro| hardly be regarded as a general definition.~Euthyphro replies,
51 Intro| incapable either of framing a general definition or of following
52 Text | piety, but to explain the general idea which makes all pious
53 Text | friend, and so are those of a general. But the chief of them is
The First Alcibiades
Part
54 Pre | of a particular author, general considerations which equally
55 Pre | 4) in harmony with the general spirit of the Platonic writings.
56 Pre | 4) accordance with the general spirit of his writings.
57 Pre | with forged writings in general, than they have yet received,
58 Pre | little importance to the general reader.~
Gorgias
Part
59 Intro| argument expands into a general view of the good and evil
60 Intro| they are to the world in general, ideals as they may be more
61 Intro| that although there is a general consistency of times and
62 Intro| but the architect, or the general. How would Gorgias explain
63 Intro| upon improvement. Poetry in general is only a rhetorical address
64 Intro| hope of a future life, or a general faith in the victory of
65 Intro| opposite effect.~Like the general analogy of the arts and
66 Intro| therefore justly involved in the general condemnation.~Subordinate
67 Intro| beautiful and the good.~In general spirit and character, that
68 Intro| education for mankind in general, and for a very few a Tartarus
69 Text | and that of the world in general; but mine is of another
70 Text | of them injustice, and in general the evil of the soul?~POLUS:
71 Text | and intemperance, and in general the depravity of the soul,
72 Text | thought that mankind in general would be displeased if he
73 Text | and of human character in general. And people of this sort,
74 Text | and dithyrambic poetry in general, what would you say? Have
75 Text | at all behind either the general, or the pilot, or any one
76 Text | son of Lysimachus. But, in general, great men are also bad,
Ion
Part
77 Intro| understands the art of the general as well as any one. ‘Then
78 Intro| not at once appointed a general?’ Ion replies that he is
79 Intro| a foreigner to be their general. ‘No, that is not the real
80 Intro| away in the disguise of a general. Would he rather be regarded
81 Text | the works of sculptors in general were produced, was at a
82 Text | rate he will know what a general ought to say when exhorting
83 Text | rhapsode the art of the general?~ION: I am sure that I should
84 Text | that I should know what a general ought to say.~SOCRATES:
85 Text | knowledge of the art of the general as well as of the rhapsode;
86 Text | SOCRATES: And in judging of the general’s art, do you judge of it
87 Text | do you judge of it as a general or a rhapsode?~ION: To me
88 Text | the rhapsode and of the general is the same?~ION: Yes, one
89 Text | rhapsode is also a good general?~ION: Certainly, Socrates.~
90 Text | SOCRATES: And he who is a good general is also a good rhapsode?~
91 Text | rhapsode is also a good general.~ION: Certainly.~SOCRATES:
92 Text | SOCRATES: And are you the best general, Ion?~ION: To be sure, Socrates;
93 Text | rhapsode when you might be a general? Do you think that the Hellenes
94 Text | crown, and do not want a general?~ION: Why, Socrates, the
95 Text | Athens, and do not need a general; and you and Sparta are
96 Text | often been chosen their general by the Athenians: and there
97 Text | the Ephesian to be their general, and honour him, if he prove
98 Text | me in the disguise of a general, in order that you may escape
Laches
Part
99 Intro| they are broken; creating a general interest in military studies,
100 Intro| 2) Socrates wants a more general definition, not only of
101 Intro| an Athenian statesman and general descending to sophistries
102 Intro| The one is the thoughtful general, willing to avail himself
103 Intro| the mind can he frame a general notion at all. No sooner
104 Intro| all. No sooner has this general notion been formed than
105 Text | the complete art of the general. There is no difficulty
106 Text | courage and cowardice in general. And I will begin with courage,
107 Text | animals. And you, and men in general, call by the term ‘courageous’
108 Text | times. As to the art of the general, you yourselves will be
109 Text | the soothsayer under the general, and not the general under
110 Text | the general, and not the general under the soothsayer. Am
Laws
Book
111 1 | in peace. For what men in general term peace would be said
112 1 | that which leads mankind in general into the wildest pleasure
113 1 | friends, not about men in general, but about the merits and
114 1 | they might be right, but in general they were utterly wrong.~
115 1 | possibility of having a general of an army who was absolutely
116 1 | we are speaking not of a general who is to command an army,
117 1 | the good of education in general, the answer is easy—that
118 1 | the future, which have the general name of expectations; and
119 2 | young men, and people in general, will favour tragedy.~Cleinias.
120 2 | eye or a quick ear, and in general to have all the senses perfect;
121 2 | indeed, from the world in general. For tell me, my good friends,
122 2 | and the use of food in general, have an accompanying charm
123 2 | and their way of life in general will follow an appointed
124 3 | any real equality. Now, in general, when the legislator attempts
125 3 | misfortunes were due to their general degeneracy, and especially
126 3 | fathers and mothers and in general of progenitors to rule over
127 3 | though a great and patriotic general, had never given his mind
128 3 | arrangement of details. But the general division of laws according
129 3 | tutors, and the multitude in general, were kept quiet by a hint
130 3 | the lyre, and making one general confusion; ignorantly affirming
131 3 | conceit of omniscience and general lawlessness;—freedom came
132 4 | not going to send out a general invitation to any Hellene
133 4 | and the physician, and the general, and may seem to be well
134 4 | imagine that the citizens in general will at once follow the
135 4 | may be said of power in general: When the supreme power
136 4 | military virtue, or virtue in general, but only the interests
137 5 | hand, the utterly bad is in general profligate, and therefore
138 5 | other races, through the general vulgarity of their pursuits
139 6 | public service only; and in general they should make up their
140 6 | this as well as for more general reasons of pleasure and
141 6 | the assembly and to the general council; it shall be compulsory
142 6 | describing these matters in a general outline.~Cleinias. Quite
143 7 | sorrow and fear, and in general of pain as was possible,
144 7 | are commonly called by the general name of unwritten customs,
145 7 | that rhythms and music in general are imitations of good and
146 7 | consecrated models, and the general fashion among the youth,
147 7 | distinguish and determine on some general principle what songs are
148 7 | This, then, will be the general order of them.~Let us now
149 7 | not mistaken, there is a general agreement, that every one
150 7 | and gymnastic exercise in general. Having said what remained
151 7 | about gymnastic movements in general; for we include under gymnastics
152 7 | body. Such motion may be in general called dancing, and is of
153 7 | violent movements, and in general when he is speaking or singing
154 7 | legislator should indicate in general outline, and the guardian
155 7 | necessary for mankind in general, and what is the truth,
156 8 | military of all qualities is general activity of body, whether
157 8 | contests and of dancing in general. What they ought severally
158 8 | influence upon the desires in general. But how can we take precautions
159 8 | nature of birds and beasts in general, who are born in great multitudes,
160 8 | down respecting love in general, and the intercourse of
161 8 | from divers sources, and in general from two sources, whereas
162 8 | third for craftsmen and in general for strangers, whether sojourners
163 9 | death. But let there be a general rule, that the disgrace
164 9 | more let there be a third general law respecting the judges
165 9 | thefts, and offences in general; and we must not be annoyed
166 9 | have been gentler. But in general the degrees of guilt will
167 9 | concerning crimes of violence in general; and I must not omit to
168 10 | we have already said in general terms what shall be the
169 10 | whole. And he contrived a general plan by which a thing of
170 10 | which will make men in general less liable to transgress
171 11 | superiors of worse men, and in general elders are the superiors
172 11 | after the fashion of men in general, who care little about piety
173 11 | fathers and mothers; and in general for his elders who are freemen,
174 11 | let the previous law in general hold; and let a man and
175 11 | the superintendent of the general education of the young,
176 12 | away his arms in war, no general or military officer shall
177 12 | eldest being chosen; the general superintendent of education
178 12 | and intemperance, and in general from all unrighteousness,
179 12 | matters:—What aim would the general of an army, or what aim
180 12 | Athenian. Does not the general aim at victory and superiority
181 12 | now called health, or a general who knows not victory, or
182 12 | the physician and of the general look to that one thing to
Lysis
Part
183 Intro| regard the question in a more general way. Friendship is the union
Menexenus
Part
184 Pre | of a particular author, general considerations which equally
185 Pre | 4) in harmony with the general spirit of the Platonic writings.
186 Pre | 4) accordance with the general spirit of his writings.
187 Pre | with forged writings in general, than they have yet received,
188 Pre | little importance to the general reader.~
Meno
Part
189 Intro| understand the nature of a general definition, he answers in
190 Intro| the mind could rise to a general notion of virtue as distinct
191 Intro| ignorant of the very nature of general terms. He can only produce
192 Intro| sophistical incapacity to grasp a general notion.~Anytus is the type
193 Intro| sort of progress from the general notions of Socrates, who
194 Intro| The difficulty in framing general notions which has appeared
195 Intro| is Socrates; but to the ‘general definitions’ of Socrates
196 Intro| represented as the genera or general ideas under which individuals
197 Intro| old string, and returns to general notions:—these he acknowledges
198 Intro| are in their substance and general meaning the same, although
199 Intro| Republic)—that he proceeds from general ideas, that many elements
200 Intro| Presocratics) with a few general notions, Descartes first
201 Intro| way and say of abstract or general ideas, that the greater
202 Text | Very true.~SOCRATES: And in general, all that the soul attempts
Parmenides
Part
203 Intro| critic (Ueberweg), who in general accepts the authorised canon
204 Intro| truth, having many kinds, general and particular. But the
205 Intro| proceed to universals or general notions. There is no contradiction
206 Intro| to admit that there are general ideas of hair, mud, filth,
207 Intro| after having obtained a general idea, does not really go
208 Intro| illogical logic, and to the general ignorance of the ancients
209 Intro| criticizing the simplest and most general of our ideas, in which,
210 Intro| of its meaning, as if the general idea of ‘force’ in our minds
211 Text | correctly understood my general purpose.~I see, Parmenides,
Phaedo
Part
212 Intro| seems to disappear in a more general notion of the soul; the
213 Intro| higher, that is, a more general notion. Consistency with
214 Intro| which proceed from the less general to the more general, and
215 Intro| less general to the more general, and are tested by their
216 Text | death is regarded by men in general as a great evil.~Very true,
217 Text | money, and the world in general; nor like the lovers of
218 Text | He might be compared to a general rallying his defeated and
219 Text | himself to arguments in general: and for ever afterwards
220 Text | be able to arrive at the general conclusion, that not only
221 Text | them: and so of things in general, as I dare say that you
222 Text | life, and the immortal in general, will never perish.~Yes,
Phaedrus
Part
223 Intro| philosophy to love and to art in general, and to the human soul,
224 Intro| of the Gods. And men in general recall only with difficulty
225 Intro| his words by going back to general maxims; a lesser merit is
226 Intro| are evils which mankind in general have agreed to conceal,
227 Intro| of women. It is really a general idea which includes both,
228 Intro| noted in passing; also the general agreement between the tone
229 Text | no; nevertheless I have a general notion of what he said,
Philebus
Part
230 Intro| and incompleteness in the general design. As in the speeches
231 Intro| and arrange in order the general principles of things. Mind
232 Intro| following grounds:—1. The general resemblance to the later
233 Intro| good’) to pleasures in general, when he cannot deny that
234 Intro| may begin with the most general notion, but this alone will
235 Intro| absolutely pure; and in general those which are unalloyed
236 Intro| only Plato but mankind in general have been unwilling to acknowledge
237 Intro| fleeting of all things,’ into a general idea seems to such men a
238 Intro| not be pursued, unless in general they had been found to lead
239 Intro| alike superseded in the more general notion of the happiness
240 Intro| ethics. Any one who adds a general principle to knowledge has
241 Intro| not deny that about the general conceptions of morals there
242 Intro| aspects under which the most general principles of morals may
243 Intro| actions, but only about the general notion which furnishes the
244 Intro| interest about morals in general, to strengthen our conception
245 Intro| not unfrequently the more general principle may correct prejudices
246 Intro| maintain their hold on us, the general principles must also be
247 Intro| whether this or some other general notion is the highest principle
248 Intro| unfavourably with Plato’s general discussion of the same subject (
249 Text | let us not imagine that a general puzzling of us all is to
250 Text | pleasure. And would not the general proposition seem to you
251 Text | Granted; what you say has a general truth.~SOCRATES: Here then
252 Text | we, or living things in general, always conscious of what
253 Text | certain habit; and of vice in general it is that kind which is
254 Text | and have acknowledged as a general truth that the body without
255 Text | of sound, again, and in general those of which the want
256 Text | observe that the arts in general and those engaged in them
257 Text | than knowledge of things in general, and likewise the perfect
Protagoras
Part
258 Intro| not the doctrine of men in general, who maintain that many
259 Intro| their differences. (4) The general treatment in Plato both
260 Text | Athenians and mankind in general, when the question relates
261 Text | seldom good for much in general conversation, but at any
262 Text | however, to point out the general intention of the poem, which
263 Text | Protagoras, that the world in general would answer as you do.~
264 Text | from defect of knowledge in general, but of that particular
265 Text | our answer to the world in general: And now I should like to
The Republic
Book
266 1 | rather suspect that people in general are not convinced by you
267 1 | particular good and not merely a general one-medicine, for example,
268 1 | knowledge and ignorance in general; see whether you think that
269 2 | convinced-this I infer from your general character, for had I judged
270 2 | State ought to know the general forms in which poets should
271 3 | attendants, and with the world in general. ~I do not deny it. ~But
272 3 | any affinity to virtue in general? ~None whatever. ~Any affinity
273 3 | we will now only give the general outlines of the subject. ~
274 3 | For these all follow the general principle, and having found
275 4 | which will all follow the general principle that friends have
276 4 | deportment and manners in general. You would agree with me? ~
277 4 | may be required, and in general about the regulations of
278 4 | Thracians, Scythians, and in general the Northern nations; and
279 4 | thirst, and the desires in general, and again willing and wishing-all
280 5 | they have arrived, and, in general, what is the nature of this
281 5 | replied, in maintaining the general inferiority of the female
282 5 | horses and of animals in general? ~Undoubtedly. ~Good heavens!
283 5 | this, over and above the general constitution of the State,
284 6 | evil which the public in general have-he will do as they
285 7 | comes, must go down to the general underground abode, and get
286 7 | ridiculously unfit to be a general. Did you never remark how
287 7 | that is true, what sort of general must he have been? ~I should
288 7 | the difference whether a general is or is not a geometrician. ~
289 7 | years is as essential to the general as it is to the farmer or
290 7 | nature; for the arts in general are concerned with the desires
291 8 | handicrafts, and trade in general, in the institution of common
292 8 | lost; he may have been a general or some other high officer
293 8 | forcibly kept down by his general habit of life? ~True. ~Do
294 8 | men, and not one; but, in general, his better desires will
295 8 | oligarchical States, from the general spread of carelessness and
296 8 | characters: Let there be a general rule that everyone shall
297 8 | order that we may have a general notion of them? ~Very good. ~
298 9 | be the opinion of men in general? ~Yes, he said, inevitably. ~
299 9 | then, I said, and as the general umpire in theatrical contests
300 9 | name, but is denoted by the general term appetitive, from the
301 9 | Necessarily. ~Then, in general, those kinds of things which
302 10 | drawing, and imitation in general, when doing their own proper
The Second Alcibiades
Part
303 Pre | of Stoic influence in the general tone and phraseology of
304 Text | arts should be wise also in general? Or is there a difference
The Seventh Letter
Part
305 Text | these symptoms and in the general course of public life, I
306 Text | pitch of infatuation and of general wickedness and greed they
The Sophist
Part
307 Intro| words are used both in a general and a specific sense, and
308 Intro| professor of philosophy in general than of a maintainer of
309 Intro| it.~But there is another general division under which his
310 Intro| should not pass from the most general notions to infinity, but
311 Intro| division and subdivision of general notions will guide men into
312 Intro| such examples forming a general notion of falsehood, the
313 Intro| coextensive with Being in general. Before analyzing further
314 Intro| be safer in accepting the general description of them which
315 Intro| private for gain about the general principles of right and
316 Intro| vermin-destroyer as from the general. And she only desires to
317 Intro| she only desires to have a general name, which shall distinguish
318 Intro| the consideration of a few general aspects of the Hegelian
319 Intro| experience and of those general or a priori truths which
320 Intro| the world, first, in the general terms of quality, quantity,
321 Intro| separates philosophy from general literature; the student
322 Intro| world must necessarily be general, and there may be a use
323 Text | secret force may have the general name of hunting?~THEAETETUS:
324 Text | STRANGER: Fowling is the general term under which the hunting
325 Text | live in the water has the general name of fishing.~THEAETETUS:
326 Text | by day is called by the general name of barbing, because
327 Text | STRANGER: Take music in general and painting and marionette
328 Text | nature, and about things in general, we have been accustomed
329 Text | fulling and of furbishing in general attend in a number of minute
330 Text | example of hunting, the general’s art, at all more decorous
331 Text | be only allowed to have a general name for all other purifications,
332 Text | correctly included under the general term of admonition.~THEAETETUS:
333 Text | are invisible to men in general?~THEAETETUS: At any rate,
334 Text | law and about politics in general?~THEAETETUS: Why, no one
335 Text | justice or of virtue in general? Are we not well aware that
The Statesman
Part
336 Intro| are the sciences of the general, the judge, the orator,
337 Intro| you comprehended under the general name of beasts. This is
338 Intro| pupils, or whether he has a general rule of diet and exercise
339 Intro| is obliged to lay down general laws, and cannot enact what
340 Intro| quite pure. The arts of the general, the judge, and the orator,
341 Intro| higher than the art of the general. The science which makes
342 Intro| respect corresponding to the general change in the later writings
343 Intro| well observes, that the general spirit of the myth may be
344 Intro| suggestiveness of imagery; the general analogy of the arts is constantly
345 Intro| found in all nature; the general conception of two great
346 Intro| another principle of a more general character, that they shall
347 Text | let us divide sciences in general into those which are practical
348 Text | and to practical life in general?~YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly
349 Text | of tenders of animals in general.~YOUNG SOCRATES: Very true.~
350 Text | and to rule over men in general.~YOUNG SOCRATES: Quite true.~
351 Text | the nature of example in general in a small and particular
352 Text | employed in building, and in general in carpentering, and in
353 Text | will apply to arguments in general.~YOUNG SOCRATES: Proceed.~
354 Text | conduct of such arguments in general.~YOUNG SOCRATES: What is
355 Text | example, the purpose is general.~STRANGER: Still less would
356 Text | which may be called by the general term of nourishment, unless
357 Text | power with a view to the general security and improvement,
358 Text | able, in enacting for the general good, to provide exactly
359 Text | will lay down laws in a general form for the majority, roughly
360 Text | painting or imitation in general, or carpentry, or any sort
361 Text | remain the nobler arts of the general and the judge, and the higher
362 Text | music or handicraft arts in general?~YOUNG SOCRATES: There is.~
363 Text | STRANGER: The art of the general is only ministerial, and
364 Text | movement and of music in general, when these have a proper
The Symposium
Part
365 Intro| things and persons there is a general understanding that you should
366 Intro| taint of indecency.~Some general considerations occur to
367 Intro| offences, or as a proof of the general corruption of society. It
368 Text | philosophy and virtue in general, ought to meet in one, and
369 Text | omnipotent force of love in general. And the love, more especially,
370 Text | Aristodemus said that there was a general cheer; the young man was
371 Text | only do the sciences in general spring up and decay, so
372 Text | conceptions?—wisdom and virtue in general. And such creators are poets
373 Text | then if beauty of form in general is his pursuit, how foolish
Theaetetus
Part
374 Intro| the mind upon itself. The general character of the Theaetetus
375 Intro| metaphysics. He can form a general conception of square and
376 Intro| because bearing on the general character of the Platonic
377 Intro| tendencies of mankind in general (compare Introduction to
378 Intro| facts, but by the help of general theories respecting the
379 Intro| agent. Hence there arises a general reflection that nothing
380 Intro| maid-servants, but of the general herd, falling into wells
381 Intro| world, now led them to frame general notions of the human faculties
382 Intro| distinguished between ‘the general and particular understanding.’
383 Intro| learning, or we may have a general but not a particular knowledge,
384 Intro| is presented to him in a general form in every moment of
385 Intro| conception of being is more general than either, and might therefore
386 Intro| are latent in the mind. In general the greater the intension
387 Intro| and yet, like many other general terms, are often in advance
388 Intro| authors or by mankind in general, who are equally inconsistent
389 Intro| derive a support from the general practice of mankind. It
390 Intro| the human mind; having a general foundation in popular experience,
391 Intro| verified. It rests only on the general impressions of mankind,
392 Text | calculator and musician, and in general an educated man?~THEAETETUS:
393 Text | I get on pretty well in general; but there is a little difficulty
394 Text | secret, as the world in general have not found me out; and
395 Text | army having Homer for its general, and not appear ridiculous? (
396 Text | at first, there arises a general reflection, that there is
397 Text | Thracian handmaids but of the general herd, tumbling into wells
398 Text | happiness and misery in general—what they are, and how a
399 Text | be speaking of numbers in general.~SOCRATES: Exactly; and
400 Text | science of odd and even in general.~THEAETETUS: I follow.~SOCRATES:
401 Text | of knowledge out of the general store, he takes the wrong
402 Text | Yes.~SOCRATES: In the same general way, we might also have
403 Text | must have conceived of some general or common nature which no
Timaeus
Part
404 Intro| dialogues, but the same general spirit is apparent; there
405 Intro| are not observed by men in general; there is moreover a cycle
406 Intro| whole body. According to our general doctrine of sensation, parts
407 Intro| this is true of vice in general, which is commonly regarded
408 Intro| Egyptian customs and the general observation that there were
409 Intro| external world. The most general facts or appearances of
410 Intro| generalizations; yet this general grasp of nature led also
411 Intro| existence, the copula, the most general symbol of relation, the
412 Intro| interpret his meaning by the general spirit of his writings.
413 Intro| of the four elements. The general meaning of these words is
414 Intro| elements, he was led to a more general notion of a substance, more
415 Intro| theories escape him.~The general physical doctrines of the
416 Intro| comparison of them with his general system.~There is no principle
417 Intro| of digestion. Except the general divisions into the spleen,
418 Intro| overtaken by the slower.~The general phenomena of sensation are
419 Intro| connect causes with effects. General notions are necessary to
420 Intro| he has contributed to the general ideas of physics, or supplied
421 Intro| than they knew?~Besides general notions we seem to find
422 Intro| writings, and there are certain general principles, such as the
423 Text | will give you not only the general heads, but the particulars,
424 Text | consequently received the general name of ‘sensations,’ which
425 Text | these are included under the general name of honey: and, lastly,
426 Text | Thus have we discussed the general affections of the whole
427 Text | which is in a state of general agitation and effervescence,
428 Text | it originates. We may in general assume sound to be a blow
429 Text | They are called by the general name of colours, and are
430 Text | have mind in them are in general less fleshy, except where
431 Text | consistency of the bones. And in general, all that which is termed
432 Text | women and the female sex in general. But the race of birds was