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The Apology
Part
1 Intro| Socrates believes in the existence of the sons of gods, which
2 Intro| nor disbelieved, in the existence of the popular gods; he
3 Intro| internal witness. But the existence of Apollo or Zeus, or the
4 Text | enquirers do not believe in the existence of the gods. And they are
5 Text | Meletus, believe in the existence of human things, and not
6 Text | might as well affirm the existence of mules, and deny that
7 Text | in court for denying the existence of the gods, if I disobeyed
Charmides
Part
8 Text | investigated. Admitting the existence of it, will you tell me
Cratylus
Part
9 Intro| a name, affirms the real existence of that which is sought
10 Intro| world of abstract terms into existence, as the former has created
11 Intro| has or has not an actual existence; or that the antitheses,
12 Intro| words have an independent existence; thus anticipating the solution
13 Intro| and has an independent existence. The imitation of the lion’
14 Intro| little of a matter-of-fact existence.~Or again, we may frame
15 Intro| figment had ever a real existence, or is anything more than
16 Intro| unintelligible. The struggle for existence among words is not of that
17 Intro| case can the struggle for existence be deemed to be the sole
18 Intro| notice of the precarious existence and uncertain character
19 Intro| may meet in a struggle for existence until one of the two is
20 Intro| pronouns and the verb of existence generally more irregular
21 Intro| pronouns or in the verb of existence of which the forms were
22 Text | battle is in the world of existence, and according to the doctrine
23 Text | being the swiftest thing in existence, allows of no stay in things
24 Text | so many words that real existence is that for which there
25 Text | implying the divine motion of existence; pseudos (falsehood) is
26 Text | image. Let us suppose the existence of two objects: one of them
27 Text | truth.~SOCRATES: How real existence is to be studied or discovered
28 Text | good, or any other absolute existence?~CRATYLUS: Certainly, Socrates,
Crito
Part
29 Text | did we not bring you into existence? Your father married your
30 Text | and virtuous men? and is existence worth having on these terms?
Euthydemus
Part
31 Intro| own day to have a separate existence; it is absorbed in two other
32 Text | about that which has no existence, or do to Cleinias that
33 Text | expressive of them?~Yes.~Of their existence or of their non-existence?~
34 Text | non-existence?~Of their existence.~Yes, Ctesippus, and we
Euthyphro
Part
35 Text | invent new gods and deny the existence of old ones; this is the
The First Alcibiades
Part
36 Pre | name. Moreover, the mere existence of a Greater and Lesser
37 Pre | express testimony to the existence of contemporary writings
38 Text | chance of discovering our own existence, which otherwise we can
39 Text | either man has no real existence, or the soul is man?~ALCIBIADES:
40 Text | when I said that absolute existence must be first considered;
41 Text | now, instead of absolute existence, we have been considering
42 Text | the nature of individual existence, and this may, perhaps,
Gorgias
Part
43 Intro| Gorgias, Socrates assumes the existence of a universal art of flattery
44 Intro| give no reason of their own existence. The art of dressing up
45 Intro| formal logic has as yet no existence. The old difficulty of framing
46 Intro| merely to point out the existence of such a sentiment in the
47 Intro| continued in other stages of existence, which is further developed
48 Intro| raise men in the scale of existence. Might not the novelist,
49 Intro| well as a future state of existence. To these may be added, (
50 Intro| relates to a former cycle of existence, in which men were born
51 Intro| which of these two cycles of existence was man the happier,—under
52 Intro| state of innocence, the existence of a world without traditions,
53 Text | refute me. We may assume the existence of bodies and of souls?~
Laws
Book
54 1 | blames the very fact of their existence—he may very likely be right.
55 6 | which had previously no existence, and also olives, and the
56 6 | fathers as the beginning of existence to every child, whether
57 8 | disproven by the fact of their existence among you, still even in
58 10 | some of us deny the very existence of the Gods, while others,
59 10 | persuasion to us, and show us the existence of Gods, if not in a better
60 10 | difficulty in proving the existence of the Gods?~Athenian. How
61 10 | furnish proofs of their existence; and also there is the fact
62 10 | you and I argue for the existence of the Gods, and produce
63 10 | called upon to prove the existence of the Gods? Who can avoid
64 10 | firmly convinced of their existence; who likewise see and hear
65 10 | could be no doubt of their existence, and no suspicion of their
66 10 | no suspicion of their non–existence; when men, knowing all these
67 10 | proving to them the very existence of the Gods? Yet the attempt
68 10 | principles of justice have no existence at all in nature, but that
69 10 | for any vindication of the existence of the Gods—but seeing that
70 10 | demonstration of their own existence. And so holding fast to
71 10 | when at rest has it real existence, but when passing into another
72 10 | place and mode of their existence;—and will any one who admits
73 10 | has hitherto denied the existence of the Gods, and leave him.~
74 10 | him who utterly denied the existence of the Gods. And do you,
75 10 | yet having once come into existence, were indestructible (for
76 10 | sufficiently proved the existence of the Gods, and that they
77 11 | possible never to come into existence, or if existing among us
78 12 | not believe at all in the existence of the Gods, and others
79 12 | generation gives perpetual existence; the other was an argument
Menexenus
Part
80 Pre | name. Moreover, the mere existence of a Greater and Lesser
81 Pre | express testimony to the existence of contemporary writings
82 Intro| there is no allusion to the existence of the dead. But in the
Meno
Part
83 Intro| in successive periods of existence, returning into this world
84 Intro| into all knowledge. The existence of this latent knowledge
85 Intro| just as he recognizes the existence of popular opinion as a
86 Intro| prior and future state of existence.~The difficulty in framing
87 Intro| modern distinctions. The existence of the virtues without the
88 Intro| men in a former state of existence, and are recovered by reminiscence (
89 Intro| back to a former state of existence, in which men did and suffered
90 Intro| notion of a previous state of existence is found in the verses of
91 Intro| for in a previous state of existence. There was no time when
92 Intro| from a previous state of existence because they are more perfect
93 Intro| and highest. It is not the existence of God or the idea of good
94 Intro| recovered from a former state of existence. The metaphysical conception
95 Intro| the conviction of its own existence. ‘I think, therefore I am;’
96 Intro| this thought from actual existence and from practical life.
97 Intro| spectator of all time and all existence, may be paralleled with
98 Text | are certain effluences of existence?~MENO: Certainly.~SOCRATES:
99 Text | how did they come into existence?~SOCRATES: I am afraid,
Parmenides
Part
100 Intro| Plato. Their transcendental existence is not asserted, and is
101 Intro| Ideas, that is, of their existence apart from the mind, in
102 Intro| that the hypothesis of the existence of the many involved greater
103 Intro| any one who maintains the existence of absolute ideas will affirm
104 Intro| either that they have no existence, or are beyond human knowledge.’ ‘
105 Intro| from the assumption of the existence of the many, and the counter-argument
106 Intro| follows from the denial of the existence of the many: and similarly
107 Intro| phenomena. Still he affirms the existence of such ideas; and this
108 Intro| Ideas must have a real existence;’ they are not mere forms
109 Intro| thus described has no real existence. The mind, after having
110 Intro| Eleatics had asserted the existence of Being, which they at
111 Intro| had attempted to prove the existence of the one by disproving
112 Intro| the one by disproving the existence of the many, and Parmenides
113 Intro| seems to aim at proving the existence of the subject by showing
114 Intro| involves change of place. But existence in place has been already
115 Intro| place, which implies partial existence in two places at once, or
116 Intro| places at once, or entire existence neither within nor without
117 Intro| infinite, and therefore existence must be infinite, for all
118 Intro| and therefore two has no existence, and therefore there is
119 Intro| And the parts come into existence first; last of all the whole,
120 Intro| may be deduced from the existence of one? There is. One is
121 Intro| things, and there is no third existence besides them. And the whole
122 Intro| the second, the verb of existence. As in the first series,
123 Intro| not-being is identified with existence or non-existence in place
124 Intro| as for example when the existence of the one and the non-existence
125 Intro| equally assumed to involve the existence of the many: (12) Words
126 Intro| Being or Substance had no existence, but he is preparing for
127 Intro| consequences follow from the existence or non-existence of one
128 Intro| that they have or have not existence, but rather that some different
129 Intro| would have asserted the existence of ‘things in themselves,’
130 Intro| methods of reasoning then in existence, and in this point of view,
131 Intro| copula,’ and the ‘verb of existence.’ Would not the distinction
132 Intro| him to have a necessary existence; nor does he attempt to
133 Intro| means intends to deny the existence of universals or the unity
134 Intro| metaphysical world into existence any more than we can frame
135 Text | only, and have no proper existence except in our minds, Parmenides?
136 Text | unless he who denies their existence be a man of great ability
137 Text | any one who maintains the existence of absolute essences, will
138 Text | them will deny the very existence of them—and even if they
139 Text | come or to have come into existence?~The lesser.~Then the least
140 Text | to remit something of existence in relation to not-being.’)
Phaedo
Part
141 Intro| former and not a future existence. Socrates answers this objection
142 Intro| that he who contemplates existence through the medium of ideas
143 Intro| actual effects.’~If the existence of ideas is granted to him,
144 Intro| infinity, hardly possessing an existence which she can call her own,
145 Intro| allied to the Author of all existence, who is because he is perfect,
146 Intro| mind. We may argue for the existence of animals in a future state
147 Intro| beings in another, still the existence of the very least evil if
148 Intro| such a doctrine with the existence of a God—also in a less
149 Intro| doubting about the continued existence of those whom we love and
150 Intro| then infinite time, or an existence out of time, which are the
151 Intro| nature. The mere fact of the existence of God does not tend to
152 Intro| tend to show the continued existence of man. An evil God or an
153 Intro| urged about the origin or existence of evil are mere dialectical
154 Intro| spectators of all time and all existence,’ and of framing in our
155 Intro| past and future states of existence. His language may be compared
156 Intro| isles of the blest; or of an existence divided between the two;
157 Intro| constantly assume the continued existence of the dead in an upper
158 Intro| with the reality of his existence. For the distinction between
159 Intro| as the argument from the existence of God to immortality among
160 Intro| there is no God, there is no existence of the soul after death.’
161 Intro| strongly persuaded of the existence of ideas than they are of
162 Intro| are more certain of the existence of God than we are of the
163 Intro| right than we are of the existence of God, and are led on in
164 Intro| Or more correctly: ‘The existence of right and truth is the
165 Intro| of right and truth is the existence of God, and can never for
166 Intro| Phaedo is derived from the existence of eternal ideas of which
167 Intro| necessarily involve the future existence of the soul, as is shown
168 Text | True.~Then must not true existence be revealed to her in thought,
169 Text | souls of the dead are in existence, and that the good souls
170 Text | souls must have had a prior existence, but if not, there would
171 Text | to the position that the existence of the soul before birth
172 Text | cannot be separated from the existence of the essence of which
173 Text | a most real and absolute existence; and I am satisfied with
174 Text | sufficiently convinced of the existence of the soul before birth.
175 Text | other elements, and was in existence before entering the human
176 Text | define as essence or true existence—whether essence of equality,
177 Text | she could only view real existence through the bars of a prison,
178 Text | pure apprehension of pure existence, and to mistrust whatever
179 Text | ready to admit that the existence of the soul before entering
180 Text | sufficiently proven; but the existence of the soul after death
181 Text | the weaker continues in existence after the man is dead, will
182 Text | strength to prove the continued existence of the soul after death.
183 Text | elements which as yet had no existence? For harmony is not like
184 Text | which the very name implies existence. Having, as I am convinced,
185 Text | of the soul, and of her existence prior to our becoming men,
186 Text | generation or destruction or existence of anything, he must find
187 Text | teacher of the causes of existence such as I desired, and I
188 Text | the contemplation of true existence, I ought to be careful that
189 Text | seek there the truth of existence. I dare say that the simile
190 Text | which anything comes into existence except by participation
191 Text | wanted to discover real existence. Not that this confusion
Phaedrus
Part
192 Intro| recover from a former state of existence. Whether the subject of
193 Intro| lead for another period of existence. The soul which three times
194 Intro| but justice absolute in existence absolute, and so of the
195 Intro| soul has had a previous existence, in which following in the
196 Intro| absolute truth. All her after existence, passed in many forms of
197 Intro| maintaining a former state of existence. His mission was to realize
198 Intro| in realizing the eternal existence of them and of the human
199 Intro| the successive stages of existence. Nor again can we attribute
200 Intro| reference to a former state of existence. The capriciousness of love
201 Intro| served in a former state of existence, we are inclined to ask
202 Intro| Constantinople, much more was in existence than the scholars of the
203 Text | relation, which men call existence, but knowledge absolute
204 Text | but knowledge absolute in existence absolute; and beholding
205 Text | first period of his earthly existence. Every one chooses his love
Philebus
Part
206 Intro| from a previous state of existence, is a note of progress in
207 Intro| sought to prove the absolute existence of the one by showing the
208 Intro| involved in admitting the existence of the many (compare Parm.).
209 Intro| To say that the verb of existence is the copula, or that unity
210 Intro| claim of either to true existence. Of that positive infinity,
211 Intro| consistency than Anaxagoras the existence of an intelligent mind and
212 Intro| unities of idea any real existence? How, if imperishable, can
213 Intro| a new classification of existence. (1) There is a finite element
214 Intro| There is a finite element of existence, and (2) an infinite, and (
215 Intro| pass into another cycle of existence, before we can discover
216 Intro| found to lead to it. The existence of such an end is proved,
217 Intro| in every stage of their existence.~‘What is the place of happiness
218 Intro| spectator of all time and of all existence’?~
219 Text | these unities have a real existence; and then how each individual
220 Text | revealed a finite element of existence, and also an infinite?~PROTARCHUS:
221 Text | they do not allow of the existence of quantity—they are always
222 Text | that which is not yet in existence, and never has been, is
223 Text | further, even if we admit the existence of qualities in other objects,
224 Text | hopes in every stage of existence?~PROTARCHUS: Exactly.~SOCRATES:
225 Text | about things which had no existence either in the past, present,
226 Text | nor have ever had any real existence, and, more often than not,
227 Text | existing or coming into existence in us, because this may
228 Text | philosophy, who deny the very existence of pleasure.~PROTARCHUS:
229 Text | pleasure who deny her very existence.~PROTARCHUS: I think I follow
Protagoras
Part
230 Intro| or to his denial of the existence of the gods in a well-known
231 Text | I have been saying, the existence of a state implies that
232 Text | be the condition of the existence of a state. Suppose that
233 Text | instead. Do you admit the existence of folly?~I do.~And is not
234 Text | And you would admit the existence of goods?~Yes.~And is the
235 Text | future consideration; but the existence of such a science furnishes
The Republic
Book
236 2 | the condition of life and existence. ~Certainly. ~The second
237 4 | cause and condition of the existence of all of them, and while
238 5 | complaints will have no existence among them; they will be
239 5 | yours were to come into existence, we need say no more about
240 5 | them; assuming then the existence of the State, let us now
241 5 | other, who recognizes the existence of absolute beauty and is
242 5 | Certainly. ~Do we admit the existence of opinion? ~Undoubtedly. ~
243 5 | or more full of light and existence than being. ~That is quite
244 5 | but would not tolerate the existence of absolute beauty. ~Yes,
245 6 | spectator of all time and all existence, think much of human life? ~
246 6 | induced to believe in the existence of absolute beauty rather
247 6 | discourse in another state of existence. ~You are speaking of a
248 6 | and he might bring into existence the ideal polity about which
249 7 | turned toward more real existence, he has a clearer vision-what
250 7 | omitted would come into existence if encouraged by the State,
251 7 | are the shadows of true existence (not shadows of images cast
252 7 | of that which is best in existence, with which we may compare
253 7 | regular process all true existence, or of ascertaining what
254 8 | we may be so bold. ~The existence of such persons is to be
255 8 | order; and this distracted existence he terms joy and bliss and
256 8 | whom he has called into existence, who admire him and are
257 9 | and necessary to his very existence, and would place her under
258 9 | from that which has more existence the truer? ~Clearly, from
259 9 | a greater share of pure existence, in your judgment-those
260 9 | is filled with more real existence, and actually has a more
261 9 | actually has a more real existence, is more really filled than
262 9 | is filled with less real existence and is less real? ~Of course. ~
263 10 | exists he cannot make true existence, but only some semblance
264 10 | but only some semblance of existence; and if anyone were to say
265 10 | other workman, has real existence, he could hardly be supposed
266 10 | image knows nothing of true existence; he knows appearances only.
267 10 | happy and not undesirable existence. Let not him who chooses
The Second Alcibiades
Part
268 Text | which wishes to have a right existence must hold firmly to this
The Seventh Letter
Part
269 Text | barbarians but were still in existence, and maintained their rule
270 Text | everything which has its existence, not in words nor in bodily
The Sophist
Part
271 Intro| philosophy; the denial of the existence of Not-being, and of the
272 Intro| not, and therefore has no existence. At length the difficulty
273 Intro| imagine that falsehood had no existence, if reality was denied to
274 Intro| alternative: If we once admit the existence of Being and Not-being,
275 Intro| argument is asserting the existence of not-being. And this is
276 Intro| being ever have come into existence, for nothing comes into
277 Intro| for nothing comes into existence except as a whole; nor can
278 Intro| themselves. They admit the existence of a mortal living creature,
279 Intro| corporeal, or that they have no existence; at this point they begin
280 Intro| by the term “being” or “existence”?’ And, as they are incapable
281 Intro| he means to assert the existence of some third thing, different
282 Intro| opposed to a certain kind of existence which is termed beautiful.
283 Intro| not only discovered the existence, but also the nature of
284 Intro| he can no longer deny the existence of not-being, may still
285 Intro| animals did not come into existence by chance, or the spontaneous
286 Intro| stages of knowledge and of existence. They are the steps or grades
287 Intro| Symposium. He does not deny the existence of objects of sense, but
288 Intro| that the truth of their existence shall be hereafter proved.
289 Intro| cycle of human thought and existence is complete. It follows
290 Intro| Being. The struggle for existence is not confined to the animals,
291 Intro| thought and language had no existence.~Of the great dislike and
292 Intro| both implies and denies the existence of every other, and that
293 Intro| with this law, nor does any existence conform to it.’ Wisdom of
294 Intro| terms Being, Not-being, existence, essence, notion, and the
295 Intro| spectators of all time and of all existence;’ their works live for ever;
296 Intro| relative forms of ‘ground’ and existence, substance and accidents,
297 Intro| them, such as ‘ground’ and ‘existence,’ have hardly any basis
298 Text | STRANGER: He who brings into existence something that did not exist
299 Text | that which is brought into existence is said to be produced.~
300 Text | if anything, has a real existence.~STRANGER: Then we must
301 Text | introducing into it either existence or unity or plurality.~THEAETETUS:
302 Text | against our will, to admit the existence of not-being.~THEAETETUS:
303 Text | things which are, and the existence of things which are not.~
304 Text | venture either to deny their existence, or to maintain that they
305 Text | slight the effect, has real existence; and I hold that the definition
306 Text | to the aborigines about existence.~THEAETETUS: What was that?~
307 Text | this view too mind has no existence.~THEAETETUS: How so?~STRANGER:
308 Text | could exist, or come into existence anywhere?~THEAETETUS: No.~
309 Text | not-beautiful anything but this—an existence parted off from a certain
310 Text | off from a certain kind of existence, and again from another
311 Text | not-beautiful a less real existence?~THEAETETUS: Not at all.~
312 Text | be said to have any more existence than the other.~THEAETETUS:
313 Text | of the other has a real existence, the parts of this nature
314 Text | were saying, as real an existence as any other class? May
315 Text | not-being has an assured existence, and a nature of its own?
316 Text | to the death against the existence of the image-making and
317 Text | action or inaction, or of the existence of existence or non-existence
318 Text | or of the existence of existence or non-existence indicated
319 Text | say that they come into existence—not having existed previously—
The Statesman
Part
320 Intro| disappeared. In that cycle of existence there was no such thing
321 Intro| life; the wheel of their existence having been reversed, they
322 Intro| or our present state of existence?’ No, Socrates, that blessed
323 Intro| carry on the struggle for existence without arts or knowledge,
324 Intro| the demonstration of the existence of not-being which we proved
325 Intro| indirect proof that the existence of such a standard is necessary
326 Intro| standard is necessary to the existence of the arts. The standard
327 Intro| than of a future, state of existence, should conform exactly
328 Intro| as is necessary for his existence. Though deprived of God’
329 Intro| and in a former cycle of existence is intended to elicit this
330 Text | another, without which the existence of production would be impossible.~
331 Text | inference that not-being had an existence, because here was the point
332 Text | the argument that the very existence of the arts must be held
The Symposium
Part
333 Intro| youngest, having had no existence in the old days of Iapetus
334 Intro| There is no sameness of existence, but the new mortality is
335 Intro| creation. The traces of the existence of love, as of number and
336 Intro| reaching a beauty in which all existence is seen to be harmonious
337 Intro| spectator of all time and of all existence.’ This is a ‘mystery’ in
338 Intro| the bodily appetites. The existence of such attachments may
339 Intro| past and future states of existence, in the Symposium there
340 Text | nature, which had once a real existence, but is now lost, and the
341 Text | always leaves behind a new existence in the place of the old.
342 Text | another new and similar existence behind—unlike the divine,
Theaetetus
Part
343 Intro| his name was already in existence; unless, indeed, we suppose
344 Intro| about the gods, of whose existence or non-existence I have
345 Intro| impressions. Neither do I deny the existence of wisdom or of the wise
346 Intro| neither has any absolute existence? But now we make the further
347 Intro| or which assumes the existence of ideas independent of
348 Intro| and has then disproved the existence both of knowledge and sensation.
349 Intro| error a sort of positive existence. But error or ignorance
350 Intro| and unsatisfactory. The existence of true opinion is proved
351 Intro| seem to have a necessary existence to us. Being the simplest
352 Intro| further still and doubt the existence of the senses of all things?
353 Intro| animals, or conceive of the existence even of a mollusc. And observe,
354 Intro| natural way of passing through existence. And many who have lived
355 Intro| together they gave a new existence to the mind in thought,
356 Intro| the character of objective existence. There is no use in asking
357 Text | measure of all things, of the existence of things that are, and
358 Text | perception is always of existence, and being the same as knowledge
359 Text | invisible can have real existence.~THEAETETUS: Yes, indeed,
360 Text | not as having any absolute existence, but as being all of them
361 Text | formed, for the agent has no existence until united with the patient,
362 Text | and the patient has no existence until united with the agent;
363 Text | waking, in either sphere of existence the soul contends that the
364 Text | other, but not to any other existence, nor each of us to himself;
365 Text | bring in the gods, whose existence or non-existence I banish
366 Text | each of us is a measure of existence and of non-existence. Yet
367 Text | and the wise man have no existence; but I say that the wise
368 Text | in nature these have no existence or essence of their own—
369 Text | patient have any absolute existence, but when they come together
370 Text | Then false opinion has no existence in us, either in the sphere
371 Text | Then now we may admit the existence of false opinion in us?~
372 Text | them, for in the one case existence, in the other non-existence
373 Text | Socrates; for if I admit the existence of parts in a syllable,
Timaeus
Part
374 Intro| at the peril of her own existence, and when the other Hellenes
375 Intro| would there have a blessed existence; but, if he lived ill, he
376 Intro| therefore have a separate existence and exist in something (
377 Intro| sensations we must assume the existence of body and soul.~What makes
378 Intro| only a faint and precarious existence. At the same time, the minds
379 Intro| being’ is only the verb of existence, the copula, the most general
380 Intro| new world was called into existence to give law and order to
381 Intro| definite belief in the eternal existence of matter. The beginning
382 Intro| the Hebrew prophet of the existence of evil, which he seeks
383 Intro| how did chaos come into existence, if not by the will of the
384 Intro| suitable to express indefinite existence,—are compared or united
385 Intro| them and so forming a new existence, is or becomes the intelligible
386 Intro| numerical phenomena of the existence of one mean proportional
387 Intro| spectator of all time and all existence’ the universe remains at
388 Intro| done away with the absolute existence of past and future.) The
389 Intro| partaking so feebly of existence as to be hardly perceivable,
390 Intro| universal globe have no existence, but by the attraction of
391 Intro| spectator of all time and all existence,’ to borrow once more his
392 Intro| admits creation to have an existence which is real and even eternal,
393 Intro| a necessary place in the existence of the world, he rather
394 Intro| antediluvian Athens ever had any existence except in the imagination
395 Intro| retain only a second-hand existence. He who would study this
396 Text | world, I say, always in existence and without beginning? or
397 Text | a blessed and congenial existence. But if he failed in attaining
398 Text | these,’ as though they had existence, since they are in process
399 Text | as in a dream, say of all existence that it must of necessity
400 Text | heaven nor in earth has no existence. Of these and other things
401 Text | i.e. in space), grasping existence in some way or other, or
402 Text | elements, let us presuppose the existence of body and soul.~First,
403 Text | parted by the strain of existence, they in turn loosen the