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| Alphabetical [« »] native-land 1 natives 3 natura 3 natural 371 natural-born 1 naturally 128 naturalness 1 | Frequency [« »] 375 pleasures 373 already 373 want 371 natural 370 opposite 369 age 369 although | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances natural |
The Apology
Part
1 Intro| he is not one of them. Of natural philosophy he knows nothing;
2 Intro| haughtiness as flowing from the natural elevation of his position?~
3 Text | one who is a student of natural philosophy. I should be
Charmides
Part
4 PreS | of ideas simpler and more natural. The Greek appears to have
5 PreS | words are taken out of their natural context, and thus become
6 PreS | only,—that is to say, of natural objects: these we conceive
7 PreS | admitted Ideas, not only of natural objects, but of properties,
8 Intro| rhetorical tendency, and for a natural desire to save his reputation
9 Text | I said to him: That is a natural reply, Charmides, and I
Cratylus
Part
10 Intro| is conventional and also natural, and the true conventional-natural
11 Intro| name is that which has a natural meaning. Thus nature, art,
12 Intro| artificial or rational, and the natural. The view of Socrates is
13 Intro| and the philosopher is his natural advisor. We are not to suppose
14 Intro| determine:—was it due to the natural dislike which may be supposed
15 Intro| maintaining that they are natural, the latter that they are
16 Intro| different processes. There is a natural way of cutting or burning,
17 Intro| cutting or burning, and a natural instrument with which men
18 Intro| must name according to a natural process, and with a proper
19 Intro| if you would show me this natural correctness of names.’~Indeed
20 Intro| the most crucial test of natural fitness? Those of heroes
21 Intro| you will admit to be their natural meaning. But then, why do
22 Intro| he deny that there is a natural fitness in names. He only
23 Intro| He only insists that this natural fitness shall be intelligibly
24 Intro| idea that language is a natural organism. He would have
25 Intro| primitive man, in whom the natural instinct is strongest, is
26 Intro| picture sounds which represent natural objects or processes. Poetry
27 Intro| Speaking is one of the simplest natural operations, and also the
28 Intro| to walk or to eat, by a natural impulse; yet in either case
29 Intro| imitation which is also natural to him—he is taught to read,
30 Intro| of languages, and is very natural to the scientific philologist.
31 Intro| distance. For languages have a natural but not a perfect growth;
32 Intro| uttering them. Like other natural operations, the process
33 Intro| is to be classed with the Natural or the Mental sciences,
34 Intro| not be silently assumed.~‘Natural selection’ and the ‘survival
35 Intro| being a truism. If by ‘the natural selection’ of words or meanings
36 Intro| exceptions would not be a natural growth: for it could not
37 Intro| some of the principles or natural laws which have created
38 Intro| how much greater and more natural the exercise of the power
39 Intro| they grew more refined—the natural laws of euphony began to
40 Intro| countries and districts by natural boundaries, or of a vast
41 Intro| crude imitations of other natural sounds, but as symbols of
42 Intro| emphasis or pitch, become the natural expressions of the finer
43 Intro| succeeding ages became the natural vehicle of expression to
44 Intro| law of language which is natural and necessary. The word
45 Intro| and theology, but also of natural knowledge. Yet it is far
46 Text | names; he says that they are natural and not conventional; not
47 Text | only, and according to the natural process of cutting; and
48 Text | process of cutting; and the natural process is right and will
49 Text | HERMOGENES: I should say that the natural way is the right way.~SOCRATES:
50 Text | but the right way is the natural way, and the right instrument
51 Text | the right instrument the natural instrument.~HERMOGENES:
52 Text | be he who speaks in the natural way of speaking, and as
53 Text | be spoken, and with the natural instrument? Any other mode
54 Text | be given according to a natural process, and with a proper
55 Text | work, he must express this natural form, and not others which
56 Text | know how to put the true natural name of each thing into
57 Text | this is which you term the natural fitness of names.~SOCRATES:
58 Text | things by their right and natural names; do you not think
59 Text | birth a man, but only a natural birth. And the same may
60 Text | arbitrarily, but have a natural fitness? The names of heroes
61 Text | first of all to examine the natural fitness of the word psuche (
62 Text | offered to estia, which was natural enough if they meant that
63 Text | them, except the true and natural way, through their affinities,
Critias
Part
64 Intro| whose genius the critic and natural philosopher of modern times
65 Text | am saying.~Such was the natural state of the country, which
66 Text | please the eye, and to be a natural source of delight. The entire
Euthydemus
Part
67 Intro| Aristotelian logic any longer natural to us. We no longer put
68 Intro| it. This seems to be the natural limit of logic and metaphysics;
69 Intro| to restore them to their natural form.~He had arrived at
70 Intro| the modern world, is the natural enemy. Nor must we forget
71 Text | their own wisdom is very natural; for they have a certain
Gorgias
Part
72 Intro| there is also a certain natural growth or unity; the beginning
73 Intro| much system, and alter the natural form and connection of his
74 Intro| counteract wholly the bent of natural character; and secondly,
75 Intro| formularies, and then the light of natural justice shines forth. Pindar
76 Intro| what he and Pindar mean by natural justice. Do they suppose
77 Intro| must be in accordance with natural as well as conventional
78 Intro| of philosophers, but the natural rebellion of the higher
79 Intro| time he acknowledges the natural result, which he hardly
80 Intro| an ordinary man, from the natural rectitude of his disposition,
81 Intro| good and very bad. It is a natural reflection which is made
82 Intro| second epoch. After another natural convulsion, in which the
83 Text | And this, I say, is the natural difference between the rhetorician
84 Text | of right, which are not natural, but only conventional.
85 Text | over us, and the light of natural justice would shine forth.
86 Text | according to the law of natural right, and that the oxen
87 Text | his utterance, which is natural to his childish years. But
88 Text | even though he have good natural parts, becomes effeminate.
89 Text | what you and Pindar mean by natural justice: Do you not mean
90 Text | ones in accordance with natural right, because they are
91 Text | is what I conceive to be natural justice—that the better
92 Text | And this I affirm to be natural justice and nobility. To
93 Text | would deserve to be the true natural friend of the Athenian Demus,
94 Text | stripped of the body, all the natural or acquired affections of
Laches
Part
95 Intro| and yet (3) is based on a natural instinct. Laches exhibits
96 Text | exhibits at Athens; and this is natural. Whereas I perceive that
97 Text | and noble sentiments are natural to him. And if his words
98 Text | they were supernatural or natural; and he would provide the
Laws
Book
99 1 | reality every city is in a natural state of war with every
100 1 | but we are considering the natural principles of right and
101 1 | degrade the ancient and natural custom of love below the
102 1 | pleasure is to be deemed natural which arises out of the
103 1 | against and overcome his own natural character—since if he be
104 2 | institute melodies which have a natural truth and correctness without
105 2 | only find in any way the natural melodies, he may confidently
106 2 | First will enter in their natural order the sacred choir composed
107 2 | Every man has a more than natural elevation; his heart is
108 3 | first, they would have a natural fear ringing in their ears
109 3 | Yes, that would be the natural order of things.~Athenian.
110 3 | or reason, which are her natural lords, that I call folly,
111 4 | Athenian. These are also natural advantages.~Cleinias. Why
112 4 | prudence, but that which is the natural gift of children and animals,
113 4 | best way of expressing the natural definition of justice.~Cleinias.
114 4 | Pindar considered violence natural and justified it.~Cleinias.
115 4 | and not according to the natural way of learning, as the
116 4 | speeches; although they may be natural to all, they are not always
117 5 | the honour of the body in natural order. Having determined
118 5 | consider that there is a natural honour of the body, and
119 5 | rich—these, who are the natural plague of the state, are
120 5 | I should propose as the natural sequel would be as follows:—
121 5 | progress quite beyond his natural powers. All such things,
122 6 | and finds in them his only natural allies in time of need;
123 6 | saying, the distribution of natural equality among unequals
124 6 | towards the attainment of its natural excellence, has the greatest
125 6 | institution which is the natural sequel to this, and would
126 6 | Cleinias, if I can, to draw the natural inference.~Cleinias. Proceed.~
127 6 | birth—every animal has a natural desire for them, and is
128 7 | at that age have certain natural modes of amusement which
129 7 | hindered from completing the natural arrangement of our laws,
130 7 | enough indicated by their natural difference. The grand, and
131 7 | serious; and that God is the natural and worthy object of our
132 7 | may have their regular and natural order, and keep the city
133 7 | how their turns come in natural order. Another mode of amusing
134 7 | they free us from that natural ignorance of all these things
135 8 | To be sure, will be the natural, reply. Well, but if we
136 8 | had a way to make men use natural love and abstain from unnatural,
137 8 | there be in any place a natural dryness of the earth, which
138 9 | which have preceded in the natural order of legislation will
139 9 | acquisition, originating in natural disposition, and a miserable
140 9 | world they will pay the natural penalty which is due to
141 9 | damages to the parents, as is natural; and if the estimate be
142 9 | struck defend himself in the natural way without a weapon and
143 10 | draw you aside from your natural piety. Perhaps you have
144 10 | things is most entirely natural to them.~Cleinias. No doubt
145 10 | either case it would not be natural for the Gods who own us,
146 11 | them, not inferior to their natural fathers. Moreover, they
147 11 | other bodies according to a natural law; there is also another
148 12 | and so hindering their natural growth of hair and soles.
149 12 | all that it does, has a natural saviour, as of an animal
150 12 | who are chosen for their natural gifts, placed in the head
Lysis
Part
151 Intro| such an attachment would be natural. Suppose the indifferent,
152 Text | would appear to be of the natural or congenial. Such, Lysis
Menexenus
Part
153 Intro| mistress, Aspasia: this is the natural exaggeration of what might
154 Text | masters or servants; but the natural equality of birth compels
155 Text | milder form. How joyful and natural was the reconciliation of
156 Text | and swear. Such was the natural nobility of this city, so
Meno
Part
157 Intro| Heracleitus. It was the natural answer to two questions, ‘
158 Intro| relation to theology and natural philosophy, and for a time
159 Text | Athenian whether virtue was natural or acquired, he would laugh
160 Text | that virtue is neither natural nor acquired, but an instinct
Parmenides
Part
161 Intro| To restore them to their natural connexion and to detect
162 Intro| over thought. There is a natural realism which says, ‘Can
Phaedo
Part
163 Intro| circumstance to make the natural remark that ‘pleasure follows
164 Intro| involves the whole question of natural growth or causation; about
165 Intro| faded into the distance by a natural process as it was removed
166 Intro| we cannot reason from the natural to the spiritual, or from
167 Intro| world below (Phaedo) was a natural feeling which, in that age
168 Intro| Republic.) Such a confusion was natural, and arose partly out of
169 Intro| the argument turns on the natural continuance of the soul,
170 Intro| immortality is only in the way of natural procreation or of posthumous
171 Text | him as might have seemed natural at such an hour. But I had
172 Text | of the knowledge which is natural to us, and may not this
173 Text | again, and that there is a natural strength in the soul which
Phaedrus
Part
174 Intro| one to another with the natural freedom of conversation.~
175 Intro| perfection of anything else; natural power must be aided by art.
176 Intro| he will rather sow in the natural soil of the human soul which
177 Intro| remedy against old age. The natural process will be far nobler,
178 Intro| the one answering to the natural wants of the animal, the
179 Intro| seems to be indicated a natural yearning of the human mind
180 Intro| far above the average in natural capacity, but the seed which
181 Text | that talking to another is natural, whether friendship or mere
182 Text | whither they will; one is the natural desire of pleasure, the
183 Text | species according to the natural formation, where the joint
184 Text | by art. If you have the natural power and add to it knowledge
185 Text | which, in addition to his natural gifts, Pericles acquired
Philebus
Part
186 Intro| members, ‘according to their natural articulation, without breaking
187 Intro| preserves them in their natural state, and brings them within
188 Intro| to have divided them into natural and artificial. The pleasures
189 Intro| longer ones. This view may be natural; but on further reflection
190 Intro| origin of pleasure? Her natural seat is the mixed class,
191 Intro| restoration of limit. There is a natural union of finite and infinite,
192 Intro| neither.~But there are certain natural philosophers who will not
193 Intro| their foundation in the natural affections and in the necessity
194 Intro| risen up and re-asserted the natural sense of religion and right.~
195 Intro| constantly assuming a more natural and necessary character.
196 Intro| for all mankind? If, as is natural, we begin by thinking of
197 Intro| place in philosophy; the natural claim of dialectic to be
198 Text | I mean to say that their natural seat is in the mixed class.~
199 Text | heat is painful, and the natural restoration and refrigeration
200 Text | animal is pain, and the natural process of resolution and
201 Text | that the destroying of the natural union of the finite and
202 Text | that the restoration of the natural state is pleasure?~PROTARCHUS:
203 Text | reputed to be masters in natural philosophy, who deny the
204 Text | PROTARCHUS: Yes, that is the natural answer.~SOCRATES: Well,
205 Text | PROTARCHUS: Yes, there is a natural connexion between them.~
206 Text | their turn; this is the natural and necessary order.~PROTARCHUS:
207 Text | absolutely beautiful, and have natural pleasures associated with
208 Text | are enumerating only the natural perceptions, and have nothing
209 Text | things?~PROTARCHUS: That is natural.~SOCRATES: And are not mind
Protagoras
Part
210 Intro| with freedom, and with a natural or even wild manner of treating
211 Intro| superficial knowledge of natural philosophy, to which, as
212 Text | house, and he is himself in natural ability quite a match for
213 Text | so that they might have a natural bed of their own when they
214 Text | which, as I reply, is very natural. But when they meet to deliberate
215 Text | speaks of them, as is also natural, because they think that
216 Text | undistinguished according to their own natural capacities as flute-players,
217 Text | a barbarous language, is natural.~Do you hear, Protagoras,
The Republic
Book
218 1 | their children, besides that natural love of it for the sake
219 1 | authority not to utter them? The natural thing is, that the speaker
220 1 | or that she retains her natural power? ~Let us assume that
221 2 | health, or any other real and natural and not merely conventional
222 2 | does one thing which is natural to him and does it at the
223 2 | are not required by any natural want; such as the whole
224 2 | Will he not also require natural aptitude for his calling? ~
225 4 | the satisfaction of our natural appetites; or whether the
226 4 | and simple, which is the natural satisfaction of thirst,
227 4 | by bad education is the natural auxiliary of reason? ~Yes,
228 4 | prince, of whom he is the natural vassal-what is all this
229 4 | is the institution of a natural order and government of
230 4 | things at variance with this natural order? ~True. ~And is not
231 4 | justice the institution of a natural order and government of
232 4 | things at variance with the natural order? ~Exactly so, he said. ~
233 5 | violate, but preserve, the natural relation of the sexes. ~
234 5 | fear and hesitation were natural respecting a proposal so
235 6 | apprehension, memory, were his natural gifts. And you objected
236 6 | through inherent goodness or natural reasonableness has had his
237 6 | like these of ours having a natural unity. But a human being
238 7 | desire of theirs is very natural, if our allegory may be
239 7 | may be trusted. ~Yes, very natural. ~And is there anything
240 7 | observed that those who have a natural talent for calculation are
241 7 | force their way by their natural charm, and very likely,
242 7 | solid geometry, which, in natural order, should have followed,
243 7 | right way and so make the natural gift of reason to be of
244 7 | say, they never reach the natural harmonies of number, or
245 7 | they should also have the natural gifts which will facilitate
246 7 | Certainly, he said; he must have natural gifts. ~The mistake at present
247 7 | better able to find out the natural bent. ~That is a very rational
248 7 | will be able to see the natural relationship of them to
249 7 | think them honorable and natural as heretofore, and he fails
250 7 | Unquestionably. ~Now all this is very natural in students of philosophy
251 8 | but you will find that the natural desires of the drone commonly
252 8 | excess of slavery. ~Yes, the natural order. ~And so tyranny naturally
253 9 | the pleasures which are natural to them, if that which is
254 9 | for each one is also most natural to him? ~Yes, certainly;
255 9 | certainly; the best is the most natural. ~And when the whole soul
256 9 | greatest distance from true or natural pleasure, and the king at
257 9 | Only because they imply a natural weakness of the higher principle;
258 10 | then, speak of him as the natural author or maker of the bed? ~
259 10 | replied; inasmuch as by the natural process of creation he is
260 10 | in misfortune we feel a natural hunger and desire to relieve
261 10 | which does not engender any natural infection-this we shall
262 10 | this disorder die by the natural inherent power of destruction
263 10 | I said; if the inherent natural vice or evil of the soul
264 10 | be discerned because his natural members are broken off and
265 10 | monster than he is to his own natural form. And the soul which
266 10 | dullness, and of all the natural and acquired gifts of the
The Seventh Letter
Part
267 Text | is not at all devoid of natural gifts for learning, and
268 Text | formed a poor opinion of his natural gifts and character, and
269 Text | favourable anticipations, as was natural enough. However, I went,
270 Text | word, the man who has no natural kinship with this matter
The Sophist
Part
271 Intro| whether deserved or not, was a natural consequence of their vocation.
272 Intro| the human mind admit of a natural connexion in thought and
273 Intro| another according to the natural meaning of them. Nothing
274 Intro| unconscious, seeming to show a natural tendency in the human mind
275 Intro| subject and object, the natural order of thought is at last
276 Intro| path; and it may weaken his natural faculties of thought and
277 Intro| are determined by their natural bent to one or other of
278 Intro| tyranny and oppression has a natural fitness: he cannot be persuaded,
279 Intro| by Napoleon I. was either natural or necessary, or that any
280 Intro| ideas in history and the natural order of philosophy is hardly
281 Intro| make them appear in their natural form, stripped of the disguises
282 Intro| him in assimilating the natural order of human thought with
283 Intro| and not beyond it. It was natural that he himself, like a
The Statesman
Part
284 Intro| spectator; and destiny and natural impulse swayed the world.
285 Intro| government. But, as there is no natural ruler of the hive, they
286 Intro| interference of God, and the natural growth of the arts and of
287 Intro| language of pictures is natural to man: truth in the abstract
288 Intro| to a certain extent, a natural sense of right prevails,
289 Text | he can, either with the natural tones of his voice or with
290 Text | not think that it is only natural for the greater to be called
291 Text | like a beehive, and has no natural head who is at once recognized
292 Text | rather to wonder at the natural strength of the political
293 Text | STRANGER: Then the true and natural art of statesmanship will
The Symposium
Part
294 Intro| in the concrete, was the natural feeling of a mind dwelling
295 Intro| time contrasts with the natural and necessary eloquence
296 Intro| part asunder more than is natural in a well-regulated mind.
297 Intro| the less resolved that the natural and healthy instincts of
298 Text | conception of him was very natural, and as I imagine from what
299 Text | not help wondering at his natural temperance and self-restraint
Theaetetus
Part
300 Intro| are we not inverting the natural order in looking for opinion
301 Intro| fallacies of others. But this natural presumption is disturbed
302 Intro| entanglements which impede the natural course of human thought.
303 Intro| inseparably connected. This is the natural memory which is allied to
304 Intro| eye or ear—stronger by the natural connexion of ideas with
305 Intro| effort is made easy by the natural instrumentality of language,
306 Intro| outward object. There is a natural connexion and arrangement
307 Intro| without some use of words—some natural or latent logic— some previous
308 Intro| youth they seem to have a natural affinity to one class of
309 Intro| be that we begin with the natural use of the mind as of the
310 Intro| part of the world as the natural way of passing through existence.
311 Intro| which interfere with our natural perceptions of pleasure
312 Intro| world. It has five or six natural states or stages:—(1) sensation,
313 Intro| them.~Psychology should be natural, not technical. It should
314 Text | one who was his equal in natural gifts: for he has a quickness
315 Text | and speak in court. How natural is this!~THEODORUS: What
316 Text | as though there were some natural distinction between them?~
Timaeus
Part
317 Intro| theology, physiology, and natural philosophy in a few pages.~
318 Intro| first, Timaeus, who is a natural philosopher, will speak
319 Intro| from the centre, as was natural and suitable to him. He
320 Intro| purged it returns to its natural size.~The truth concerning
321 Intro| Elements move towards their natural places. Now as every animal
322 Intro| For the death which is natural is pleasant, but that which
323 Intro| following causes: There is a natural order in the human frame
324 Intro| longer preserving their natural courses, but at war with
325 Intro| to destruction. But the natural motion, as in the world,
326 Intro| unknown to him. He was the natural enemy of mythology, and
327 Intro| Laws); he was aware that natural phenomena like the Delta
328 Intro| comparison. The course of natural phenomena would have passed
329 Intro| and morality also found a natural expression in number and
330 Intro| a mere vagary, but is a natural result of the state of knowledge
331 Intro| part of the Timaeus—the natural order of thought is inverted.
332 Intro| vanished away. Hence it was natural for Plato to conceive of
333 Intro| them again out of their natural places. Thus want of uniformity,
334 Intro| opposite process—when the natural proportions of the four
335 Intro| when heated by it, having a natural tendency to move out of
336 Intro| advance and almost maturity of natural knowledge.~We should also
337 Intro| explained as the result of natural laws, or whether we must
338 Intro| phenomena are the result of natural forces, we must admit that
339 Intro| has been the language of natural theology down to our own
340 Intro| conjectural astronomy, conjectural natural philosophy, conjectural
341 Intro| what appear to us to be the natural inferences from them, we
342 Intro| of the Greek mind, and so natural is it to the heart of man,
343 Intro| reconciled with his dependence on natural causes. And sometimes, like
344 Intro| realized the fiction so natural to the human mind, because
345 Intro| meaning or sentences in their natural connexion. He is thinking,
346 Intro| them and partaking of the natural truth of reason, might imitate
347 Text | better than this, which is natural and suitable to the festival
348 Text | which was suitable and also natural. Now to the animal which
349 Text | circles return to their natural form, and their revolutions
350 Text | and one body is formed by natural affinity in the line of
351 Text | them and partaking of the natural truth of reason, might imitate
352 Text | enter into her; she is the natural recipient of all impressions,
353 Text | until they return to their natural state, and by reason of
354 Text | the sight returns to its natural state; but the sensations
355 Text | when alienated from their natural conditions, and pleasure
356 Text | region to an agreeable and natural condition.~In considering
357 Text | in this place it will be natural and suitable to give a rational
358 Text | but by making use of the natural sweetness of the liver,
359 Text | surface damp, would impart a natural coolness to the whole body;
360 Text | soul, and she, obtaining a natural release, flies away with
361 Text | any of them from its own natural place into another, or—since
362 Text | structures which are also natural, and this affords a second
363 Text | then destroyed. For the natural order is that the flesh
364 Text | preserving the order of their natural courses, but at war with
365 Text | is not replenished in a natural manner by food and drink
366 Text | receives no nutriment, and the natural process is inverted, and
367 Text | as there are two desires natural to man,—one of food for
368 Text | whole extent, which form the natural defence against other motions
369 Text | inactive and ceasing from its natural motion, must necessarily
370 Text | food and motion which are natural to it. And the motions which
371 Text | which they were drawn by natural affinity; and the crowns