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| Alphabetical [« »] fate 36 fated 4 fates 5 father 336 fathered 1 fathering 2 fatherland 1 | Frequency [« »] 338 work 337 knows 336 course 336 father 336 making 335 new 335 though | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances father |
The Apology
Part
1 Text | Socrates if he pretends to father these extraordinary views.
2 Text | you individually like a father or elder brother, exhorting
3 Text | of Sphettus, who is the father of Aeschines—he is present;
4 Text | of Cephisus, who is the father of Epigenes; and there are
Charmides
Part
5 PreF | to represent Plato as the father of Idealism, who is not
6 PreF | going to lay hands on my father Parmenides’ (Soph.), who
7 Text | I said; and who is his father?~Charmides, he replied,
8 Text | are sprung. There is your father’s house, which is descended
Cratylus
Part
9 Intro| the city’), because his father saved the city. The names
10 Intro| physician. The son succeeds the father as the foal succeeds the
11 Intro| country. And the name of his father, Zeus, Dios, Zenos, has
12 Text | king of the city which his father was saving, as Homer observes.~
13 Text | bear the name not of his father, but of the class to which
14 Text | irreligious son of a religious father should be called irreligious?~
15 Text | Socrates.~SOCRATES: And his father’s name is also according
16 Text | Zeus, who is his alleged father, has also an excellent meaning,
17 Text | this is the meaning of his father’s name: Kronos quasi Koros (
18 Text | maddened by the body, not even father Cronos himself would suffice
Critias
Part
19 Intro| transgress the laws of their father Poseidon. When night came,
20 Text | and sprang from the same father, having a common nature,
21 Text | reached womanhood, when her father and mother died; Poseidon
22 Text | according to the laws of their father Poseidon. This was the prayer
Crito
Part
23 Text | you into existence? Your father married your mother by our
24 Text | right in commanding your father to train you in music and
25 Text | do any other evil to your father or your master, if you had
26 Text | holier far than mother or father or any ancestor, and more
27 Text | angry, even more than a father, and either to be persuaded,
28 Text | may do no violence to his father or mother, much less may
Euthydemus
Part
29 Intro| brother is a brother, and a father is a father, not of one
30 Intro| brother, and a father is a father, not of one man only, but
31 Intro| follow: ‘Much good has your father got out of the wisdom of
32 Intro| equal in years, Crito, the father of Critobulus, like Lysimachus
33 Text | more than money, from a father or a guardian or a friend
34 Text | nephew of Heracles; and his father was not my brother Patrocles,
35 Text | my mother, but not of my father.~Then he is and is not your
36 Text | brother.~Not by the same father, my good man, I said, for
37 Text | for Chaeredemus was his father, and mine was Sophroniscus.~
38 Text | And was Sophroniscus a father, and Chaeredemus also?~Yes,
39 Text | said; the former was my father, and the latter his.~Then,
40 Text | said, Chaeredemus is not a father.~He is not my father, I
41 Text | not a father.~He is not my father, I said.~But can a father
42 Text | father, I said.~But can a father be other than a father?
43 Text | a father be other than a father? or are you the same as
44 Text | said, being other than a father, is not a father?~I suppose
45 Text | than a father, is not a father?~I suppose that he is not
46 Text | suppose that he is not a father, I replied.~For if, said
47 Text | argument, Chaeredemus is a father, then Sophroniscus, being
48 Text | Sophroniscus, being other than a father, is not a father; and you,
49 Text | than a father, is not a father; and you, Socrates, are
50 Text | Socrates, are without a father.~Ctesippus, here taking
51 Text | argument, said: And is not your father in the same case, for he
52 Text | for he is other than my father?~Assuredly not, said Euthydemus.~
53 Text | connection; but is he only my father, Euthydemus, or is he the
54 Text | Euthydemus, or is he the father of all other men?~Of all
55 Text | the same person to be a father and not a father?~Certainly,
56 Text | to be a father and not a father?~Certainly, I did so imagine,
57 Text | monstrous to suppose that your father is the father of all.~But
58 Text | that your father is the father of all.~But he is, he replied.~
59 Text | himself.~And the dog is the father of them?~Yes, he said, I
60 Text | sure he is.~Then he is a father, and he is yours; ergo,
61 Text | yours; ergo, he is your father, and the puppies are your
62 Text | him.~Then you beat your father, he said.~I should have
63 Text | sons? much good has this father of you and your brethren
64 Text | speaking about the dog and father), and what is still more
65 Text | Apollo there is, who is the father of Ion, and a family Zeus,
Euthyphro
Part
66 Intro| brought against his own father. The latter has originated
67 Intro| the command of Euthyphro’s father, who sent to the interpreters
68 Intro| Euthyphro brings against his father. Socrates is confident that
69 Intro| as I do, prosecuting your father (if he is guilty) on a charge
70 Intro| Doing as I do, charging a father with murder,’ may be a single
71 Intro| your chastisement of your father, Euthyphro, may be dear
72 Intro| chastisement on his own father), but not equally pleasing
73 Intro| you able to show that your father was guilty of murder, or
74 Intro| have prosecuted his old father. He is still hoping that
75 Intro| right in prosecuting his father has ever entered into his
76 Intro| in his prosecution of his father, who has accidentally been
77 Text | Who is he?~EUTHYPHRO: My father.~SOCRATES: Your father!
78 Text | My father.~SOCRATES: Your father! my good man?~EUTHYPHRO:
79 Text | suppose that the man whom your father murdered was one of your
80 Text | servants and slew him. My father bound him hand and foot
81 Text | diviner, he was dead. And my father and family are angry with
82 Text | murderer and prosecuting my father. They say that he did not
83 Text | impious who prosecutes a father. Which shows, Socrates,
84 Text | bringing an action against your father?~EUTHYPHRO: The best of
85 Text | instructs, and of his old father whom he admonishes and chastises.
86 Text | crime—whether he be your father or mother, or whoever he
87 Text | admit that he bound his father (Cronos) because he wickedly
88 Text | too had punished his own father (Uranus) for a similar reason,
89 Text | when I proceed against my father, they are angry with me.
90 Text | as you do, charging your father with murder.~EUTHYPHRO:
91 Text | in thus chastising your father you may very likely be doing
92 Text | ought to proceed against his father and accuse him of murder.
93 Text | have charged your aged father with murder. You would not
The First Alcibiades
Part
94 Text | highly connected both on the father’s and the mother’s side,
95 Text | of Xanthippus, whom your father left guardian of you, and
96 Text | of Coronea, at which your father Cleinias met his end, the
97 Text | entertains a suspicion that the father of a prince of Persia can
98 Text | between an affectionate father and mother and their son,
Gorgias
Part
99 Intro| harp-player, who was the father of Cinesias, failed even
100 Intro| parricide, who ‘beats his father, having first taken away
101 Text | strength goes and strikes his father or mother or one of his
102 Text | Xerxes invade Hellas, or his father the Scythians? (not to speak
103 Text | And what do you say of his father, Meles the harp-player?
104 Text | they inherited from their father. Now in the days of Cronos
Laches
Part
105 Text | Lysimachus made about his own father and the father of Melesias,
106 Text | about his own father and the father of Melesias, and which is
107 Text | as an old friend of your father; for I and he were always
108 Text | spoken?~SON: Certainly, father, this is he.~LYSIMACHUS:
109 Text | maintain the name of your father, who was a most excellent
110 Text | maintaining, not only his father’s, but also his country’
111 Text | your friend, as I was your father’s. I shall expect you to
112 Text | the whole order of their father’s house.~MELESIAS: That
113 Text | have only known Socrates’ father, and have no acquaintance
114 Text | fellow-wardsmen, in company with his father, at a sacrifice, or at some
Laws
Book
115 2 | And to that I rejoin:—O my father, did you not wish me to
116 2 | whether he be legislator or father, will be in a dilemma, and
117 3 | originated in the authority of a father and a mother, whom, like
118 3 | Dear is the son to the father—the younger to the elder.~
119 3 | obtain things which the father prays that he may not obtain.~
120 3 | Athenian. Yes; or when the father, in the dotage of age or
121 3 | justice, will join in his father’s prayers?~Megillus. I understand
122 3 | expect?~Athenian. Their father had possessions of cattle
123 3 | control and exhortation of father, mother, elders, and when
124 4 | give way to them; for a father who thinks that he has been
125 6 | for whom he votes, and his father’s name, and his tribe, and
126 6 | this colony of ours has a father and mother, who are no other
127 6 | person, and also that his father and mother have led a similar
128 6 | the relations both on the father’s and mother’s side, who
129 6 | themselves.~The betrothal by a father shall be valid in the first
130 6 | brothers who have the same father; but if there are none of
131 6 | children, going away from his father and mother. For in friendships
132 6 | shall leave to his and her father and mother their own dwelling–
133 7 | forebodings in the mind of his father and of his other kinsmen?~
134 7 | nor less, and whether his father or himself like or dislike
135 9 | avoid the ways of their father, have glory, and let honourable
136 9 | disgrace and punishment of the father is not to be visited on
137 9 | the case of some one whose father, grandfather, and great–
138 9 | shall select ten whom their father or grandfather by the mother’
139 9 | grandfather by the mother’s or father’s side shall appoint, and
140 9 | does sometimes happen) a father or a mother in a moment
141 9 | table with them, and the father or son who disobeys shall
142 9 | fit of passion has slain father or mother, undergo many
143 9 | law will allow to kill his father or his mother who are the
144 9 | fit of passion slays his father or his mother. But if brother
145 9 | law as he who has killed a father; and let the law about the
146 9 | done. He who has slain a father shall himself be slain at
147 9 | fatality to deprive his father or mother, or brethren,
148 9 | person, or by his or her father or brothers or sons. If
149 9 | warding off death from his father or mother or children or
150 9 | and introduce him to the father and forefathers of the dead
151 9 | better fortune than his father had; and when they have
152 9 | regarding him or her as his father or mother; and he shall
153 9 | an age to have been his father or his mother, out of reverence
154 9 | as he would a brother or father or still older relative.
155 9 | lay violent hands upon his father or mother, or any still
156 9 | a man dare to strike his father or his mother, or their
157 10 | from the day on which their father is convicted.~In all these
158 11 | serve him, except for his father or his mother, and their
159 11 | appear to throw dirt upon his father’s house by an unworthy occupation,
160 11 | testament, if he be the father of a family, shall first
161 11 | according to law, to him his father may give as much as he pleases
162 11 | require guardians, and: the father when he dies leaves a will
163 11 | next of kin, two on the father’s and two on the mother’
164 11 | third condition, which a father would naturally consider,
165 11 | character and disposition—the father, say, shall forgive the
166 11 | being the son of the same father or of the same mother, having
167 11 | there be only the testator’s father’s brother, or in the fifth
168 11 | in the fifth degree, his father’s brother’s son, or in the
169 11 | degree, the child of his father’s sister. Let kindred be
170 11 | make him the heir of her father’s possessions, if he be
171 11 | fourth degree the sister of a father, and in the fifth degree
172 11 | degree the daughter of a father’s brother, and in a sixth
173 11 | and in a sixth degree of a father’s sister; and these shall
174 11 | the nephew, having a rich father, will be unwilling to marry
175 11 | any one who is bereft of father or mother, shall pay twice
176 11 | the case of those who have father, though in regard to honour
177 11 | as, for example, if the father be not bad, but the son
178 11 | state, a son disowned by his father would not of necessity cease
179 11 | renounced not only by his father, who is a single person,
180 11 | these things. And if the father persuades them, and obtains
181 11 | kindred, exclusive of the father and mother and the offender
182 11 | family, of both sexes, the father shall be permitted to put
183 11 | hesitates about indicting his father for insanity, let the law
184 11 | law and tell them of his father’s misfortune, and they shall
185 11 | his advocates; and if the father is cast, he shall henceforth
186 11 | offspring of the woman and its father shall be sent away by the
187 11 | account. Now, if a man has a father or mother, or their fathers
188 11 | suppose that the prayers of a father or mother who is specially
189 11 | the Gods, than that of a father or grandfather, or of a
190 11 | makes a right use of his father and grandfather and other
Lysis
Part
191 Intro| Socrates asks Lysis whether his father and mother do not love him
192 Intro| intention of the question: ‘Your father and mother of course allow
193 Text | to me.~Why, he said, his father being a very well-known
194 Text | Lysis, I said, that your father and mother love you very
195 Text | indeed, he said.~And if your father and mother love you, and
196 Text | want to mount one of your father’s chariots, and take the
197 Text | is a charioteer, whom my father pays for driving.~And do
198 Text | Then I must say that your father is pleased to inflict many
199 Text | ever behave ill to your father or your mother?~No, indeed,
200 Text | should imagine that your father Democrates, and your mother,
201 Text | you please, and neither father nor mother would interfere
202 Text | knowledge; and whenever your father thinks that you are wiser
203 Text | rule hold as about your father? If he is satisfied that
204 Text | not only strangers, but father and mother, and the friend,
205 Text | Certainly not.~Neither can your father or mother love you, nor
206 Text | you are not wise, neither father, nor mother, nor kindred,
207 Text | love, or even hating their father or mother when they are
208 Text | is more precious to his father than all his other treasures);
209 Text | treasures); would not the father, who values his son above
210 Text | had drunk hemlock, and the father thought that wine would
Menexenus
Part
211 Text | their sons in the place of a father, and to their parents and
Meno
Part
212 Text | Can the child govern his father, or the slave his master;
213 Text | son of a wealthy and wise father, Anthemion, who acquired
214 Text | wise or good man, as his father was?~ANYTUS: I have certainly
215 Text | have been taught, would his father Themistocles have sought
Parmenides
Part
216 Intro| going to ‘lay hands on his father Parmenides.’ Nothing of
217 Intro| was last here;—I know his father’s, which is Pyrilampes.’ ‘
218 Intro| recognizes him as his spiritual father, whom he ‘revered and honoured
219 Intro| consistency in attributing to the ‘father Parmenides’ the last review
220 Text | was a long time ago; his father’s name, if I remember rightly,
Phaedo
Part
221 Text | Apollodorus, Critobulus and his father Crito, Hermogenes, Epigenes,
222 Text | have done violence to a father or a mother, and have repented
223 Text | our sorrow; he was like a father of whom we were being bereaved,
Phaedrus
Part
224 Intro| everywhere felt. (Compare Symp.) Father and mother, and goods and
225 Text | and holiest possessions, father, mother, kindred, friends,
226 Text | blame Lysias, who is the father of the brat, and let us
227 Text | convince Phaedrus, who is the father of similar beauties, that
228 Text | friend Eryximachus, or to his father Acumenus, and to say to
229 Text | instance, you who are the father of letters, from a paternal
Philebus
Part
230 Intro| analysis and synthesis to his father and mother and the neighbours,
231 Intro| ambiguous memory of some father of the Church. The odium
232 Text | makes no difference; neither father nor mother does he spare;
Protagoras
Part
233 Text | consulted either with your father or with your brother or
234 Text | whom I might not be the father. Wherefore I should much
235 Text | for example, Pericles, the father of these young men, who
236 Text | life. Mother and nurse and father and tutor are vying with
237 Text | in comparison with their father; and this is true of the
238 Text | might feel to an unnatural father or mother, or country, or
The Republic
Book
239 1 | There too was Cephalus, the father of Polemarchus, whom I had
240 1 | have been midway between my father and grandfather: for my
241 1 | what I possess now; but my father, Lysanias, reduced the property
242 2 | Sons of an illustrious father, that was not a bad beginning
243 2 | even if he chastises his father when he does wrong, in whatever
244 3 | my views, if you like to father them on me; that we must
245 3 | familiarity to his love than a father would use to his son, and
246 4 | adultery, or to dishonor his father and mother, or to fail in
247 5 | child of which he is the father, if it steals into life,
248 5 | fathers, or son's son or father's father, and so on in either
249 5 | or son's son or father's father, and so on in either direction.
250 5 | and they will call him father, and he will call their
251 5 | a brother or sister, or father or mother, or son or daughter,
252 5 | in the use of the word "father," would the care of a father
253 5 | father," would the care of a father be implied and the filial
254 5 | each will call the other father, brother, son; and if you
255 7 | will be likely to honor his father and his mother and his supposed
256 8 | be unworthy to hold their father's places, and when they
257 8 | children from the law, their father: they have been schooled
258 8 | the young son of a brave father, who dwells in an ill-governed
259 8 | says to her son that his father is only half a man and far
260 8 | anyone who owes money to his father, or is wronging him in any
261 8 | be more of a man than his father. He has only to walk abroad
262 8 | hearing, too, the words of his father, and having a nearer view
263 8 | opposite ways: while his father is watering and nourishing
264 8 | begins by emulating his father and walking in his footsteps,
265 8 | miserly and oligarchical father who has trained him in his
266 8 | Exactly. ~And, like his father, he keeps under by force
267 8 | whether the influence of a father or of kindred, advising
268 8 | them, and because he their father does not know how to educate
269 8 | you mean? ~I mean that the father grows accustomed to descend
270 8 | son is on a level with his father, he having no respect or
271 8 | be maintained out of his father's estate. ~You mean to say
272 8 | not to be supported by his father, but that the father should
273 8 | his father, but that the father should be supported by the
274 8 | supported by the son? The father did not bring him into being,
275 8 | depart, just as any other father might drive out of the house
276 8 | violence? What! beat his father if he opposes him? ~Yes,
277 9 | from an abhorrence of his father's meanness. At last, being
278 9 | who is brought up in his father's principles. ~I can imagine
279 9 | already happened to the father: he is drawn into a perfectly
280 9 | perfect liberty; and his father and friends take part with
281 9 | claim to have more than his father and his mother, and if he
282 9 | same to his withered old father, first and most indispensable
283 9 | son is a blessing to his father and mother. ~He is indeed,
284 9 | subject to the laws and to his father, were only let loose in
285 9 | began by beating his own father and mother, so now, if he
286 10 | and had murdered his aged father and his elder brother, and
The Seventh Letter
Part
287 Text | he were unwilling. To a father or mother I do not think
288 Text | the same experience as his father. For his father, having
289 Text | experience as his father. For his father, having taken under his
290 Text | he had received from his father, he had had no advantages
291 Text | would, we told him, make his father’s empire not merely double
292 Text | whereas in our own day his father had followed the opposite
293 Text | deserting the policy of his father, attempted to lower the
The Sophist
Part
294 Intro| extent the reflection of his father and master, Parmenides,
295 Intro| ventures to lay hands on his father Parmenides; or, once more,
296 Intro| that I must lay hands on my father Parmenides; but do not call
297 Text | test the philosophy of my father Parmenides, and try to prove
298 Text | venture to lay hands on my father’s argument; for if I am
The Statesman
Part
299 Intro| instructions of his God and Father, at first more precisely,
300 Text | the instructions of his Father and Creator, more precisely
The Symposium
Part
301 Intro| and Phaedrus, who is the ‘father’ of the idea, which he has
302 Intro| Socrates asks: Who are his father and mother? To this Diotima
303 Intro| of Pausanias); like his father he is bold and strong, and
304 Text | hand, and because he is the father of the thought, shall begin.~
305 Text | than at being seen by his father, or by his companions, or
306 Text | would, although he had a father and mother; but the tenderness
307 Text | that love is the love of a father or the love of a mother—
308 Text | you would, if I asked is a father a father of something? to
309 Text | if I asked is a father a father of something? to which you
310 Text | And who,’ I said, ‘was his father, and who his mother?’ ‘The
311 Text | always in distress. Like his father too, whom he also partly
312 Text | again alive by reason of his father’s nature. But that which
313 Text | birth is the cause; for his father is wealthy and wise, and
314 Text | too, who is the revered father of Athenian laws; and many
315 Text | arose as from the couch of a father or an elder brother.~What
Theaetetus
Part
316 Intro| but the property of his father has disappeared in the hands
317 Intro| and if Protagoras, “the father of the myth,” had been alive,
318 Intro| receive them ‘first on his father and mother, secondly on
319 Text | THEODORUS: The name of his father I have forgotten, but the
320 Text | Protagoras, who was the father of the first of the two
Timaeus
Part
321 Intro| young Phaethon who drove his father’s horses the wrong way,
322 Intro| the cause is the ineffable father of all things, who had before
323 Intro| intelligence is perfected.~When the Father who begat the world saw
324 Intro| the source or spring to a father, the intermediate nature
325 Intro| being, in obedience to their Father’s will and in order to make
326 Intro| thought to answer to God the Father; or the world, in whom the
327 Intro| in his works, who, like a father, lives over again in his
328 Intro| to the world below.’ ‘The father and maker of all this universe
329 Text | yoked the steeds in his father’s chariot, because he was
330 Text | them in the path of his father, burnt up all that was upon
331 Text | created by a cause. But the father and maker of all this universe
332 Text | opposite of the truth.~When the father and creator saw the creature
333 Text | whom I am the artificer and father, my creations are indissoluble,
334 Text | and were obedient to their father’s word, and receiving from
335 Text | the source or spring to a father, and the intermediate nature
336 Text | remembering the command of their father when he bade them create