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The Apology
Part
1 Intro| habitual irony acquires a new meaning and a sort of tragic
2 Intro| receives, but introduces other new divinities.’ These last
3 Intro| receives, and has other new gods. ‘Is that the way in
4 Intro| Yes, it is.’ ‘Has he only new gods, or none at all?’ ‘
5 Intro| receives, and has other new divinities’ —but of the
6 Intro| remarked that the prophecy of a new generation of teachers who
7 Text | the state, but has other new divinities of his own. Such
8 Text | acknowledges, but some other new divinities or spiritual
9 Text | divine or spiritual agencies (new or old, no matter for that);
Charmides
Part
10 Ded | entitled to receive a copy of a new Edition at half-price.~
11 PreF | Alfred Robinson, Fellow of New College, who read with me
12 PreS | page and arrive at some new view or aspect of the subject.
13 PreS | same passage without any new aspect or modification of
14 PreS | is no reason why in the New Testament (Greek) should
15 PreS | one into the other, but a new beginning, partly artificial,
16 PreS | surprised to find that the new is ever old, and that the
17 PreS | put forward an entirely new explanation of the Platonic ‘
18 PreS | The preparations for the new departure are discovered
19 PreS | context and placing them in a new connexion when they seem
20 Text | attained), and to raise a new one in which I will attempt
21 Text | that wisdom, viewed in this new light merely as a knowledge
Cratylus
Part
22 Intro| Hence his ridicule of the new school of etymology is interspersed
23 Intro| ridiculing the fancies of a new school of sophists and grammarians.
24 Intro| from Euthyphro; and now a new and ingenious idea comes
25 Intro| selas) which is ever old and new, and which, as Anaxagoras
26 Intro| word must be tested by some new method. Will you help me
27 Intro| genius, and come with a new force and association to
28 Intro| everywhere else, and the new use of an old and familiar
29 Intro| aware that he has acquired a new power. Many thousand times
30 Intro| learning to think and speak a new language, of the deaf and
31 Intro| combination of them into a new word; there is the distinction
32 Intro| person may have introduced a new custom into the formation
33 Intro| we ever attempt to invent new words or to alter the meaning
34 Intro| taking thought’ can make new words or constructions?
35 Intro| Greek grammar has received a new character from comparative
36 Intro| the assignment to them of new meanings. The vacuity and
37 Intro| received in another way a new character; it affected not
38 Intro| speech which is given by a new formation or pronunciation
39 Intro| the necessity of finding new expressions for new classes
40 Intro| finding new expressions for new classes or processes of
41 Intro| themselves acquiescing in a new pronunciation or use of
42 Intro| word may easily pass into a new sense: a new meaning caught
43 Intro| pass into a new sense: a new meaning caught up by association
44 Intro| utilized for the same reason. New meanings of words push themselves
45 Intro| grammarian, if he were to form new words, would make them all
46 Intro| or Milton, not only have new powers of expression been
47 Intro| expression would have given a new shade of meaning to the
48 Intro| admixture of rhyme, make up a new kind of harmony, swelling
49 Intro| words and sentences used in new senses or in a new order
50 Intro| used in new senses or in a new order or even a little perverted
51 Intro| first used for ourselves a new word or phrase or figure
52 Intro| is embodied in it. In any new use of a word all the existing
53 Intro| required to explain some new idea to a popular audience
54 Intro| introduced into the world a new science which more than
55 Intro| political importance. It gives a new interest to distant and
56 Text | that and give another, the new name is as correct as the
57 Text | for at this very moment a new and ingenious thought strikes
58 Text | terrified at this; whereas the new name means only that the
59 Text | about the moon is always new (neon) and always old (enon),
60 Text | his revolution always adds new light, and there is the
61 Text | is always old and always new (enon neon aei) she may
62 Text | esis (the desire of the new); the word neos implies
63 Text | examined according to some new method?~HERMOGENES: Very
64 Text | you must find out some new notion of correctness of
65 Text | present convention, or make a new and opposite one, according
Euthydemus
Part
66 Intro| It was long before the new world of ideas which had
67 Intro| which linger among us, and new ones are constantly springing
68 Intro| There might certainly be a new science of logic; it would
69 Intro| secondly, it might furnish new forms of thought more adequate
70 Intro| days; it might also suggest new methods of enquiry derived
71 Intro| this they have now added a new accomplishment—the art of
72 Intro| Ctesippus, imitating the new wisdom, replies, ‘And do
73 Intro| old is dying out, and the new has not yet come into full
74 Text | me, Socrates; they are a new importation of Sophists,
75 Text | they had none of their new wisdom. I am only apprehensive
76 Text | from some one else this new sort of death and destruction
77 Text | or a camp hands over his new acquisition to the statesman,
78 Text | the wit to shoot up many new heads when one of them was
Euthyphro
Part
79 Intro| proceeds to analyze the new form of the definition.
80 Text | gods, and that I invent new gods and deny the existence
The First Alcibiades
Part
81 Text | you insist on having a new and different refutation;
82 Text | another which is clean and new. Now I shall disregard this
Gorgias
Part
83 Intro| Most great works receive a new light from a new and original
84 Intro| receive a new light from a new and original mind. But whether
85 Intro| mind. But whether these new lights are true or only
86 Intro| Sophists; but favours the new art of rhetoric, which he
87 Intro| remark that laughter is a new species of refutation. Polus
88 Intro| figures are suggestive of some new aspect under which the mind
89 Intro| like the parables of the New Testament, or the oracles
90 Intro| suffer injustice.~Compare the New Testament—~‘It is better
91 Intro| time awaken and develop a new life in us.~Second Thesis:—~
92 Intro| ever brings to the birth a new political conception. One
93 Intro| principle he invests with a new dignity; he finds a noble
94 Intro| tradition Plato makes a new beginning for his society: (
95 Intro| the tale to its truth. The new order of the world was immediately
96 Text | since any one has asked me a new one.~CHAEREPHON: Then you
97 Text | Polus? Well, this is a new kind of refutation,—when
98 Text | now you bring forward a new notion; the superior and
99 Text | are losing not only their new acquisitions, but also their
Laches
Part
100 Intro| very much in favour of the new art, which he describes
101 Intro| quite ready to accept the new art, which Laches treats
102 Text | courage, according to this new definition of yours, instead
Laws
Book
103 2 | traditional forms and invent new ones. To this day, no alteration
104 2 | arises out of pleasure in the new and weariness of the old,
105 3 | exiles came again, under a new name, no longer Achaeans,
106 3 | would promise us that our new enquiry about legislation
107 3 | legislator attempts to make a new settlement of such matters,
108 4 | more disposed to listen to new laws; but then, to make
109 5 | being a despot, sets up a new government and laws, even
110 5 | to be the founders of a new state as yet free from enmity—
111 5 | legislator is establishing a new state or restoring an old
112 5 | are going to colonize a new country.~Cleinias. Your
113 6 | have offered to settle the new state on behalf of the people
114 6 | become a citizen of the new state; and if you and they
115 6 | Megillus take a part in our new city?~Athenian. O, Cleinias,
116 6 | of the way in which the new citizens may be best managed
117 6 | shown by their care of the new city; and there is a similar
118 6 | shall return home, and the new city do the best she can
119 6 | according to this rule order the new city which is now being
120 6 | probable at the foundation of a new city, priests and priestesses
121 6 | longer period, when the new year is about to commence,
122 6 | on the beginning of your new discourse to the end of
123 6 | shall establish and use the new laws with the others which
124 6 | Athenian. The city being new and hitherto uninhabited,
125 7 | ought to bind together the new state in every possible
126 7 | he who devises something new and out of the way in figures
127 7 | dishonoured among them and the new to be honoured. And I affirm
128 7 | become habituated to their new food. A similar principle
129 7 | even desiring to imitate new modes either in dance or
130 9 | accordingly. But shall this new word of ours, like an oracle
131 11 | separation, should choose their new partners with a view to
132 12 | to extend for ever, and a new mound will not be required.
133 12 | necessary, for the order of our new state, considering and correcting
134 12 | What do you mean, and what new thing is this?~Athenian.
Lysis
Part
135 Intro| request of Lysis, asks him a new question: ‘What is friendship?
136 Intro| draws out the latter by a new sort of irony, which is
137 Intro| of one another for making new friends, or for not revealing
138 Text | on telling him something new, and let me hear, as long
139 Text | but, in order that this new statement may not delude
Menexenus
Part
140 Text | king was going to make a new attempt upon the Hellenes,
Meno
Part
141 Intro| previous Dialogues. But the new truth is no sooner found
142 Intro| Aristophanes, to regard the new opinions, whether of Socrates
143 Intro| different times of his life, as new distinctions are realized,
144 Intro| distinctions are realized, or new stages of thought attained
145 Intro| which they put together in a new form. Their great diversity
146 Intro| proceeds he makes for himself new modes of expression more
147 Intro| begins to flow again under new conditions, at first confined
148 Intro| thoughts appeared to be new and original, but they carried
149 Intro| unconscious. They stood in a new relation to theology and
150 Intro| semi-barbarous Latin, and putting a new meaning into them. Unlike
151 Intro| the same was revived in a new form by Descartes. But now
152 Intro| to receive knowledge by a new method and to work by observation
153 Intro| age, groping about for a new method more comprehensive
Parmenides
Part
154 Intro| illustration, taken at random, of a new method. They seem to have
155 Intro| classification. These were the ‘new weapons,’ as he terms them
156 Intro| contain. We cannot call a new metaphysical world into
157 Intro| more than we can frame a new universal language; in thought
158 Text | telling us something which is new. For you, in your poems,
159 Text | anything else, another; and new ideas will be always arising,
160 Text | on a further review, any new aspect of the question appears.~
161 Text | But what do you say to a new point of view? Must not
162 Text | one appears to create a new element in them which gives
Phaedo
Part
163 Intro| them all for the best. The new teacher will show me this ‘
164 Intro| disappointment! For he found that his new friend was anything but
165 Intro| waters of which it gains new and strange powers. This
166 Intro| another body and entering into new relations, but retaining
167 Intro| found to be developed by new circumstances, like stunted
168 Intro| civilized man in old and new countries, may be indefinitely
169 Intro| immortality of the soul was not new to the Greeks in the age
170 Intro| philosophies arose, and some new elements were added to the
171 Text | Quite true.~Then here is a new way by which we arrive at
172 Text | Lingering, and sitting by a new made grave, As loath to
173 Text | some confused notion of a new method, and can never admit
174 Text | very well.~There is nothing new, he said, in what I am about
Phaedrus
Part
175 Intro| for trying to invent ‘a new shudder’ instead of bringing
176 Intro| peacemakers’ between the new and old are liable to serious
177 Intro| the old literature and the new was present to the mind
178 Intro| which has come to life in new forms and been developed
179 Intro| of later ages. And when new books ceased to be written,
180 Intro| oriental. No one had anything new to say, or any conviction
181 Intro| to persons living under new conditions may lead to many
182 Intro| conditions may lead to many new combinations of thought
183 Intro| intelligence out of which new waters may flow and cover
184 Text | love at the pleasure of the new. And how, in a matter of
185 Text | equal in length and entirely new, on the same subject; and
186 Text | great little, disguise the new in old fashions and the
187 Text | fashions and the old in new fashions, and have discovered
Philebus
Part
188 Intro| weapons of another make,’ i.e. new categories and modes of
189 Intro| have a right to attribute a new predicate (i.e. ‘good’)
190 Intro| further, we shall require some new weapons; and by this, I
191 Intro| weapons; and by this, I mean a new classification of existence. (
192 Intro| it inconceivable that a new enthusiasm of the future,
193 Intro| Unless we are looking for a new moral world which has no
194 Intro| will often seem to open a new world to him, like the religious
195 Intro| be using the term in some new and transcendental sense,
196 Intro| as the anticipation of a new logic, that ‘In going to
197 Text | are, you apply to them a new predicate, for you say that
198 Text | among men by the hands of a new Prometheus, and therewith
199 Text | approach and grasp this new argument.~PROTARCHUS: Proceed.~
200 Text | SOCRATES: Here are two new principles.~PROTARCHUS:
Protagoras
Part
201 Intro| Socrates then applies this new conclusion to the case of
202 Intro| art of rhetoric and the new science of interrogation
203 Intro| desirous of substituting a new interpretation of his own;
The Republic
Book
204 1 | the festival, which was a new thing. I was delighted with
205 1 | than that of the just, his new statement appears to me
206 3 | of lie? he said. ~Nothing new, I replied; only an old
207 4 | then, is a discovery of new evils, I said, against which
208 4 | he may be praising, not new songs, but a new kind of
209 4 | praising, not new songs, but a new kind of song; and this ought
210 5 | city will offer, that the new generation may be better
211 6 | have nothing to say in this new game of which words are
212 6 | as you are aware, these new Sophists and educators,
213 6 | takes a bath and puts on a new coat, and is decked out
214 6 | and to lose itself in the new soil, even so this growth
215 6 | supposed-if they view him in this new light, they will surely
216 7 | be needed to acquire this new habit of sight might be
217 7 | that was said. ~Then this new kind of knowledge must have
218 8 | of the change. ~And the new government which thus arises
219 8 | they proceed? Clearly, the new State, being in a mean between
220 8 | said, and these are the new citizens whom he has called
221 9 | succession of pleasures, and the new got the better of the old
222 9 | may, I think, furnish a new demonstration. ~Of what
223 10 | Mortal souls, behold a new cycle of life and mortality.
224 10 | the soul, when choosing a new life, must of necessity
The Second Alcibiades
Part
225 Text | averted, but called down new ones. And was not his prayer
The Seventh Letter
Part
226 Text | affairs. Well, even in the new government, unsettled as
227 Text | method by which I could make new friends. The laws too, written
228 Text | write to tell him of this new proposal. His next step
229 Text | he always devising some new way of scaring me back and
The Sophist
Part
230 Intro| descended education, and the new principle of education is
231 Intro| old, the revelation of the new. But each one of the company
232 Intro| again become concrete in a new and higher sense. They also
233 Intro| Thales said ‘All is water’ a new era began to dawn upon the
234 Intro| Socrates presented in a new form as the study of ethics.
235 Intro| without the assistance of new forms of thought. One of
236 Intro| of opposites has supplied new instruments of thought for
237 Intro| allow him to build up in a new form the ‘beggarly elements’
238 Intro| knowledge, and wait to see what new forms may be developed out
239 Intro| known, whether, for example, new discoveries may not one
240 Intro| obsolete, or are used in new senses, whereas ‘individual,’ ‘
241 Intro| greatly increased when the new is confused with the old,
242 Intro| the student has to learn a new language of uncertain meaning
243 Intro| which would have opened a new world to him. He makes no
244 Intro| recognize in his system a new logic supplying a variety
245 Text | STRANGER: And shall we call our new friend unskilled, or a thorough
246 Text | and ‘other’? Are they two new kinds other than the three,
The Statesman
Part
247 Intro| withdrawn from view; and new foes begin to appear under
248 Intro| Thessaly. These suggest a new division into the rearing
249 Intro| during infinite ages. This new action is spontaneous, and
250 Intro| in the beginning of the new cycle all was well enough,
251 Intro| and then let him impose new laws. But is a physician
252 Intro| first generation of the new cycle, who lived near the
253 Intro| of the gradual rise of a new society in the Third Book
254 Intro| and may often originate new directions of enquiry. Plato
255 Intro| Statesman of Plato, as in the New Testament, the word has
256 Intro| tends to degenerate into a new kind of idolatry. Neither
257 Intro| also power, would breathe a new religious life into the
258 Intro| hardly the introduction of new laws or modes of industry.
259 Intro| satyrs and monkeys. In this new disguise the Sophists make
260 Text | asked you, because here is a new division of the management
261 Text | Plato is here introducing a new suddivision, i.e. that of
262 Text | STRANGER: Then let us make a new beginning, and travel by
263 Text | earthquake, which wrought a new destruction of all manner
264 Text | YOUNG SOCRATES: What is this new question?~STRANGER: Take
265 Text | venture to suggest this new remedy, although not contemplated
266 Text | neither himself giving any new commandments, nor the patient
The Symposium
Part
267 Intro| He professes to open a new vein of discourse, in which
268 Intro| sameness of existence, but the new mortality is always taking
269 Intro| opposites he explains in a new way as the harmony after
270 Intro| Comic poets; and in the New Comedy the allusions to
271 Intro| Socrates is himself ‘a prophet new inspired’ with Bacchanalian
272 Text | pity of them invented a new plan: he turned the parts
273 Text | generation always leaves behind a new existence in the place of
274 Text | same although in reality new, according to that law of
275 Text | mortality leaving another new and similar existence behind—
Theaetetus
Part
276 Intro| arrangements may suggest new views to the student of
277 Intro| nature of knowledge is not new to him; long ago he has
278 Intro| ideas, or illustrated a new method, his aim has been
279 Intro| were vainly trying to find new combinations of them, or
280 Intro| of the old world and the new, were not yet fixed. The
281 Intro| to put the question in a new form. He proceeds as follows:—‘
282 Intro| of the Sophist; and the new state or opinion is not
283 Intro| every one. But this begins a new question. ‘Well, Socrates,
284 Intro| falsehood,’ but passes on. The new notion involves a process
285 Intro| has no sooner found the new solution than he sinks into
286 Intro| combinations are known. But this new hypothesis when tested by
287 Intro| imagination, nor to the new world of reflection and
288 Intro| difficulty in following this new hypothesis. For must not
289 Intro| attempts to explain the new definition of knowledge
290 Intro| a generation, before the new structure can begin to rise.
291 Intro| combinations and consequences. New and unchangeable properties
292 Intro| sense, but gives them a new content by comparing and
293 Intro| and puts it together on a new pattern. The universals
294 Intro| day or two the world has a new interest to him; he alone
295 Intro| follow custom, to have no new ideas or opinions, not to
296 Intro| through which, as through some new optical instrument limiting
297 Intro| ones; under the pretence of new investigations it may be
298 Intro| the appetites and create a new language in which they too
299 Intro| The mind is regarded from new points of view, and becomes
300 Intro| and becomes adapted to new conditions of knowledge.
301 Intro| all together they gave a new existence to the mind in
302 Intro| have not established the new; their views of philosophy,
303 Intro| and their analogies are new faculties, discovered by
304 Intro| immeasurably increased.~II. The new Psychology, whatever may
305 Intro| of Physiology may throw a new light on Psychology is a
306 Intro| comes back to us, not as new knowledge, but as a thing
307 Intro| remembered, and yet, when a new beginning is made, the old
308 Intro| of rest or vacancy, as a new train of thought suddenly
309 Intro| equally noticeable that the new thought may occur to us,
310 Intro| old nature of man into a new one, wrought by shame or
311 Text | into being and passing into new forms; nor can any name
312 Text | Protagoras. Here arises a new question, Theodorus, which
313 Text | themselves, and must get a new language. I know of no word
314 Text | or begin over again in a new way.~THEAETETUS: Begin again,
315 Text | SOCRATES: According to this new view, the whole is supposed
Timaeus
Part
316 Intro| Hence there are several new beginnings and resumptions
317 Intro| are continually assuming new forms. Somebody asks what
318 Intro| animal has the triangles new and closely locked together,
319 Intro| has an auburn colour, when new flesh is decomposed by the
320 Intro| Behind any pair of ideas a new idea which comprehended
321 Intro| peopled with abstractions; a new world was called into existence
322 Intro| with them and so forming a new existence, is or becomes
323 Intro| 3) a reunion of them in new forms. Plato himself proposes
324 Intro| obscurity to him. He attributes new meanings to the words of
325 Intro| Sir Thomas More and the New Atlantis of Bacon, although
326 Intro| well as from the Old and New Testament; also from the
327 Intro| which are ever assuming some new form.~When we have shaken
328 Intro| surely the discovery of the New World was preceded by a
329 Text | let us begin again.~This new beginning of our discussion
330 Text | we to attribute to this new kind of being? We reply,
331 Text | vacant space whence the new air had come up; and the
332 Text | them they do not intrude a new and discordant motion, but
333 Text | the triangles of each kind new, and may be compared to
334 Text | with the bitter matter when new flesh is decomposed by the
335 Text | formed by the liquefaction of new and tender flesh when air