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The Apology
Part
1 Intro| that the way in which he is supposed to corrupt the youth?’ ‘
Charmides
Part
2 PreS | language; a ship is humorously supposed to be the sailor’s bride;
3 PreS | common notions: these he supposed to exist only by participation
4 PreS | ontology.’~This theory is supposed to be based on Aristotle’
5 PreS | Later Theory of Ideas’ is supposed to be found, quite as clearly
6 Text | life which is temperate is supposed to be the good. And of two
7 Text | Socrates, is not to be supposed: but I conceive him to have
8 Text | and doings; and he must be supposed to have called such things
9 Text | wise man, may be reasonably supposed to call him wise who does
10 Text | without this knowledge may be supposed to have a feebler and weaker
Cratylus
Part
11 Intro| beauty and good; but he never supposed that they were capable of
12 Intro| natural dislike which may be supposed to exist between the ‘patrons
13 Intro| is another name, which is supposed to have some dreadful meaning,
14 Intro| night,’ and not, as is often supposed, ‘that which makes things
15 Intro| example; the word agathos was supposed by us to be a compound of
16 Intro| delta into zeta; this is supposed to increase the grandeur
17 Intro| existent languages may be supposed to be the perversion. But
18 Intro| day.’)~It can hardly be supposed that any traces of an original
19 Intro| observation possible. What is supposed to be our consciousness
20 Intro| philologians whether climate can be supposed to have exercised any influence
21 Intro| sounds, like animals, are supposed to pass into one another
22 Intro| partly because it has been supposed to imply an actual manufacture
23 Text | and always, they must be supposed to have their own proper
24 Text | the Gods must clearly be supposed to call things by their
25 Text | the case which was before supposed of a horse foaling a calf.~
26 Text | SOCRATES: Heracleitus is supposed to say that all things are
27 Text | was saying, is generally supposed to have some terrible signification.
28 Text | other words the alpha is supposed to mean ‘together,’ so the
29 Text | sophia, for all things are supposed to be in motion. Good (agathon)
30 Text | delta into zeta; this is supposed to increase the grandeur
31 Text | the original form may be supposed to have been eone, but this
32 Text | sentences; for these cannot be supposed to be made up of other names?
33 Text | the greater part may be supposed to be made up of proper
34 Text | custom and convention must be supposed to contribute to the indication
Crito
Part
35 Text | the practice of gymnastics supposed to attend to the praise
36 Text | never leave, you may be supposed to love (compare Phaedr.).
Euthydemus
Part
37 Text | art does? If medicine were supposed to have supreme authority
38 Text | as I was telling you, are supposed to be the most eminent professors
Euthyphro
Part
39 Text | And I, Euthyphro, never supposed that you did. I asked you
The First Alcibiades
Part
40 Pre | favour. They may have been supposed by him to be the writings
41 Intro| the Greeks generally, is supposed to be taken down by the
42 Text | learn or to examine what you supposed that you knew?~ALCIBIADES:
43 Text | not know what you are now supposed to know?~ALCIBIADES: Certainly.~
44 Text | ALCIBIADES: So much may be supposed.~SOCRATES: And he who knows
Gorgias
Part
45 Intro| Socrates gently points out the supposed inconsistency into which
46 Intro| the uninitiated, who are supposed to be carrying water to
47 Intro| Tityus, not Thersites, are supposed by Homer to be undergoing
48 Intro| as in other dialogues is supposed to consist in the permanent
49 Intro| wildness of his humour; he is supposed not only by Callicles, but
50 Intro| right or truth is often supposed to die in raptures, having
51 Text | them; for no one can be supposed to instruct such a vast
52 Text | those who know he cannot be supposed to have greater powers of
53 Text | inference?~GORGIAS: In the case supposed:—yes.~SOCRATES: And the
54 Text | And he who is just may be supposed to do what is just?~GORGIAS:
55 Text | About that you and I may be supposed to agree?~POLUS: Yes.~SOCRATES:
56 Text | the Macedonians, he may be supposed to be the most miserable
57 Text | suffer punishment, as you supposed, or whether to escape punishment
58 Text | not a greater evil, as I supposed. Consider:—You would say
59 Text | them is affected cannot be supposed to be of any consequence:
60 Text | whether the Athenians are supposed to have been made better
61 Text | as he is, he is naturally supposed by himself and every one
62 Text | uproar and indignation at the supposed wrong which is done to them; ‘
Laches
Part
63 Intro| noted that one of them is supposed to be a hearer of Socrates;
64 Intro| facts. For the scene must be supposed to have occurred between
65 Text | of fighting in armour is supposed to conduce? And is not that
Laws
Book
66 1 | Strangers, is a God or some man supposed to be the author of your
67 2 | Athenian. And which may be supposed to be the truer judgment—
68 5 | acting, let our selection be supposed to be completed, and the
69 7 | he is silent, then he is supposed to be pleased, but, when
70 7 | right and left hand are supposed to be by nature differently
71 7 | life among men who may be supposed to have their food and clothing
72 8 | women. The legislator may be supposed to argue the question in
73 8 | state should practise them supposed~Athenian. And what is the
74 8 | constitution may be reasonably supposed to be the only one existing
75 10 | but he who did must have supposed one of three things—either
76 10 | Surely God must not be supposed to have a nature which he
77 10 | Athenian. In a way which may be supposed to make the care of all
78 11 | determine whether he may be supposed to act from a love of money
79 11 | contentiousness. And if he is supposed to act from contentiousness,
80 11 | plead a cause; and if he is supposed to act as be does from love
81 12 | does otherwise shall be supposed to speak beside the point,
Lysis
Part
82 Text | gymnastic-master wanted him. I supposed that he had to offer sacrifice.
83 Text | evil only, and the good was supposed to have no friendship with
Menexenus
Part
84 Pre | favour. They may have been supposed by him to be the writings
85 Intro| years after the date of the supposed oration. But Plato, like
86 Intro| anachronisms, which are not supposed to strike the mind of the
87 Intro| in the Phaedrus he may be supposed to offer an example of what
88 Text | our city. Her enemies had supposed that she was exhausted by
Meno
Part
89 Intro| different manner, and are not supposed to be recovered from a former
90 Intro| which the mind of man is supposed to receive knowledge by
91 Text | the youth, are they to be supposed to have corrupted them consciously
92 Text | I have told him whom I supposed to be the teachers of these
93 Text | set aside, and cannot be supposed to be our guide in political
94 Text | reason, unless there may be supposed to be among statesmen some
Parmenides
Part
95 Intro| dialectical frenzy, such as may be supposed to have prevailed in the
96 Intro| conceptions which have been supposed in after ages to be peculiarly
97 Intro| absurdity, which may be supposed to follow from the assumption
98 Intro| consequences to the things supposed and to other things, in
99 Intro| drift, and Zeno himself is supposed to admit this. But they
100 Intro| philosophers together.’ He may be supposed to have thought more than
101 Intro| infinity. Socrates meets the supposed difficulty by a flash of
102 Intro| The interlocutor is not supposed, as in most of the other
103 Intro| and therefore they were supposed to be prior to experience—
104 Intro| always in the sense which we supposed. And Plato, while he criticizes
105 Text | rehearses a dialogue which is supposed to have been narrated in
106 Text | into being first it must be supposed to have come into being
107 Text | nor the one that is not is supposed not to be, and we are speaking
Phaedo
Part
108 Intro| fact on which it has been supposed to rest. Arguments derived
109 Intro| be weaker than was once supposed: it is not consistent with
110 Intro| world. Either the soul was supposed to exist in the form of
111 Intro| an end. It is not to be supposed that an Ardiaeus, an Archelaus,
112 Intro| immortality of the soul is supposed to rest on the conception
113 Text | which even by the vulgar is supposed to consist in the control
114 Text | compound or composite may be supposed to be naturally capable,
115 Text | unchanging?~That may be also supposed.~And, further, is not one
116 Text | another body. And they may be supposed to find their prisons in
117 Text | and moderate men may be supposed to spring from them.~Very
118 Text | mortal portion of him may be supposed to die, but the immortal
Phaedrus
Part
119 Intro| freely and is not to be supposed to have arranged every part
120 Intro| to the written law; he is supposed to be the Law personified,
121 Text | exchange two words they are supposed to meet about some affair
Philebus
Part
122 Intro| a hearer of Gorgias, is supposed to begin as a disciple of
123 Intro| true fire from heaven, is supposed to have imparted to us.
124 Intro| The ‘one and many’ is also supposed to have been revealed by
125 Intro| drinking compared with the supposed permanence of intellectual
126 Intro| Philebus, like the Cratylus, is supposed to be the continuation of
127 Intro| cannot, without indecency, be supposed to feel either joy or sorrow.~
128 Intro| discussion: the same word is now supposed to include two principles
129 Intro| moral philosophy we are supposed by them to be no better
130 Intro| evil or wholly good, is supposed to be a witness. More we
131 Text | chief good, it cannot be supposed to want anything, but if
132 Text | at any rate, cannot be supposed to have either joy or sorrow.~
133 Text | the body, for the body is supposed to be emptied?~PROTARCHUS:
134 Text | question which he may be supposed to put to himself when he
135 Text | SOCRATES: And the soul was supposed to desire the opposite of
136 Text | there may be reasonably supposed to be two sorts of arithmetic.~
137 Text | SOCRATES: One pleasure was supposed by us to be truer than another,
138 Text | SOCRATES: There was also supposed to be a difference in sciences;
Protagoras
Part
139 Intro| The Protagoras is often supposed to be full of difficulties.
140 Intro| approval of Hippias, who is supposed at once to catch the familiar
141 Text | player on the lyre may be supposed to make a man talk eloquently
142 Text | give them advice who is not supposed by them to have any skill
143 Text | things, I say, they are supposed not to teach them,—not to
144 Text | and that men are commonly supposed to know the things which
The Republic
Book
145 1 | as the government must be supposed to have power, the only
146 2 | State, whether they are supposed to have an allegorical meaning
147 2 | to change; being, as is supposed, the fairest and best that
148 3 | private individuals are supposed to address to their rulers,
149 3 | would live. ~He is generally supposed to have nothing to do. ~
150 3 | politic Asclepius may be supposed to have exhibited the power
151 3 | really designed, as is often supposed, the one for the training
152 3 | good or evil fortune is supposed by him at any time most
153 4 | Adeimantus, are not, as might be supposed, a number of great principles,
154 4 | the individuals who are supposed to possess it, e.g., the
155 4 | verse Homer has clearly supposed the power which reasons
156 4 | commands; that part too being supposed to have a knowledge of what
157 4 | the manner which we have supposed, the fundamental laws of
158 5 | True. ~Their parents may be supposed not to be blind to the risks
159 6 | which they and everybody are supposed to know, and therefore they
160 7 | before, and Agamemnon must be supposed literally to have been incapable
161 7 | them? ~Neither can this be supposed. ~And so, Glaucon, I said,
162 7 | toward his flatterers and his supposed parents, first of all during
163 7 | father and his mother and his supposed relations more than the
164 7 | himself no more about his supposed parents or other relations. ~
165 7 | in the way which has been supposed; that is to say, when the
166 8 | old servants also, who are supposed to be attached to the family,
167 9 | the democratic man. He was supposed from his youth upward to
168 9 | rules; not, as Thrasymachus supposed, to the injury of the servant,
169 10 | existence, he could hardly be supposed to be speaking the truth. ~
170 10 | the actual food, is not supposed to destroy the body; although,
171 10 | friend of the gods may be supposed to receive from them all
172 10 | may not the opposite be supposed? ~Certainly. ~Such, then,
The Second Alcibiades
Part
173 Text | He neither sought, nor supposed that he sought for good,
174 Text | an evil, as you formerly supposed?~ALCIBIADES: I do.~SOCRATES:
The Seventh Letter
Part
175 Text | Archytes, and of whom he supposed that I had a higher opinion
The Sophist
Part
176 Intro| Parmenides and Zeno, and is supposed to have descended from a
177 Intro| which his art may be also supposed to fall, and that is purification;
178 Intro| philosophy of Heracleitus, supposed to have a poetical origin
179 Intro| plurality and unity, which were supposed to be joined and severed
180 Intro| one and not many, may be supposed to contain a reference to
181 Intro| This vast ideal system is supposed to be based upon experience.
182 Intro| sceptic has stood, as he supposed, firmly rooted in the categories
183 Intro| priori truths which are supposed to transcend experience.
184 Intro| considered. All abstractions are supposed by Hegel to derive their
185 Intro| of a Divine Being, can be supposed to have made the world.
186 Text | STRANGER: Then he must be supposed to have some art.~THEAETETUS:
187 Text | imagine, is that they are supposed to have knowledge of those
188 Text | STRANGER: And may there not be supposed to be an imitative art of
189 Text | else which we originally supposed to be one is described by
190 Text | this nature must equally be supposed to exist.~THEAETETUS: Of
191 Text | in the division which was supposed to be made in the other
The Statesman
Part
192 Intro| lived near the time, are supposed to have preserved a recollection
193 Intro| this further decline is supposed to be the disorganisation
194 Intro| 1) the primitive men are supposed to be created out of the
195 Intro| the Theaetetus, evil is supposed to continue,—here, as the
196 Intro| to themselves, which is supposed to be the best way of taking
197 Text | STRANGER: May not all rulers be supposed to command for the sake
198 Text | they have one name they are supposed to be of one species also.
199 Text | STRANGER: And it may be supposed to result in the greatest
200 Text | the ancient sacrifices are supposed to be celebrated by him
201 Text | difficult to acquire, be supposed to reside? That we must
202 Text | of government can only be supposed to be the government of
203 Text | nature of their rule, must be supposed, according to our present
The Symposium
Part
204 Text | the lover; neither is he supposed to be doing anything dishonourable;
205 Text | qualities, Agathon, must be supposed to have their respective
206 Text | their young. Man may be supposed to act thus from reason;
Theaetetus
Part
207 Intro| time of his own death he is supposed to be a full-grown man.
208 Intro| is the only one which is supposed to have been written down.
209 Intro| truant souls. There he is supposed to have a mission to convict
210 Intro| his doctrine. He is then supposed to reply that the perception
211 Intro| often read the books,’ is supposed to acknowledge (so Cratylus).
212 Intro| a novel, he is not to be supposed always to represent the
213 Intro| but he is by no means supposed to be in possession of the
214 Intro| distinction which he is supposed to draw between Eristic
215 Intro| defence of Protagoras, who is supposed to reply in his own person—‘
216 Intro| And all things must be supposed to have both kinds of motion;
217 Intro| mean, may not one thing be supposed to be another? Theaetetus
218 Intro| which Protagoras himself is supposed to give of these latter
219 Intro| To which Protagoras is supposed to reply by Megarian quibbles,
220 Intro| Heraclitean philosophy which is supposed to effect the final overthrow
221 Intro| might nevertheless have been supposed to hold good (for anything
222 Intro| separation or union may be supposed to occur. And within the
223 Intro| the consequences which are supposed to flow from them.~Neither
224 Intro| philosopher of Konigsberg supposed himself to be analyzing
225 Intro| growth of language must be supposed. The child of two years
226 Intro| recognized by it.~Its sphere is supposed to be narrowed to the individual
227 Text | True.~SOCRATES: And if this supposed likeness of our faces is
228 Text | things appear, or may be supposed to be, to each one such
229 Text | fire and warmth, which are supposed to be the parent and guardian
230 Text | were just now speaking are supposed to depend: there is nothing
231 Text | knowledge in which you are supposed to excel them.~THEODORUS:
232 Text | would follow if the truth is supposed to vary with individual
233 Text | for that also was a case supposed.~THEAETETUS: True.~SOCRATES:
234 Text | twelve in the waxen block are supposed to be eleven?~THEAETETUS:
235 Text | this new view, the whole is supposed to differ from all?~THEAETETUS:
236 Text | How so?~SOCRATES: We are supposed to acquire a right opinion
Timaeus
Part
237 Intro| misunderstanding. In the supposed depths of this dialogue
238 Intro| But he seems to have supposed that the course of events
239 Intro| Homer and the poets were supposed by them to be the original
240 Intro| sometimes contrasted with their supposed failure in physical investigations. ‘
241 Intro| objects contained in it are supposed to have vanished away. Hence
242 Intro| Plato, like Empedocles, supposed to be four in number—fire,
243 Intro| sides.~The elements are supposed to pass into one another,
244 Intro| water when decomposed is supposed to give two particles of
245 Intro| earth. The particles are supposed by him to be in a perpetual
246 Intro| a parallelogram which is supposed to be inscribed in it, the
247 Intro| in which the planets are supposed to move becomes a spiral.
248 Intro| if the outer heaven is supposed to be moving around the
249 Intro| as Proclus and Simplicius supposed, understood (Greek) in the
250 Intro| the nobler affections are supposed to reside. There the veins
251 Intro| which they are formed, are supposed to pass into one another
252 Intro| respiration. Digestion is supposed to be effected by the action
253 Intro| and sensation, which he supposed to be communicated by the
254 Intro| elements—the light which is supposed to reside within the eye,
255 Intro| qualitative differences were supposed to have their origin in
256 Intro| discoveries might have been supposed to be a happy guess, taken
257 Intro| the fact that there was supposed to be a resemblance between
258 Intro| another than they themselves supposed, and nearer to him than
259 Intro| and nearer to him than he supposed. All of them are antagonistic
260 Intro| upon us. God, like man, is supposed to have an ideal of which
261 Intro| agree, and therefore may be supposed to be derived from a single
262 Intro| the order of the world is supposed to find a place in the human
263 Text | providence of God.~This being supposed, let us proceed to the next
264 Text | of the rectangular figure supposed to be inscribed in the circle
265 Text | concave; and the latter is supposed to be placed, first horizontally,
266 Text | of this movement may be supposed to be as follows. In the
267 Text | lives may with reason be supposed to have changed into the