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The Apology
Part
1 Intro| acquitted ‘if in any moderate degree he would have conciliated
2 Intro| understood as applying with any degree of certainty to the Platonic
3 Text | them illiterate to such a degree as not to know that these
Charmides
Part
4 PreF | of the Introduction. The degree of accuracy which I have
5 PreS | intelligences, and in some degree, more perhaps than others,
6 PreS | realize to a very imperfect degree the common distinction between (
7 PreS | Parm.) ‘in the smallest degree prove his point’; and that
8 Text | quickness will be the higher degree of temperance, if temperance
9 Text | sake, and perhaps in some degree also for the sake of my
10 Text | truth; but mocks us to a degree, and has gone out of its
Cratylus
Part
11 Intro| always falls short in some degree of the original, and if
12 Intro| not see that there is a degree of deception about names?
13 Intro| to philology in the same degree as to most of the physical
14 Intro| resolved into differences of degree. But we must not assume
15 Intro| experience, and throws some degree of light upon a dark corner
16 Intro| words everywhere in every degree of clearness and consistency,
17 Intro| contributed in an appreciable degree to the formation of language. ‘
18 Intro| has attained to any high degree of literary excellence.~
19 Intro| they demanded a greater degree of freedom, and to those
20 Text | are compounded bore some degree of resemblance to the objects
Critias
Part
21 Intro| Persia, perhaps in some degree also of the wars of the
22 Intro| empire there might be a degree of virtue and justice, such
23 Text | artist who is able in any degree to imitate the earth and
Euthydemus
Part
24 Intro| and even differences of degree, when applied to abstract
25 Intro| respondere parati.’ Some superior degree of wit or subtlety is attributed
26 Text | goods in themselves, but the degree of good and evil in them
The First Alcibiades
Part
27 Pre | etc., have an inferior degree of evidence in their favour.
28 Pre | portion scarcely in any degree affects our judgment of
29 Text | that you must possess this degree of excellence, rather look
Gorgias
Part
30 Intro| secondly, a man may have a degree of justice, but not sufficient
31 Intro| and happy in the second degree he who has been healed by
32 Intro| pain in nearly the same degree, and sometimes the bad man
33 Intro| man or coward in a greater degree. Therefore the bad man or
34 Intro| human conduct. There is some degree of unfairness in opposing
35 Intro| possessed by Plato in a degree which has never been equalled.~
36 Text | above all, and in the next degree his family or any of his
37 Text | saying, in nearly equal degree; but are the cowards more
38 Text | pained in a nearly equal degree?~CALLICLES: Yes.~SOCRATES:
39 Text | and bad in a nearly equal degree, or have the bad the advantage
40 Text | than to suffer, is in that degree worse; and the other position,
Laches
Part
41 Intro| reclaims, but is in some degree mollified by a compliment
42 Text | other animal, has such a degree of wisdom that he knows
Laws
Book
43 1 | of war, much in the same degree as justice and temperance
44 2 | neither harm nor good in any degree worth speaking of.~Cleinias.
45 3 | found to illustrate in some degree our proposed design:—Shall
46 3 | is beneficial in the next degree; and so each of them will
47 4 | oligarchy; and, in the third degree, from a democracy: is not
48 4 | victorious in the first degree shall be given the highest
49 5 | softer and has a proper degree of elasticity;—in a similar
50 5 | them, no legislator of any degree of sense will proceed a
51 5 | rich. And good in a high degree, and rich in a high degree
52 5 | degree, and rich in a high degree at the same time, he cannot
53 5 | that there is a certain degree of truth in your words;
54 6 | hope of escaping in some degree from factions. For equity
55 6 | shall be valid in the first degree, that by a grandfather in
56 6 | grandfather in the second degree, and in the third degree,
57 6 | degree, and in the third degree, betrothal by brothers who
58 6 | friendships there must be some degree of desire, in order to cement
59 6 | capacity for virtue, in that degree the consequence of such
60 7 | amusement or instruction in any degree worth, speaking of in war,
61 7 | action, if he is to have any degree of virtue. And for this
62 7 | agree with you that such a degree of knowledge as will enable
63 8 | terrors and to a certain degree show the man who has and
64 8 | not disgraceful, in what degree will they contribute to
65 9 | partakes also in the same degree of the fair and honourable.~
66 9 | admitted to be in the same degree fair and honourable, if
67 9 | are infinite in number and degree, and that they are, at once,
68 9 | justice are in the highest degree confused and contradictory.
69 9 | at any rate in a far less degree; and he must in addition
70 9 | man himself, and in a less degree to the chiefs of the state.
71 9 | of the exiled man to the degree of sons of cousins, both
72 10 | share; and in the second degree great when they are committed
73 10 | sepulchres, and in the third degree (not to repeat the acts
74 10 | with nature, but in a less degree, and have more of art; also
75 11 | the Gods; and in the next degree, he who tells a falsehood
76 11 | likewise, and so in the fourth degree, if there be only the testator’
77 11 | brother, or in the fifth degree, his father’s brother’s
78 11 | brother’s son, or in the sixth degree, the child of his father’
79 11 | the heiress in the first degree be a sister, and in a second
80 11 | sister, and in a second degree a daughter of a brother,
81 11 | a sister, in the fourth degree the sister of a father,
82 11 | father, and in the fifth degree the daughter of a father’
83 11 | brother, and in a sixth degree of a father’s sister; and
84 11 | kinsmen, according to the degree of relationship and right,
85 12 | will if the thing is in any degree possible.~Athenian. Let
Menexenus
Part
86 Pre | etc., have an inferior degree of evidence in their favour.
87 Pre | portion scarcely in any degree affects our judgment of
Meno
Part
88 Intro| verbal and does not in any degree affect the nature of things.
89 Text | seem, assisted him in some degree to the discovery of the
Parmenides
Part
90 Intro| or younger in a greater degree than they were at first
91 Intro| they are in the highest degree unlike. And all other opposites
92 Intro| whatever sense and in whatever degree they are one they cease
93 Intro| be many; and in whatever degree or sense they are many they
94 Text | likeness become in that degree and manner like; and so
95 Text | unlikeness become in that degree unlike, or both like and
96 Text | both like and unlike in the degree in which they participate
97 Text | than the others in the same degree that the others are other
98 Text | nor less, then in a like degree?~Yes.~In virtue of the affection
99 Text | or younger in a greater degree than it was at first; for
Phaedo
Part
100 Intro| of a God—also in a less degree on the impossibility of
101 Intro| to imagine differences of degree?—putting the whole human
102 Intro| process of transition from one degree of good or evil to another.
103 Intro| gentler, and he has in no degree lost his interest in dialectics;
104 Text | whether the likeness in any degree falls short or not of that
105 Text | liable at times to some degree of change? or are they each
106 Text | one soul in the very least degree more or less, or more or
107 Text | fascinated by them to such a degree that my eyes grew blind
108 Text | not incline any way in any degree, but will always remain
109 Text | and fruits—are in a like degree fairer than any here; and
110 Text | stones in them in a like degree smoother, and more transparent,
111 Text | much lower, but all in some degree lower than the point from
Phaedrus
Part
112 Intro| seen truth in the second degree, into a king or warrior;
113 Intro| but also ‘with a certain degree of seriousness,’ we may
114 Text | seen truth in the second degree shall be some righteous
115 Text | detect the greater or less degree of likeness in other things
Philebus
Part
116 Intro| march in the dialogue, and a degree of confusion and incompleteness
117 Intro| mind, or perhaps, in some degree, to a carelessness about
118 Intro| philosophers will deny that a degree of pleasure attends eating
119 Intro| constantly affords some degree of pleasure, the antecedent
120 Intro| repetition of either, but to the degree of truth which they attain—
121 Intro| possessed in the highest degree by dialectic. And do not
122 Intro| in the necessity of some degree of truth and justice in
123 Intro| shared by all of us in some degree, and is capable of being
124 Intro| principle is in the highest degree agreeable to it. For what
125 Intro| to happiness in the same degree in which they are right (
126 Intro| in kind to differences in degree; we obliterate the stamp
127 Intro| imaginative nature in any degree, the doctrine of utility
128 Text | Yes, certainly, and in a degree surpassing all other things.~
129 Text | infinite in quantity and degree.~SOCRATES: Nor would pain,
130 Text | imparts to pleasure some degree of good. But now—admitting,
131 Text | lives were compared, no degree of pleasure, whether great
132 Text | Yes, Socrates, and in a degree far greater.~SOCRATES: Then
133 Text | when he is pleased, in that degree excels in virtue?~PROTARCHUS:
134 Text | their help to a greater degree of accuracy than the other
135 Text | rather than with a certain degree of pleasure, or all pleasure
136 Text | rather than with a certain degree of wisdom?~PROTARCHUS: Certainly
Protagoras
Part
137 Intro| political virtues to a certain degree, and are obliged to say
138 Intro| all men are teachers in a degree. Some, like Protagoras,
139 Intro| five virtues are in some degree similar; but he still contends
140 Intro| virtue is in the highest degree good:—~The courageous are
141 Text | that a man must have some degree of honesty; and that if
142 Text | holiness have but a small degree of likeness?~Certainly not;
143 Text | good, and in the highest degree.~Tell me then; who are they
144 Text | and fewer, and differ in degree? For if any one says: ‘Yes,
The Republic
Book
145 2 | results, but in a far greater degree for their own sakes-like
146 3 | firmly and wisely; in a less degree when he is overtaken by
147 3 | melody, and the rhythm; that degree of knowledge I may presuppose? ~
148 3 | depart, in ever so slight a degree, from their customary regimen? ~
149 4 | beautify the eyes to such a degree that they are no longer
150 4 | Precisely. ~And the greatest degree of evil-doing to one's own
151 5 | and qualities in a higher degree than the female? Need I
152 5 | possible but in the highest degree beneficial to the State? ~
153 5 | matrimony sacred in the highest degree, and what is most beneficial
154 5 | robbing a corpse, and also a degree of meanness and womanishness
155 5 | attainment in him of a higher degree of justice than is to be
156 5 | which they exhibited and the degree in which we resembled them,
157 5 | Both; and in no small degree. ~And also to be within
158 6 | art corrupt them in any degree worth speaking of? Are not
159 6 | such things which in any degree falls short of the whole
160 6 | have clearness in the same degree that their objects have
161 7 | geometry-whether that tends in any degree to make more easy the vision
162 7 | conception, in whatever degree he fails, may in that degree
163 7 | degree he fails, may in that degree also be said to fail in
164 9 | of knowledge in the same degree as of essence? ~Yes, of
165 9 | of knowledge in the same degree. ~And of truth in the same
166 9 | And of truth in the same degree? ~Yes. ~And, conversely,
167 9 | pleasures in the highest degree which is attainable to them,
168 10 | single thing with a higher degree of accuracy than any other
169 10 | imitators in the highest degree? ~Very true. ~And now tell
170 10 | creations have an inferior degree of truth-in this, I say,
The Sophist
Part
171 Intro| individuals can corrupt youth to a degree worth speaking of in comparison
172 Intro| that the two cannot in any degree be distinguished, is clearly
173 Intro| regarded as a difference of degree. One is to the other as
174 Intro| resolvable into differences of degree, and that differences of
175 Intro| and that differences of degree may be heightened into differences
176 Intro| may vary from the least degree of diversity up to contradictory
177 Intro| Hegelian logic has been in some degree adapted to the order of
178 Intro| resolvable into differences of degree. It is familiar with the
179 Intro| leave out details, a certain degree of order begins to appear;
180 Text | magnitude, there is a certain degree of deception; for artists
181 Text | a certain sense, if any degree of falsehood is to be possible.~
182 Text | doing or suffering in a degree however slight was held
The Statesman
Part
183 Intro| good government supposes a degree of co-operation in the ruler
184 Intro| without paradox in some degree to confirm their genuineness.
185 Text | intertexture of the warp and to the degree of force used in dressing
186 Text | of action in a remarkable degree, and where either of these
The Symposium
Part
187 Intro| not a mystic, nor in any degree affected by the Eastern
188 Intro| combining good and evil in a degree beyond what we can easily
189 Intro| Plato never in the least degree excuses the depraved love
190 Intro| jest, yet ‘with a certain degree of seriousness.’ We observe
191 Intro| mysteries, a higher and a higher degree of initiation; at last we
192 Text | all, the best in the next degree and under present circumstances
Theaetetus
Part
193 Intro| cannot be determined with any degree of certainty. The Theaetetus,
194 Intro| measure of the relative degree of importance which is to
195 Intro| distinctness is a question of degree which cannot be precisely
196 Intro| laid, differs in a slight degree only from the necessity
197 Intro| themselves into differences of degree.~Within or behind space
198 Intro| indirectly or in a less degree, and to the various associations
199 Intro| by us as differences of degree passing into differences
200 Intro| common language is in some degree verified by experience,
201 Intro| do not exist, or by what degree or kind of difference they
202 Intro| adding in any considerable degree to our stock of mental facts.~
203 Intro| kind from differences of degree; nor have we any measure
204 Intro| them in a greater or less degree, or with a greater or less
205 Intro| be regarded as a higher degree of knowledge when we not
206 Intro| it harmony’ may in some degree be realized. But the indications
Timaeus
Part
207 Intro| are diluted to the third degree; by this Plato expresses
208 Intro| exaggerated.~That there is a degree of confusion and indistinctness
209 Intro| kind, sometimes only in degree. As in Aristotle’s matter
210 Intro| unable to escape from some degree of self-contradiction. He
211 Intro| hand there is no kind or degree of absurdity or fancy in
212 Intro| Atlantis of Plato in any degree held out a guiding light
213 Text | a temperament in a high degree both passionate and philosophical;
214 Text | Socrates, who have any degree of right feeling, at the
215 Text | to the second and third degree. And having made it he divided
216 Text | similar properties in a second degree, and the third body in the
217 Text | third body in the third degree. Let it be agreed, then,
218 Text | which is congealed in a less degree and is only half solid,
219 Text | even if attaining to some degree of perception would never
220 Text | more or fewer, and in every degree of intensity; and being