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Alphabetical    [«  »]
expresses 36
expressible 1
expressing 24
expression 167
expressions 42
expressive 39
expressively 1
Frequency    [«  »]
169 takes
168 hope
168 ways
167 expression
166 private
166 used
164 2
Plato
Partial collection

IntraText - Concordances

expression

The Apology
    Part
1 Text | be allowed to use such an expression, I cared not a straw for Charmides Part
2 PreS | help to lighten a cumbrous expression (Symp.). The translation 3 PreS | the order is confused, the expression feeble, the emphasis misplaced, 4 PreS | omit words and turns of expression which the English language 5 PreS | attraction of a favourite expression, or a sonorous cadence, 6 PreS | furnished with powers of expression as the ancient classical 7 PreS | wanting in a single fine expression. And even if this be matter Cratylus Part
8 Intro| been striving to attain an expression of their ideas, and now 9 Intro| ask themselves whether the expression might not be distinguished 10 Intro| word is either the perfect expression of a thing, or a mere inarticulate 11 Intro| may apply letters to the expression of objects, and form them 12 Intro| inwardness: alpha is the expression of size; eta of length; 13 Intro| Bebaion, again, is the expression of station and position; 14 Intro| but only the inarticulate expression of feeling or emotion in 15 Intro| was once an involuntary expression becomes voluntary. Not only 16 Intro| as of the tongue, and the expression of a movement stirring the 17 Intro| great writer who is the expression of his age, became impressed 18 Intro| separate faculty, but the expression of all our faculties, to 19 Intro| all our other powers of expression, signs, looks, gestures, 20 Intro| in familiar objects the expression of their confused fancies— 21 Intro| merits of different modes of expression while he is uttering them. 22 Intro| or speech which was the expression of what we now call human 23 Intro| only have new powers of expression been diffused through a 24 Intro| within the sentence the expression of the logical relations 25 Intro| another word or turn of expression would have given a new shade 26 Intro| are beyond their powers of expression, especially in writing, 27 Intro| became the natural vehicle of expression to all mankind. Henceforward 28 Intro| is familiar, the word or expression which strikes us or comes 29 Intro| According to the famous expression of Luther, ‘Words are living 30 Text | business; or they are the expression of a wish like Eutychides ( 31 Text | chara (joy) is the very expression of the fluency and diffusion 32 Text | or tongue, or mouth, the expression is simply their imitation 33 Text | shall apply letters to the expression of objects, either single 34 Text | and syllables, and so find expression, may appear ridiculous, 35 Text | excellent instrument for the expression of motion; and he frequently 36 Text | movements he generally finds an expression in the letter R, because, 37 Text | and in this he found the expression of smoothness, as in leios ( 38 Text | alpha he assigned to the expression of size, and nu of length, 39 Text | maintain that a name is the expression of a thing in letters or 40 Text | bebaion (sure) is clearly the expression of station and position, 41 Text | of which the image is the expression have been rightly conceived, Euthydemus Part
42 Intro| thought more adequate to the expression of all the diversities and 43 Text | about nothing.’ That was the expression which he used. ‘Surely,’ Euthyphro Part
44 Text | another?~EUTHYPHRO: That is an expression which you may use, if you The First Alcibiades Part
45 Text | of a thing is a correct expression?~ALCIBIADES: Yes.~SOCRATES: Gorgias Part
46 Intro| amusement, or to be the expression of the feelings of mankind, 47 Intro| dignity; he finds a noble expression for the common-places of 48 Intro| feeling is strengthened by the expression. He is his own critic, for 49 Intro| knowledge; or, to borrow an expression of his own, when he is standing 50 Intro| reality. Language is the expression of the seen, and also of 51 Intro| united; which gives a fitting expression to the highest truths; and 52 Text | rhetoric; although the precise expression which you used was, that 53 Text | or, to repeat my former expression, have any desire to set 54 Text | man who, if I may use the expression, may be boxed on the ears 55 Text | riveted by us, if I may use an expression which is certainly bold, Laws Book
56 1 | and the meaning of the expressionsuperior or inferior to 57 3 | variety in the modes of expression ought not to disturb us.~ 58 3 | blamed, does not deserve an expression of opinion, but is best 59 7 | lies, if I may use such an expression, about those great Gods, Meno Part
60 Intro| and the Sophists as the expression of it.~This Dialogue contains 61 Intro| for himself new modes of expression more akin to the Aristotelian 62 Intro| They are the ever-varying expression of Plato’s Idealism. The 63 Intro| paralleled with another famous expression of Spinoza, ‘Contemplatio Parmenides Part
64 Intro| terms is sometimes the best expression of a truth higher than either ( 65 Intro| and opinion and name and expression, as is already implied in 66 Intro| moment’—which is a strange expression, and seems to mean change 67 Intro| happens in regard to one? The expression ‘is not’ implies negation 68 Intro| conception is necessary to the expression of the phenomena of motion 69 Intro| to prevent the forms of expression which are ready made for 70 Intro| accept them as the best expression which we have of the correlation 71 Text | Then there is no name, nor expression, nor perception, nor opinion, 72 Text | Then there is name and expression for it, and it is named 73 Text | from both of them; for the expression ‘one and the others’ includes 74 Text | whenever he uses such an expression, that ‘what is not’ is other 75 Text | opinion, or perception, or expression, or name, or any other thing Phaedo Part
76 Intro| filled up the void or gave an expression in words to a cherished 77 Intro| of the monad, the truer expression? Is the soul related to 78 Intro| in different forms to an expression of the common sentiment 79 Intro| are no longer an adequate expression of the kingdom of God which 80 Intro| individual must find an expression as well as the world. Either 81 Intro| indistinct longings and fears an expression was given in the mysteries 82 Intro| purely verbal, and is but the expression of an instinctive confidence 83 Intro| on a subject which passes expression the distinctions of language 84 Intro| own absence seems like an expression of sorrow, and may, perhaps, 85 Intro| various are the forms of expression which he employs.~As in Phaedrus Part
86 Intro| the Symposium, and is the expression partly of Plato’s enthusiasm 87 Intro| Art,’ confusing Art the expression of mind and truth with Art 88 Intro| words lose their power of expression? Why were ages of external 89 Text | face or form, which is the expression of divine beauty; and at Philebus Part
90 Intro| interfere with the power of expression. Instead of the equally 91 Intro| and far-fetched modes of expression; also clamorous demands 92 Intro| measure which is the highest expression of the good may also be 93 Intro| been regarded as being the expression of ideas. But this higher 94 Intro| truest and most comprehensive expression of morality. There is no 95 Intro| the world. In that very expression we seem to detect a false 96 Intro| happens to us,’ a chance expression to which if philosophers 97 Text | reminds me that such an expression as ‘exceedingly,’ which Protagoras Part
98 Text | praise is often an insincere expression of men uttering falsehoods 99 Text | explaining the meaning of the expressionovercome by pleasure’; The Republic Book
100 2 | the true lie, if such an expression may be allowed, is hated 101 3 | shall not suffer such an expression to be used about the gods 102 3 | poetry, and every form of expression in words? No one can say 103 3 | are to be reserved for the expression of opposite feelings. And 104 4 | something ridiculous in the expression "master of himself;" for 105 5 | his finger; and the same expression is used about any other 106 10 | work, too, is an indistinct expression of truth. ~No wonder. ~Suppose The Sophist Part
107 Intro| falsehood, which is the image or expression of Not-being. Falsehood 108 Intro| more apt and intelligible expression of the same mental phenomenon. 109 Intro| probably under this remarkable expression Plato designates those who 110 Intro| if you can, to find an expression for not-being which does 111 Intro| imagination is only the expression of this in some form of 112 Intro| faculties of thought and expression without increasing his philosophical 113 Intro| are aids to reflection and expression, forms of thought are useful, 114 Intro| Hegel will to many seem the expression of an indolent conservatism, 115 Intro| are best adapted for the expression of facts. It has never applied 116 Intro| them? The great man is the expression of his time, and there may 117 Intro| is the mere creature or expression of the age in which he lives. 118 Intro| differ; while one man is the expression of the influences of his 119 Text | Yes, that is the usual expression.~STRANGER: And any one may 120 Text | is confirmed by the very expression when sifted a little. Would 121 Text | something as not great, does the expression seem to you to imply what 122 Text | discourse; for there is no expression of action or inaction, or The Statesman Part
123 Intro| style; at least his gift of expression does not keep up with the 124 Intro| temperate, which, borrowing an expression derived from the image of 125 Intro| the Greek state found an expression in the deification of law: 126 Intro| meaning is lurking in the expression—‘There is no art of feeding 127 Text | ruling without laws—the expression has a harsh sound.~STRANGER: The Symposium Part
128 Intro| acknowledge that this was the very expression of their want. For love 129 Intro| not to be expected. The expressionpoema magis putandum quam 130 Intro| when man was seeking for an expression of the world around him, 131 Intro| beauty, the one being the expression of the other; and in certain 132 Text | instead of two, was the very expression of his ancient need (compare Theaetetus Part
133 Intro| unable to attain a similar expression of knowledge in the abstract. 134 Intro| Their restlessness is beyond expression, and if you ask any of them 135 Intro| attacking the paradoxical expressiontrue falsehood,’ but passes 136 Intro| mean, (1) the reflection or expression of a man’s thoughts—but 137 Intro| definition, besides the image or expression of the mind, and the enumeration 138 Intro| language, although mere expression in words is not truth. The 139 Intro| speech’; or the remarkable expression, ‘full of impure dialectic’; 140 Intro| without explanation; nor the expression of thought, nor the enumeration 141 Intro| as ‘decaying sense,’ an expression which may be applied with 142 Intro| circumlocution to become the expression of individuals or particulars. 143 Intro| name for reason finding an expression of herself in the outward 144 Intro| language in which they too find expression. As the differences of actions 145 Intro| energy from its nervous expression.~i. The fact that mental 146 Intro| association, but this is an expression which is confusing, for 147 Text | understand the abstract expression. Then I will take concrete 148 Text | It would be the correct expression.~SOCRATES: Well, may not 149 Text | knowable—such was the singular expression which he used—and that things 150 Text | SOCRATES: And in each form of expression we spoke of all the six?~ 151 Text | The first was the image or expression of the mind in speech; the Timaeus Part
152 Intro| him. They are the feeble expression of an age which has lost 153 Intro| population in the Republic is the expression or symbol of the transition 154 Intro| striving to realize. The first expression of this was some element, 155 Intro| morality also found a natural expression in number and figure. Instruments 156 Intro| according to his own fine expression, ‘the thought of God made 157 Intro| in the latter symbol an expression of the relation of the elements, 158 Intro| eternal element, in the expression of which all predicates 159 Intro| once more his own grand expression, or viewed, in the language 160 Intro| enveloped and finds its expression in matter, whereas the soul 161 Intro| himself? Is not the famous expression—‘You Hellenes are ever children 162 Intro| tradition, which had found expression from time to time in the 163 Intro| of the Republic, the one expression describing the personal, 164 Text | are inaccurate modes of expression (compare Parmen.). But perhaps 165 Text | the safe and indefinite expression, ‘such,’ we should be satisfied. 166 Text | charged with using an improper expression? For the centre of the world 167 Text | producing a single mixed expression out of high and low, whence


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