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| Alphabetical [« »] divinity 10 divisibility 2 divisible 13 division 163 divisions 78 divisors 1 divorce 1 | Frequency [« »] 164 honour 164 knew 164 willing 163 division 163 medicine 163 natures 163 poet | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances division |
Charmides
Part
1 Intro| would be opposed to the division of labour which exists in
Critias
Part
2 Intro| in my possession...In the division of the earth Poseidon obtained
3 Text | the ten kings in his own division and in his own city had
Euthydemus
Part
4 Intro| Republic; the nature of division is likewise illustrated
The First Alcibiades
Part
5 Text | the absence of hatred and division.~SOCRATES: And do you mean
Gorgias
Part
6 Intro| Callicles. In the first division the question is asked—What
7 Intro| good, returns to his old division of empirical habits, or
8 Intro| Callicles agree to this division? Callicles will agree to
9 Intro| Aristophanes respecting the division of the sexes, Sym.: (11)
Laws
Book
10 3 | details. But the general division of laws according to their
11 5 | ours—that we have escaped division of land and the abolition
12 5 | number has every possible division, and the number 5040 can
13 5 | circular wall, making the division of the entire city and country
14 6 | themselves, and in a third division all the rest of the army.
15 6 | or archers, or any other division of the army, shall be appointed
16 6 | convenient number for sub–division. If we divide the whole
17 6 | the tribe allotted to a division provide annually for it
18 6 | the watch, five for each division, who are to be the superintendents
19 6 | nature, but in some the division or distribution has been
20 6 | families, the defect in the division is cured. And the truth
21 6 | introduce the necessary division, slave, and freeman, and
22 10 | of the seasons, and the division of them into years and months,
23 12 | corresponding to the twelvefold division of the land, and before
Parmenides
Part
24 Intro| contradiction; and each division of your argument is intended
25 Intro| capable of infinitesimal division. And they will have no unity
26 Intro| because the infinitesimal division is never arrested by the
27 Intro| composition, and sometimes of division: (2) The division or distinction
28 Intro| sometimes of division: (2) The division or distinction is sometimes
29 Intro| the Phaedrus the nature of division is explained; in the Republic
30 Text | the many? and is not each division of your treatise intended
Phaedo
Part
31 Intro| greater convenience of logical division? Are we not at the same
32 Text | other processes, such as division and composition, cooling
33 Text | composition only, and no division of substances, then the
34 Text | can I understand how the division of one is the way to make
35 Text | addition of one to one, or the division of one, is the cause of
36 Text | will let alone puzzles of division and addition—wiser heads
Phaedrus
Part
37 Intro| These are the processes of division and generalization which
38 Intro| the art of composition and division; fourthly, the true rhetoric,
39 Intro| represented to us the threefold division of psychology. The image
40 Intro| attribute his tripartite division of the soul to the gods?
41 Text | good and the other bad: the division may remain, but I have not
42 Text | ought to make a regular division, and acquire a distinct
43 Text | second principle is that of division into species according to
44 Text | lover of these processes of division and generalization; they
Philebus
Part
45 Intro| in a state of change or division. To say that the verb of
46 Intro| truth. Yet without this division there can be no truth; nor
47 Intro| and the cumbrous fourfold division of causes in the Physics
48 Text | till then, we may rest from division, and without further troubling
49 Text | principle would you make the division?~SOCRATES: Let us take some
50 Text | clumsy at these processes of division and enumeration.~PROTARCHUS:
51 Text | say that I must make the division for you?~PROTARCHUS: Yes,
52 Text | But we must pursue the division a step further, Protarchus,
53 Text | can we make the further division which you suggest?~SOCRATES:
54 Text | then, be the principle of division; those of them who are weak
55 Text | PROTARCHUS: Let us make that division.~SOCRATES: Of the latter
The Republic
Book
56 4 | Yes, certainly. ~And the division of labor which required
57 5 | proceed further I will make a division. ~What division? ~I will
58 5 | will make a division. ~What division? ~I will begin by placing
59 6 | both the sections of this division have different degrees of
60 6 | figures given by the former division as images; the inquiry can
61 6 | when I speak of the other division of the intelligible, you
62 7 | the two as in a state of division, for if they were undivided
63 7 | opinion, and to call the first division science, the second understanding,
64 8 | said; and now that this division of our task is concluded,
65 8 | defect? ~The inevitable division: such a State is not one,
66 8 | from without assisting one division of the citizens, so too
67 9 | into three principles, the division may, I think, furnish a
68 9 | principle, and there is no division, the several parts are just,
The Sophist
Part
69 Intro| synthesis and analysis, of division and cross-division, are
70 Intro| Not-being’ is the hole or division of the dialectical net in
71 Intro| the result of a scientific division. His descent in another
72 Intro| there is another general division under which his art may
73 Intro| seems to be aware that mere division is an unsafe and uncertain
74 Intro| from supposing that mere division and subdivision of general
75 Intro| we have already seen, the division gives him the opportunity
76 Intro| the latter, and in that division of it which disputes in
77 Intro| All these are processes of division; and of division there are
78 Intro| processes of division; and of division there are two kinds,—one
79 Intro| hereafter. And so, from division comes purification; and
80 Intro| theories of composition and division, whether out of or into
81 Intro| let us return to our old division of likeness-making and phantastic.
82 Intro| developed. The threefold division of logic, physic, and ethics,
83 Intro| The triplets of Hegel, the division into being, essence, and
84 Intro| fairly doubt whether the division of the first and second
85 Intro| equally placed in the second division of mediate or reflected
86 Text | How would you make the division?~STRANGER: Into the hunting
87 Text | STRANGER: You remember our division of hunting, into hunting
88 Text | THEAETETUS: How shall we make the division?~STRANGER: Let us define
89 Text | STRANGER: There shall be one division of the competitive, and
90 Text | there is implied a notion of division.~THEAETETUS: Yes.~STRANGER:
91 Text | THEAETETUS: Whatever line of division you suggest, I will endeavour
92 Text | ignorance into two halves. For a division of ignorance into two parts
93 Text | education admits of any further division.~THEAETETUS: We have.~STRANGER:
94 Text | a point at which such a division is possible.~THEAETETUS:
95 Text | Should we not say that the division according to classes, which
96 Text | you should make a vertical division of production or invention,
97 Text | STRANGER: And, again, in the division which was supposed to be
98 Text | twofold; in the lateral division there is both a divine and
99 Text | Where shall we make the division?~STRANGER: There is one
100 Text | to it; as for the other division, we are weary and will give
101 Text | image-making into that further division of creation, the juggling
The Statesman
Part
102 Intro| in refusing to admit the division of mankind into Hellenes
103 Intro| follows: (1) By a process of division and subdivision we discover
104 Intro| the enquiry by making a division of the arts and sciences
105 Intro| nature of my mistake.’ Your division was like a division of the
106 Intro| Your division was like a division of the human race into Hellenes
107 Intro| male and female; or like a division of number into ten thousand
108 Intro| class. But to return to your division, you spoke of men and other
109 Intro| beasts. This is the sort of division which an intelligent crane
110 Intro| non-gregarious, omitting the previous division into tame and wild. We forgot
111 Intro| Thessaly. These suggest a new division into the rearing or management
112 Intro| categories of composition and division. Carding is of the latter
113 Intro| delight than in processes of division (compare Phaedr.); he pursues
114 Intro| rhetoric is based on the division of the characters of mankind
115 Intro| carry on the process of division until we have arrived at
116 Intro| contains four examples of division, carried on by regular steps,
117 Intro| find, in the Philebus, a division of sciences into practical
118 Intro| defect, like the principle of division in the Phaedrus, receives
119 Intro| arts of composition and division, in which are contained
120 Intro| often in the process of division curious results are obtained.
121 Intro| there is the same love of division, and in both of them the
122 Text | say.~STRANGER: But yet the division will not be the same?~YOUNG
123 Text | whether there is any mark of division in the art of command too.
124 Text | power allows of any further division.~YOUNG SOCRATES: By all
125 Text | assist me in making the division.~YOUNG SOCRATES: At what
126 Text | Certainly.~STRANGER: That division, then, is complete; and
127 Text | were guilty in our recent division?~STRANGER: The error was
128 Text | you could no longer make a division into parts which were also
129 Text | of you, to make a similar division, and set up cranes against
130 Text | source of error in our former division.~YOUNG SOCRATES: How?~STRANGER:
131 Text | there was already implied a division of all animals into tame
132 Text | you, because here is a new division of the management of herds,
133 Text | better. And now attend to the division.~YOUNG SOCRATES: Let me
134 Text | refer the passage to the division into quadrupeds and bipeds,
135 Text | pedestrian animals. The chief division of the latter was the art
136 Text | take the next step in the division?~STRANGER: As before we
137 Text | weaving the same processes of division and subdivision which we
138 Text | causal class, and form a division of the great art of adornment,
139 Text | composition and the art of division.~YOUNG SOCRATES: Yes.~STRANGER:
140 Text | the art of discernment or division in wool and yarn, which
141 Text | dismissing the elements of division which we found there, make
142 Text | other on the principle of division.~YOUNG SOCRATES: Let that
143 Text | Where would you make the division?~STRANGER: As thus: I would
144 Text | assert the great method of division according to species—whether
145 Text | and so we proceeded in the division step by step up to this
146 Text | How would you make the division?~STRANGER: Monarchy divides
147 Text | SOCRATES: On what principle of division?~STRANGER: On the same principle
148 Text | SOCRATES: Yes.~STRANGER: The division made no difference when
The Symposium
Part
149 Intro| furnished by the allusion to the division of Arcadia after the destruction
150 Text | primeval state. After the division the two parts of man, each
Theaetetus
Part
151 Intro| easily suggested by the division of roots, which Plato attributes
152 Intro| For he has discovered a division of numbers into square numbers,
153 Intro| fertile source of error. The division of the mind into faculties
154 Intro| perceive it to be capable of division by lines or points, real
155 Intro| conditions.~Paragraph II. Another division of the subject has yet to
156 Intro| little synthesis, too much division of the mind into parts and
Timaeus
Part
157 Intro| touches upon a few points,—the division of labour and distribution
158 Intro| model for the twelvefold division of the Zodiac.~Let us now
159 Intro| step in giving order is the division of the heavens into an inner
160 Intro| of the body—the threefold division into the rational, passionate,
161 Text | universe requires a fuller division than the former; for then
162 Text | in the first place of a division into two kinds; the one
163 Text | ordinarily applied by us to the division of the heavens, may be elucidated