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The Apology
Part
1 Intro| speaking about them in other places. (Compare for Anaxagoras,
2 Text | all day long and in all places am always fastening upon
3 Text | sundry times and in divers places of an oracle or sign which
Charmides
Part
4 Intro| been rendered in different places either Temperance or Wisdom,
5 Text | continent of Asia, in all the places to which he went as ambassador,
Cratylus
Part
6 Intro| The irony of Socrates places him above and beyond the
7 Intro| epenthesis of omicron in two places, may be identified with
8 Intro| distinguish them. Times, persons, places, relations of all kinds,
9 Intro| was the same in different places or among different races
10 Text | notably and nobly in the places where he distinguishes the
11 Text | all your qualities, and places them by you in another form;
Critias
Part
12 Text | allotments in different places which they set in order.
13 Text | the mountains, as in other places, but the earth has fallen
14 Text | an abundant supply in all places, and receiving it into herself
15 Text | observed sacred memorials in places where fountains once existed;
16 Text | top, except in one or two places. Outside the Acropolis and
17 Text | many gods; also gardens and places of exercise, some for men,
Crito
Part
18 Intro| friends in Thessaly and other places.~Socrates is afraid that
19 Text | men will love you in other places to which you may go, and
Euthydemus
Part
20 Intro| too much of them in wrong places. ‘No,’ says Ctesippus, ‘
21 Intro| embittered hatred; and the places and persons have a considerable
22 Text | having a knowledge of the places where most gold was hidden
The First Alcibiades
Part
23 Intro| differently in different places; for in the Symposium Alcibiades
Gorgias
Part
24 Intro| solve.~The statesman who places before himself these lofty
25 Intro| shed a light on many dark places both of philosophy and theology.~
26 Intro| mythological names and of providing places of torment for the wicked.
27 Intro| as well as other homes or places for the very good and very
28 Text | only at Athens, but in all places.~SOCRATES: And will you
29 Text | found their way to the wrong places. Zeus said: ‘I shall put
30 Text | come to Rhadamanthus, he places them near him and inspects
Ion
Part
31 Text | be among the persons or places of which you are speaking,
Laches
Part
32 Text | always passing his time in places where the youth have any
33 Text | and accordingly the law places the soothsayer under the
Laws
Book
34 1 | doubtless there are shady places under the lofty trees, which
35 1 | of them in many different places, and moreover I have made
36 2 | which you speak; in other places novelties are always being
37 3 | this still remains in many places, both among Hellenes and
38 4 | the law prescribes in the places which are sacred to them.
39 5 | mounting high and steep places, the Gods oppose him in
40 5 | there is a difference in places, and that some beget better
41 5 | legislate accordingly. Some places are subject to strange and
42 6 | manner in which different places are affected at different
43 6 | furnish even to the dry places plenty of good water. The
44 6 | year. Everywhere in such places the youth shall make gymnasia
45 6 | mother their own dwelling–places, and themselves go as to
46 6 | receive their due, and the places will be regarded as most
47 6 | because they are the dwelling–places of holy Gods: and in them
48 6 | agora, and the gymnasia, and places of instruction, and theatres,
49 6 | occur in thinly–peopled places, and in times of pressure.
50 6 | speak of common tables in places and cities in which they
51 6 | accustomed to creep into dark places, and when dragged out into
52 6 | as I said before, in most places they will not endure to
53 7 | these are to be in three places in the midst of the city;
54 7 | surrounding country, also in three places, there shall be schools
55 7 | the mountains and waste places shall be permitted, but
56 8 | or sowing them in stony places, in which they will take
57 8 | common tables, which in most places would be difficult, but
58 8 | shall determine; at such places they shall exchange money
59 9 | or blows, or degrading places of sitting or standing,
60 9 | either from sacred or secular places—and these are not the only
61 9 | are already fixed in their places, and others lie at hand.~
62 9 | portions the land, in such places as are uncultivated and
63 10 | are different in different places, according to the agreement
64 10 | one place and some in more places than one?” You mean to say,
65 10 | of bodies moving in many places, you seem to me to mean
66 10 | say, into Hades and other places in the world below, of which
67 11 | that at proper times and places the practice may often be
68 11 | that a man goes to desert places and builds bouses which
69 12 | who at sea, and in stormy places, have been suddenly overwhelmed
70 12 | nature diffused in many places, and called by many names;
71 12 | citizens never to go to other places, is an utter impossibility,
72 12 | shall be received in market–places and harbours and public
73 12 | sepulchres are not to be in places which are fit for cultivation,
Menexenus
Part
74 Intro| veils in panegyric the weak places of Athenian history. The
75 Text | to Egypt and divers other places; and they should be gratefully
76 Text | ways of their fathers, she places in their hands the instruments
Meno
Part
77 Intro| having wandered over all places of the upper and under world,
78 Intro| they agree—the spirit which places the divine above the human,
79 Text | for if you did in other places as you do in Athens, you
Parmenides
Part
80 Intro| to by Plato in two other places (Theaet., Soph.).~Many interpreters
81 Intro| which is one and in many places: in this way the ideas may
82 Intro| which is one and in many places; but he is easily driven
83 Intro| Yes’ and ‘No’ in the right places. A hint has been already
84 Intro| partial existence in two places at once, or entire existence
85 Intro| But can one be in many places and yet be a whole? If not
86 Intro| therefore be two, and in two places. But one cannot be two,
87 Intro| that anything can be in two places at once. It is a mere fiction;
88 Text | one and the same in many places at once, and yet continuous
89 Text | Socrates, of making one in many places at once. You mean to say,
90 Text | and would touch it at many places and with many parts; but
91 Text | touched all round in many places.~Certainly not.~But if,
92 Text | its entirety, be in many places at the same time?~No; I
93 Text | should be two, and be in two places at once, and this, while
Phaedo
Part
94 Intro| the earth through desert places, at last reaches the Acherusian
95 Text | compelled to wander about such places in payment of the penalty
96 Text | assigning to all of them places answering to their several
97 Text | offered to the gods below in places where three ways meet on
98 Text | inhabitants of many other like places; for everywhere on the face
99 Text | and abundant and in all places, making the earth a sight
100 Text | have temples and sacred places in which the gods really
101 Text | and which he in other places, and many other poets, have
102 Text | their way to their several places, forming seas, and lakes,
103 Text | lands, others going to a few places and not so distant; and
104 Text | the earth through desert places into the Acherusian lake:
105 Text | earth, comes, among other places, to the extremities of the
Phaedrus
Part
106 Intro| under the earth, the good to places of joy in heaven. When a
Philebus
Part
107 Intro| will enable us to fix the places of both of them in the scale
108 Intro| determination of the relative places of pleasure and wisdom.
109 Intro| in his scale of goods he places measure, in which he finds
Protagoras
Part
110 Text | wheeled round and took their places behind him in perfect order.~
The Republic
Book
111 2 | greatest of all lies in high places, which the poet told about
112 3 | their way into the inward places of the soul, on which they
113 3 | occurred before now in other places (as the poets say, and have
114 4 | and if there be any fallen places [a] [principle] in the State
115 5 | go forward to the rough places of the law; at the same
116 7 | courts of law, or in other places, about the images or the
117 8 | unworthy to hold their father's places, and when they come into
118 8 | which always and in all places are causes of hatred and
119 8 | they will hoard in dark places, having magazines and treasuries
The Statesman
Part
120 Intro| dialectical method, which places birds in juxtaposition with
121 Intro| still the case in certain places. They were shepherds of
122 Text | deities, as is the way in some places still. There were demigods,
The Symposium
Part
123 Intro| young and dwells in soft places,—not like Ate in Homer,
124 Intro| discourse, starting, as in other places, from mythology and the
125 Text | suit. In Ionia and other places, and generally in countries
126 Text | ways in the softest of soft places, how can he be other than
127 Text | there are in many other places, both among Hellenes and
128 Text | all sorts of unsuspected places: and now, what have you
Theaetetus
Part
129 Intro| foundations are weak, and in many places rest only on the surface
130 Text | about in the courts and such places, as a freeman is in breeding
131 Text | distribute them into their proper places on the block. And such men
Timaeus
Part
132 Intro| dwell upon high and dry places, who in their turn are safer
133 Intro| and always into their own places. Hence there is a principle
134 Intro| move towards their natural places. Now as every animal has
135 Intro| parts are watered and empty places filled.~The process of repletion
136 Intro| are carried to the three places of the soul, creating infinite
137 Intro| elements are settled in their places? He answers that although
138 Intro| again out of their natural places. Thus want of uniformity,
139 Intro| already settled in their places at the creation: (2) they
140 Intro| had settled down to their places, and he imagined fire or
141 Intro| the midst of them all he places the central fire, around
142 Intro| Seneca and in many other places. This tradition was sustained
143 Intro| appears in it. In several places the writer has simplified
144 Text | unworthy were to take the places of those who came up?~TIMAEUS:
145 Text | mountains and in dry and lofty places are more liable to destruction
146 Text | motion he divided in six places and made seven unequal circles
147 Text | other. To enumerate the places which he assigned to the
148 Text | among the high and deep places of the earth, but might
149 Text | able to pass through all places, carrying on high the dwelling-place
150 Text | various elements had different places before they were arranged
151 Text | thither towards their own places; for the change in the size
152 Text | being able to take their places, compress the moist principle
153 Text | round, and that they change places, passing severally into
154 Text | parts are watered and empty places filled.~Now the process
155 Text | have many names because the places into which they flow are
156 Text | being carried to the three places of the soul, whichever they