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Alphabetical    [«  »]
sown 8
sows 2
sozetai 2
space 135
spaces 5
spain 1
spake 4
Frequency    [«  »]
136 universal
135 exactly
135 origin
135 space
135 unable
134 learning
134 partly
Plato
Partial collection

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space

The Apology
    Part
1 Text | would live even for a brief space, must have a private station Charmides Part
2 PreS | to Plato. I have not the space to go into the question Cratylus Part
3 Intro| resolvable into relations of space and time. Nor can we suppose 4 Intro| Time has an analogy with space, arithmetic with geometry. Euthydemus Part
5 Intro| language; in which the ideas of space, time, matter, motion, were Gorgias Part
6 Intro| occupied an inconsiderable space in the eyes of the public. Laws Book
7 7 | explain them to you in a brief space of time; whereas if they Lysis Part
8 Text | He showed me an enclosed space and an open door over against Meno Part
9 Text | if in one direction the space was of two feet, and in 10 Text | you assert that a double space comes from a double line? 11 Text | four such lines will make a space containing eight feet?~BOY: 12 Text | double line, boy, has given a space, not twice, but four times 13 Text | What line would give you a space of eight feet, as this gives 14 Text | Yes.~SOCRATES: And the space of four feet is made from 15 Text | SOCRATES: Good; and is not a space of eight feet twice the 16 Text | Certainly.~SOCRATES: Such a space, then, will be made out 17 Text | feet that way, the whole space will be three times three 18 Text | and again that the double space should have a double side.~ 19 Text | many times larger is this space than this other?~BOY: Four 20 Text | lines which contain this space?~BOY: There are.~SOCRATES: 21 Text | Look and see how much this space is.~BOY: I do not understand.~ 22 Text | Twice.~SOCRATES: And this space is of how many feet?~BOY: 23 Text | to affirm that the double space is the square of the diagonal?~ Parmenides Part
24 Intro| really occupies a very small space in the entire works of Plato. 25 Intro| contradictions of matter, motion, space, and the like.~It was no 26 Intro| the reality of time and space. It is not the infinitesimal 27 Intro| One, being, time, like space in Zeno’s puzzle of Achilles 28 Intro| under the forms of time and space, who is out of time and 29 Intro| who is out of time and space? How get rid of such forms 30 Text | the other is during any space of time; for during that 31 Text | of time; for during that space of time, however small, Phaedo Part
32 Intro| heaven. Whether time and space really exist when we take 33 Intro| the double conception of space or matter, which the human Philebus Part
34 Intro| tois kath ekasta, leave space enough for an intermediate 35 Intro| held to be independent of space and time, such a mataion The Republic Book
36 3 | unimportant whether they occupy a space large or small, but everywhere 37 8 | existences pass over a short space, and in long-lived ones 38 8 | long-lived ones over a long space. But to the knowledge of 39 9 | from true pleasure by the space of a number which is three 40 10 | seriously think of this little space rather than of the whole? ~ 41 10 | above. In the intermediate space there were judges seated, The Second Alcibiades Part
42 Text | them. And often in a short space of time they change their 43 Text | hurry through the brief space of human life, pilotless The Sophist Part
44 Intro| and that any conception of space or matter or time involves 45 Intro| Not-being projected into space became the atoms and void 46 Intro| attain even within the short space of one or two thousand years?~ The Statesman Part
47 Intro| little or nothing in the space between them. Thus there The Symposium Part
48 Intro| and having no limit of space or time: this is the highest Theaetetus Part
49 Intro| contained—that is to say, space, which may be explained 50 Intro| passing from one portion of space to another. It might be 51 Intro| blind the conception of space is feeble and inadequate, 52 Intro| we form another idea of space, which is altogether independent 53 Intro| lines and figures by which space is or may be intersected 54 Intro| unchangeable properties of space are thus developed, which 55 Intro| to the cube or solid what space is to the square or surface. 56 Intro| applications of our ideas of space to matter. No wonder then 57 Intro| the simplest of our ideas, space is also the one of which 58 Intro| wherever we fix a limit, space is springing up beyond. 59 Intro| inconceivable qualities of space, whether the infinite or 60 Intro| certain truth to us.~Whether space exists in the mind or out 61 Intro| carry about the universe of space packed up within, or how 62 Intro| equally an illusion, if space is only a quality or condition 63 Intro| may compare the truths of space with other truths derived 64 Intro| necessity in our ideas of space on which much stress has 65 Intro| the a priori intuition of space is really the conception 66 Intro| forget that our idea of space, like our other ideas, has 67 Intro| not the Kantian notion of space, but only the definite ‘ 68 Intro| necessity of our ideas of space we must remember that this 69 Intro| not as yet exist. And when space or time are described as ‘ 70 Intro| is a latent perception of space, of which we only become 71 Intro| between them. We may think of space as unresisting matter, and 72 Intro| matter as rarefied into space. And motion may be conceived 73 Intro| of there and not there in space, and force as the materializing 74 Intro| solidification of motion. Space again is the individual 75 Intro| degree.~Within or behind space there is another abstraction 76 Intro| the form of the inward, as space is the form of the outward. 77 Intro| outward sensations without space, so neither can we think 78 Intro| thoughts or sensations, as space is the void of outward objects, 79 Intro| It is to arithmetic what space is to geometry; or, more 80 Intro| partly by the analogy of space and partly by the recollection 81 Intro| we are experiencing. Like space, it is without limit, for 82 Intro| and again the analogy of space assists us in conceiving 83 Intro| other negative infinity of space, becomes positive. Whether 84 Intro| parallel question about space) unmeaning. Like space it 85 Intro| about space) unmeaning. Like space it has been realized gradually: 86 Intro| more notion of time than of space. The conception of being 87 Intro| another, some position in space, some relation to a previous 88 Intro| spirits wandering through space, present in the room in 89 Intro| to overleap the limits of space. The operations of this 90 Intro| we to think of time and space? Time seems to have a nearer 91 Intro| connexion with the mind, space with the body; yet time, 92 Intro| body; yet time, as well as space, is necessary to our idea 93 Intro| they often interpenetrate. Space or place has been said by 94 Text | whence he looks down into space, which is a strange experience Timaeus Part
95 Intro| conceptions of time and space, also appear in it. They 96 Intro| the conception of time and space, and the composition of 97 Intro| impressed. In the same way space or matter is neither earth 98 Intro| also a third nature—that of space, which is indestructible, 99 Intro| things must be somewhere in space. For they are the images 100 Intro| exist in something (i.e. in space). But true reason assures 101 Intro| Being and generation and space, these three, existed before 102 Intro| moving round the sun in space: there is no truer or more 103 Intro| indivisible same? Or, how could space or anything else have been 104 Intro| laws of nature. They are in space, but not in time, and they 105 Intro| two natures of time and space. Time is conceived by him 106 Intro| doctrine of the ideality of space and time at once press upon 107 Intro| The ever-present image of space is transferred to timesuccession 108 Intro| with the above and below in space, as he has done away with 109 Intro| like the infinitesimal in space, were a source of perplexity 110 Intro| is revolving in his mind.~Space is said by Plato to be the ‘ 111 Intro| are made, there is also a space in which they are contained. 112 Intro| abstract as the English wordspace’ or the Latin ‘spatium.’ 113 Intro| we speak of ‘time’ and ‘space.’~Yet space is also of a 114 Intro| time’ and ‘space.’~Yet space is also of a very permanent 115 Intro| than of the unreality of space; because, as he says, all 116 Intro| must necessarily exist in space. We, on the other hand, 117 Intro| disposed to fancy that even if space were annihilated time might 118 Intro| indeed that our knowledge of space is of a dreamy kind, and 119 Intro| attempt to realize either space or matter the two abstract 120 Intro| moving image of eternity, and space, existing by a sort of necessity 121 Intro| is indivisible exist in space. But the whole description 122 Intro| them as resting, while the space in which they are contained, 123 Intro| for men a freedom out of space and time; but he acknowledges 124 Intro| motions of the world in space, which is the mother and 125 Intro| other stars revolving in space around the sun or a central 126 Intro| denied the above and below in space, and said that all things 127 Text | a third nature, which is space, and is eternal, and admits 128 Text | some place and occupy a space, but that what is neither 129 Text | to be in another (i.e. in space), grasping existence in 130 Text | things (i.e. the image and space) are different they cannot 131 Text | verdict is that being and space and generation, these three, 132 Text | changes its position in space. And these causes generate 133 Text | drives it into the vacant space whence the new air had come 134 Text | does not go into a vacant space, but pushes its neighbour 135 Text | breath, fills up the vacant space; and this goes on like the


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