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| Alphabetical [« »] heard 272 hearer 15 hearers 33 hearing 130 hearing-has 1 hearken 3 hearkens 1 | Frequency [« »] 131 theory 130 food 130 force 130 hearing 129 child 129 phaedo 128 conclusion | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances hearing |
The Apology
Part
1 Intro| they found an amusement in hearing the pretenders to wisdom
2 Intro| first procures himself a hearing by conciliatory words. He
Charmides
Part
3 Text | not.~Or is there a kind of hearing which hears no sound at
4 Text | itself and other sorts of hearing, or the defects of them?~
5 Text | to say, for example, that hearing is, as we say, of sound
6 Text | that true?~Yes.~Then if hearing hears itself, it must hear
7 Text | there is no other way of hearing.~Certainly.~And sight also,
8 Text | true.~But in the case of hearing and sight, or in the power
Cratylus
Part
9 Intro| Lastly, he is impatient of hearing from the half-converted
10 Intro| the other to his sense of hearing;—may he not? ‘Yes.’ Then
11 Intro| flexible, and the sense of hearing finer and more discerning;
12 Intro| appearance. In the moment of hearing the sound, without any appreciable
13 Intro| had all their life been hearing poetry the first introduction
14 Text | is no objection to your hearing the facetious one; for the
15 Text | cause, and I begin, after hearing what he has said, to interrogate
16 Text | then bring to his sense of hearing the imitation of himself,
Crito
Part
17 Text | ears, and prevents me from hearing any other. And I know that
Euthydemus
Part
18 Text | that I could not get within hearing, but I caught a sight of
19 Text | perceptions of seeing and hearing less than one who had keen
20 Text | my best.~I was pleased at hearing this; and I turned to Dionysodorus
21 Text | remarkable discourse well worth hearing, and wonderfully persuasive
22 Text | I could not get within hearing of them—there was such a
23 Text | have heard something worth hearing if you had.’ ‘What was that?’
Euthyphro
Part
24 Text | against me, which at first hearing excites surprise: he says
The First Alcibiades
Part
25 Text | you are in the habit of hearing; but that is not my way.
26 Text | you like, in the hope of hearing what more you have to say.~
27 Text | deafness was absent, and hearing was present in them.~ALCIBIADES:
Gorgias
Part
28 Intro| he was desirous, not of hearing Gorgias display his rhetoric,
29 Intro| which Socrates remembers hearing him give long ago to his
Ion
Part
30 Text | shall take an opportunity of hearing your embellishments of him
Laches
Part
31 Text | pleasure which I feel in hearing of your fame; and I hope
32 Text | what sight is, nor what hearing is, we should not be very
33 Text | mode of giving sight and hearing to them.~LACHES: That is
Laws
Book
34 1 | words?~Cleinias. On first hearing, what you say appears to
35 2 | the greatest pleasure in hearing a rhapsodist recite well
36 2 | truth, to have sight, and hearing, and the use of the senses,
37 2 | the happiest, every one hearing him would enquire, if I
38 2 | strange, at any rate on first hearing, in a Dionysiac chorus of
39 3 | battle of Marathon; and hearing of the bridge over the Hellespont,
40 7 | they should be constantly hearing them read aloud, and always
41 8 | standing by, and who, on hearing this enactment, declares
42 10 | and therefore, if on first hearing they seem difficult, there
43 10 | difficulty in seeing and hearing the small than the great,
44 12 | after each decision in the hearing of the judges; and when
45 12 | countries in the hope of hearing something that might be
46 12 | things, contains sight and hearing; and the mind, mingling
Lysis
Part
47 Text | appalling, and we cannot help hearing him: and now having a question
48 Text | I should say, at first hearing, that he is right, said
Meno
Part
49 Text | have been in the habit of hearing: and your wit will have
50 Text | young, ever say in your hearing that Cleophantus, son of
Phaedo
Part
51 Intro| may feel discouraged at hearing our favourite ‘argument
52 Text | mean to say, have sight and hearing any truth in them? Are they
53 Text | by the help of sight, or hearing, or some other sense, from
54 Text | using the sense of sight or hearing or some other sense (for
55 Text | an unpleasant feeling at hearing what they said. When we
56 Text | power of the perceptions of hearing and sight and smell, and
57 Text | attribute to sound, and air, and hearing, and he would assign ten
58 Text | Simmias, which is well worth hearing.~And we, Socrates, replied
59 Text | we do, and have sight and hearing and smell, and all the other
Phaedrus
Part
60 Text | and again;—he insisted on hearing it many times over and Lysias
61 Text | he receives from seeing, hearing, touching, perceiving him
62 Text | the proverb says, ‘claim a hearing’?~PHAEDRUS: Do you say what
Philebus
Part
63 Intro| four kinds: those of sight, hearing, smell, knowledge.~(6) The
64 Intro| a dreamy recollection of hearing that neither pleasure nor
Protagoras
Part
65 Text | felt at the prospect of hearing wise men talk; we ourselves
66 Text | do not at all wonder at hearing you say this; even at your
The Republic
Book
67 1 | sight or the ear fail of hearing, and therefore requires
68 2 | own sakes-like sight or hearing or knowledge or health,
69 2 | Glaucon and Adeimantus, but on hearing these words I was quite
70 4 | the other city: Who, on hearing these words, would choose
71 5 | which wise men assign to the hearing of such discourses. But
72 5 | the pleasure, he said, of hearing your opinion? ~Both should
73 5 | we do as we do. Sight and hearing, for example, I should call
74 6 | he said. ~And with the hearing, I said, we hear, and with
75 8 | result is that the young man, hearing and seeing all these things -
76 8 | seeing all these things -hearing, too, the words of his father,
77 9 | judgment is given in the hearing of us all by one who is
78 10 | or does it extend to the hearing also, relating in fact to
79 10 | would be ashamed of anyone hearing or seeing him do? ~True. ~
The Seventh Letter
Part
80 Text | complaint if anyone, after hearing the facts, forms a poor
81 Text | young man, quick to learn, hearing talk of the great truths
82 Text | devote myself, whether by hearing the teaching of me or of
83 Text | cause of all the trouble. Hearing this, Heracleides kept out
84 Text | somewhere about here.” On hearing this he blazed up and turned
85 Text | the blame on Dionysios. Hearing that I had been to see Theodotes
86 Text | expulsion and banishment. Hearing this, I told him that he
The Sophist
Part
87 Text | question and answer. I remember hearing a very noble discussion
88 Text | of talking a little and hearing others talk, to be spinning
The Symposium
Part
89 Text | and child who comes within hearing of them. And if I were not
90 Text | have a grand opportunity of hearing him tell what he knew, for
91 Text | time before you get old.’ Hearing this, I said: ‘I have told
92 Text | another, which is worth hearing,~‘Of the doings and sufferings
Theaetetus
Part
93 Intro| Euclid; ‘only just now I was hearing of his noble conduct in
94 Intro| to the cobbler, who, on hearing that all is in motion, and
95 Intro| between seeing the forms or hearing the sounds of words in a
96 Intro| senses, two—the sight and the hearing—are of a more subtle and
97 Intro| The acts of seeing and hearing may be almost unconscious
98 Intro| inheritance of form, scent, hearing, sight, and other qualities
99 Intro| conceptions. In seeing or hearing or looking or listening
100 Intro| much our impressions of hearing may be affected by those
101 Text | should rather be surprised at hearing anything else of him. But
102 Text | citizen and stranger in my hearing, never did I hear him praise
103 Text | senses are variously named hearing, seeing, smelling; there
104 Text | sight, and so with sound and hearing, and with the rest of the
105 Text | the various illusions of hearing and sight, or of other senses.
106 Text | lost in wonder. At first hearing, I was quite satisfied with
107 Text | not perceive by sight and hearing, or know, that which grammarians
108 Text | have made an assault upon hearing, smelling, and the other
109 Text | which is his mountain-pen. Hearing of enormous landed proprietors
110 Text | perceptions, such as sight and hearing, or any other kind of perception?
111 Text | in the act of seeing and hearing?~THEODORUS: Certainly not,
112 Text | another; the objects of hearing, for example, cannot be
113 Text | objects of sight through hearing?~THEAETETUS: Of course not.~
114 Text | them? for neither through hearing nor yet through seeing can
115 Text | It would not be sight or hearing, but some other.~THEAETETUS:
116 Text | would you give to seeing, hearing, smelling, being cold and
Timaeus
Part
117 Intro| health and disease, on sight, hearing, smell, taste, and touch.
118 Intro| old man brightened up at hearing this, and said: Had Solon
119 Intro| the gifts of speech and hearing were bestowed upon us; not
120 Intro| the latter kind, sight and hearing of the former. Ordinary
121 Intro| from the head to the navel.~Hearing is the effect of a stroke
122 Intro| who was all sight, all hearing, all knowing’ (Xenophanes).~
123 Intro| sense the cause of sight and hearing he seems hardly to be aware.~
124 Intro| affections with the organs. Hearing is a blow which passes through
125 Text | remember, brightened up at hearing this and said, smiling:
126 Text | be affirmed of speech and hearing: they have been given by
127 Text | voice and to the sense of hearing is granted to us for the
128 Text | relates mainly to sight and hearing, because they have in them
129 Text | the third kind of sense, hearing, we must speak of the causes
130 Text | blood, to the soul, and that hearing is the vibration of this