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| Alphabetical [« »] conceptions 49 conceptualism 3 concern 21 concerned 127 concerning 84 concernment 1 concerns 30 | Frequency [« »] 128 prove 128 shown 128 termed 127 concerned 127 disease 127 temperate 127 wherefore | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances concerned |
Charmides
Part
1 PreF | of philosophy. We are not concerned to determine what is the
2 Text | said; and as far as I am concerned you may proceed in the way
3 Text | which result, as far as I am concerned, is not so much to be lamented,
4 Text | charm, and as far as I am concerned, I shall be willing to be
Cratylus
Part
5 Intro| aeidous, because the God is concerned with the invisible. But
6 Intro| all the sciences which are concerned with man, it has a double
7 Intro| other sciences which are concerned with animal and vegetable
8 Intro| aftergrowth with which we are now concerned. How did the roots or substantial
9 Text | naming appears not to be concerned with imitations of this
Euthyphro
Part
10 Text | Archon? Surely you cannot be concerned in a suit before the King,
11 Text | talking when the gods are concerned, and when I am concerned.~
12 Text | concerned, and when I am concerned.~SOCRATES: May not this
13 Text | certainly, as far as I am concerned, Euthyphro, there is no
14 Text | stirred, as far as I am concerned.~SOCRATES: Then I must be
The First Alcibiades
Part
15 Intro| if, as he says, they are concerned with the expedient.~However,
Gorgias
Part
16 Intro| particular arts, are also concerned with discourse; in what
17 Intro| Even in the arts which are concerned with words there are differences.
18 Intro| and the arts which are concerned with the higher interests
19 Intro| of an angel.’ We are not concerned to justify this idealism
20 Text | you, with what is rhetoric concerned: I might ask with what is
21 Text | ask with what is weaving concerned, and you would reply (would
22 Text | SOCRATES: And music is concerned with the composition of
23 Text | rhetoric: with what is rhetoric concerned?~GORGIAS: With discourse.~
24 Text | they are for the most part concerned with doing, and require
25 Text | words with which rhetoric is concerned:—Suppose that a person asks
26 Text | one of the arts which is concerned wholly with words. And if
27 Text | And if he further said, ‘Concerned with what?’ I should say,
28 Text | deceiving you, for my art is concerned with the greatest good of
29 Text | the former class, which is concerned with pleasure, and that
30 Text | was of the class which is concerned with the good. And now,
31 Text | I term flattery, whether concerned with the body or the soul,
Laches
Part
32 Intro| part of virtue which is concerned with the use of weapons—‘
33 Text | NICIAS: As far as I am concerned, Lysimachus and Melesias,
34 Text | science of medicine which is concerned with the inspection of health
35 Text | in like manner, which is concerned with the productions of
36 Text | not the science which is concerned with the fearful and hopeful,
37 Text | like the other sciences, is concerned not only with good and evil
Laws
Book
38 1 | similar institutions which are concerned with pleasure; there are
39 2 | are melodies: and music is concerned with harmony and rhythm,
40 3 | contemporaries, as far as they were concerned not even the portion of
41 7 | one of gymnastic, which is concerned with the body, and the other
42 7 | may be truly said to be concerned with the virtue of body
43 7 | these we are undoubtedly concerned. Now the unwarlike muse,
44 9 | to certain Gods, who are concerned with the prevention of murders
45 9 | true art or politics is concerned, not with private but with
46 10 | which our present enquiry is concerned.~Cleinias. Speak plainer.~
47 12 | with what is that intellect concerned which, mingling with the
48 12 | and glorious truths are concerned?~Cleinias. I suppose not.~
Meno
Part
49 Intro| and the mimetic arts are concerned with an inferior part of
Parmenides
Part
50 Text | nor we with them; they are concerned with themselves only, and
Phaedo
Part
51 Text | say that he is entirely concerned with the soul and not with
52 Text | as far as the argument is concerned, one of them is the same
Phaedrus
Part
53 Text | which true knowledge is concerned; the colourless, formless,
54 Text | the Muses who are chiefly concerned with heaven and thought,
55 Text | question in which men are concerned who are just and good, either
Philebus
Part
56 Intro| And reason and wisdom are concerned with the eternal; and these
57 Intro| itself.~Again, if we are concerned not with particular actions
58 Text | How can anything fixed be concerned with that which has no fixedness?~
Protagoras
Part
59 Text | not that, as far as I am concerned, any reflection is of much
The Republic
Book
60 1 | the art of the shepherd is concerned only with the good of his
61 4 | we were describing, being concerned, however, not with the outward
62 5 | said. ~Then opinion is not concerned either with being or with
63 6 | And the habit which is concerned with geometry and the cognate
64 7 | wise-the sense which is concerned with the quality of hardness
65 7 | hardness is necessarily concerned also with the quality of
66 7 | Clearly, he said, we are concerned with that part of geometry
67 7 | dimension, the third, which is concerned with cubes and dimensions
68 7 | the arts in general are concerned with the desires or opinions
69 7 | of shadows, opinion being concerned with becoming, and intellect
70 9 | of this third part were concerned with gain, we should then
71 9 | pure being-that which is concerned with the invariable, the
72 9 | natures; or that which is concerned with and found in the variable
73 9 | the being of that which is concerned with the invariable. ~And
74 9 | life, if human beings are concerned with days and nights and
75 9 | human life is certainly concerned with them. ~Then if the
76 10 | are three arts which are concerned with all things: one which
77 10 | imitation been shown by us to be concerned with that which is thrice
78 10 | which poetical imitation is concerned is good or bad. ~By all
79 10 | is also like him in being concerned with an inferior part of
The Seventh Letter
Part
80 Text | far as the young men were concerned, and the probable line which
81 Text | so far as your action was concerned? Had I been living at Megara,
The Sophist
Part
82 Text | acquisitive art; the one concerned with hunting, the other
83 Text | two kinds: it is partly concerned with food for the use of
84 Text | merchandise of the soul which is concerned with speech and the knowledge
85 Text | and that one of them is concerned with the soul, and that
86 Text | there is another which is concerned with the body.~STRANGER:
87 Text | separated off a part which is concerned with the soul; of this mental
88 Text | the imitative art which is concerned with making such images
89 Text | about the arts which are concerned with them; can avoid falling
90 Text | art of making the thing is concerned, and the image, with which
91 Text | with which imitation is concerned.~THEAETETUS: Now I begin
The Statesman
Part
92 Intro| names. Plato is now chiefly concerned, not with the original Sophist,
93 Intro| and practical—the one kind concerned with knowledge exclusively,
94 Intro| others. Again, a ruler is concerned with the production of some
95 Intro| like the master-builder, concerned with lifeless matter, but
96 Intro| say with which the king is concerned. And land-herds may be divided
97 Intro| hornless, and the king is concerned with the hornless; and these
98 Intro| designation to the art which was concerned with command-for-self over
99 Intro| fuller and the mender, are concerned with the treatment and production
100 Intro| arts of measuring—one is concerned with relative size, and
101 Text | as far as government is concerned?~YOUNG SOCRATES: They will
102 Text | and our enquiry is not concerned with him who is not a ruler.~
103 Text | art of knowledge which was concerned with command, had to do
104 Text | search, is and ever was concerned with tame animals, and is
105 Text | portion of it which was concerned with the making of clothes,
106 Text | acts of violence, and are concerned with making the lids of
107 Text | of the magic art which is concerned with antidotes, and have
108 Text | will maintain that they are concerned with the treatment and production
109 Text | noblest of arts which are concerned with woollen garments—shall
110 Text | of the process which are concerned with the actual manufacture
111 Text | been discovered which are concerned with them, and not forget
112 Text | those which are immediately concerned with States, and which must
113 Text | another, but are each of them concerned with some special action
The Symposium
Part
114 Intro| cannot be. Music too is concerned with the principles of love
115 Text | and thus music, too, is concerned with the principles of love
116 Text | and men—these, I say, are concerned only with the preservation
117 Text | more especially, which is concerned with the good, and which
118 Text | off from the rest, and is concerned with music and metre, is
119 Text | by far is that which is concerned with the ordering of states
Theaetetus
Part
120 Intro| differences that we are concerned in Psychology. The facts
121 Text | legislation and expediency are all concerned with the future; and every
122 Text | question with which we are concerned: Are all things in motion
Timaeus
Part
123 Intro| The dialogue is primarily concerned with the animal creation,
124 Intro| at present, we are only concerned with the creation of the
125 Intro| certain. But when reason is concerned with the rational, and the
126 Text | certain. But when reason is concerned with the rational, and the
127 Text | the affections which are concerned with sensation, nor the