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| Alphabetical [« »] writing-master 3 writings 193 writinig 1 written 125 wrong 279 wrong-doer 3 wrong-headedness 1 | Frequency [« »] 125 excellent 125 numbers 125 poetry 125 written 124 lesser 124 went 123 3 | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances written |
The Apology
Part
1 Intro| how he would or must have written under the circumstances.
2 Text | impudent, and that he has written this indictment in a spirit
Charmides
Part
3 PreS | as his author would have written it at first, had he not
4 PreS | And they are clearly all written from the same motive, whether
5 PreS | and since the Laws were written in the last decade of his
6 PreS | Philebus, and the Timaeus were ‘written simultaneously,’ or ‘were
Cratylus
Part
7 Intro| the age in which it was written. Had the treatise of Antisthenes
8 Intro| drawing. Deon, as ordinarily written, has an evil sense, signifying
9 Intro| the preceding remarks were written, which with a few alterations
10 Intro| arisen—they were not first written down by a grammarian in
11 Intro| preserved; secondly, it may be written down and in a written form
12 Intro| be written down and in a written form distributed more or
13 Intro| book is spelt correctly and written grammatically.~(9) Proceeding
14 Text | may have been originally written with a double lamda and
15 Text | letter, the name which is written is not only written wrongly,
16 Text | which is written is not only written wrongly, but not written
17 Text | written wrongly, but not written at all; and in any of these
The First Alcibiades
Part
18 Pre | spurious. They may have been written in youth, or possibly like
Gorgias
Part
19 Intro| tending to show that they were written at the same period of Plato’
20 Intro| forgotten: they are spoken, not written words, stories which are
Ion
Part
21 Text | of the finest poems ever written, simply an invention of
Laws
Book
22 6 | original lot; and let him be written down a condemned man as
23 6 | that his laws should be written down with all possible exactness;
24 6 | however, by any compulsion of written law.~Let this then be our
25 6 | and let him who is thus written up, if he cannot in a court
26 6 | if she in like manner be written up as acting disorderly
27 6 | time of birth ought to be written down in the temples of their
28 7 | are the destruction of the written law because mankind get
29 7 | and come in between the written laws which are or are hereafter
30 7 | the previously existing written law; but if they depart
31 7 | those strains which are written in prose, although you have
32 10 | that the laws when once written down are always at rest;
33 12 | the whole transaction in a written document, and in the presence
34 12 | and also in prose, whether written down or uttered in daily
Lysis
Part
35 Intro| about business,—the letter written from a distance by a disinterested
36 Text | they want anything read or written, you, I presume, would be
Menexenus
Part
37 Pre | spurious. They may have been written in youth, or possibly like
38 Intro| much better he might have written in his own style. The orators
39 Intro| might or might not have written, what was his conception
Meno
Part
40 Intro| Dialogues of Plato were written before the death of Socrates;
41 Intro| was more likely to have written, as he has done, of Meno
42 Intro| Republic, though probably written some time afterwards, no
Phaedo
Part
43 Intro| his heart.’ Could he have written this under the idea that
Phaedrus
Part
44 Intro| nothing was or ever could be written better. Socrates does not
45 Intro| living is better than the written word, and that the principles
46 Intro| superiority of the spoken over the written word. The continuous thread
47 Intro| first speech was really written by Lysias is improbable.
48 Intro| king is preferred to the written law; he is supposed to be
49 Intro| say, that what is truly written is written in the soul,
50 Intro| what is truly written is written in the soul, just as what
51 Intro| the words of St. Paul, ‘Written not on tables of stone,
52 Intro| that this must have been written in the youth of Isocrates,
53 Intro| must necessarily have been written in youth. As little weight
54 Intro| supposing that one of them was written at least twenty years after
55 Intro| be, that the Dialogue was written at some comparatively late
56 Intro| when new books ceased to be written, why did hosts of grammarians
57 Text | women, who have spoken and written of these things, would rise
58 Text | speeches and leaving them in a written form, lest they should be
59 Text | will trust to the external written characters and not remember
60 Text | under the idea that the written word would be intelligible
61 Text | when they have been once written down they are tumbled about
62 Text | a soul, and of which the written word is properly no more
63 Text | he who thinks that in the written word there is necessarily
64 Text | poetry nor prose, spoken or written, is of any great value,
Philebus
Part
65 Intro| things which the scribe has written down in the soul,—at least
66 Intro| to us,—‘the word of God’ written on the human heart: to no
Protagoras
Part
67 Text | beginning to understand what is written, as before he understood
The Republic
Book
68 2 | produce a host of books written by Musaeus and Orpheus,
69 4 | done; nor are any precise written enactments about them likely
70 8 | care even for the laws, written or unwritten; they will
The Seventh Letter
Part
71 Text | new friends. The laws too, written and unwritten, were being
72 Text | hear also that he has since written about what he heard from
73 Text | indeed that others have written on the same subjects; but
74 Text | know-that if the things were written or put into words, it would
75 Text | and that, if they were written badly, I should be the person
76 Text | that which is set down in written characters.~Again you must
77 Text | from this that, if one sees written treatises composed by anyone,
78 Text | else, great or small, has written a treatise on the highest
The Sophist
Part
79 Intro| said that Plato would have written differently, if he had been
80 Intro| Aristotle ever have been written unless the Sophist and Statesman
81 Intro| immediate. As Luther’s Bible was written in the language of the common
82 Text | answer to any question is written down in a popular form,
The Statesman
Part
83 Intro| which is superior to law and written enactments; these do but
84 Intro| others the restriction of a written law. Let me suppose now,
85 Intro| to be wise above what is written, shall be called not an
86 Intro| nothing contrary to their own written laws and national customs.
87 Intro| and the living will; the written word and the spirit; the
88 Text | compulsory submission, of written law or the absence of law,
89 Text | of their subjects, with written laws or without written
90 Text | written laws or without written laws, and whether they are
91 Text | himself the restriction of a written law.~YOUNG SOCRATES: So
92 Text | remembered unless they are written down, he will leave notes
93 Text | And if he who gave laws, written or unwritten, determining
94 Text | which is contrary to the written rules; what is this compulsion
95 Text | the others must use the written laws of this—in no other
96 Text | skilled or unskilled, shall be written down on triangular tablets
97 Text | the sick according to the written rules.~YOUNG SOCRATES: Worse
98 Text | atmosphere, contrary to the written rules, and has any ingenious
99 Text | to act contrary to the written law, he is to be punished
100 Text | for anybody may learn the written laws and the national customs.
101 Text | in this way according to written regulations, and not according
102 Text | operations to be regulated by written law, we were to appoint
103 Text | error than any adherence to written law?~YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly.~
104 Text | far as they admit of being written down from the lips of those
105 Text | other than that which he has written down and enjoined to be
106 Text | nothing contrary to their own written laws and national customs.~
The Symposium
Part
107 Intro| Symposium of Xenophon, if written by him at all, would certainly
Theaetetus
Part
108 Intro| dialogue could not have been written earlier than 390, when Plato
109 Intro| Theaetetus may not have been all written continuously; or the probability
110 Intro| is supposed to have been written down. In a short introductory
111 Intro| Plato, he is said to have written the first work on the Five
112 Intro| and votes of the state, written or recited; societies, whether
113 Intro| affect the testimony, whether written or oral, which he knows
114 Intro| thoughts or feelings were written down in a book. This is
115 Text | nearly the whole conversation written down.~TERPSION: I remember—
116 Text | that the truth is as I have written, and that each of us is
117 Text | are called, of the state written or recited; the eagerness
118 Text | them spoken or saw them written, you might not be confused
Timaeus
Part
119 Intro| physiologists had generally written in verse; the prose writers,
120 Intro| lost, because there was no written voice among you. For in
121 Intro| using it.~M. Martin has written a valuable dissertation
122 Intro| leisure we will take up the written documents and examine in
123 Intro| part of the Timaeus. It is written in the Doric dialect, and
124 Text | remarkable, they have all been written down by us of old, and are
125 Text | destruction died, leaving no written word. For there was a time,