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| Alphabetical [« »] talked 10 talker 3 talkers 1 talking 115 talks 10 tall 7 talla 1 | Frequency [« »] 115 nicias 115 perceive 115 simmias 115 talking 115 worthy 114 advantage 114 danger | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances talking |
The Apology
Part
1 Intro| to teach all things; his talking in the marketplace to their
2 Text | that he walks in air, and talking a deal of nonsense concerning
Charmides
Part
3 Text | who were coming in, and talking noisily to one another,
4 Text | be no impropriety in his talking to us in the presence of
5 Text | walking in the streets, and talking, or anything else of that
6 Text | energetically, either in walking or talking or in anything else; nor
Cratylus
Part
7 Intro| which are conscious we are talking to ourselves; the attempt
8 Text | you may think that I am talking nonsense; and indeed I believe
9 Text | But I dare say that I am talking great nonsense.~HERMOGENES:
10 Text | the speaker would only be talking nonsense.~SOCRATES: Well,
Crito
Part
11 Text | be talk for the sake of talking—mere childish nonsense?
Euthydemus
Part
12 Text | Socrates, with whom you were talking yesterday at the Lyceum?
13 Text | stranger with whom you were talking: who was he?~SOCRATES: There
14 Text | Euthydemus leaned forward in talking with me, he was prevented
15 Text | to have no objection to talking nonsense.~Fearing that there
16 Text | between them, then they are talking nonsense, for they are worse
Euthyphro
Part
17 Intro| anticipating another opportunity of talking with him. In the Euthyphro,
18 Text | are they in their way of talking when the gods are concerned,
The First Alcibiades
Part
19 Text | madman; there is no use in talking of him.~SOCRATES: But if
20 Text | to say, I, Socrates, am talking?~ALCIBIADES: Yes.~SOCRATES:
21 Text | Yes.~SOCRATES: And I in talking use words?~ALCIBIADES: Certainly.~
22 Text | Certainly.~SOCRATES: And talking and using words have, I
23 Text | Socrates, am not arguing or talking with the face of Alcibiades,
Gorgias
Part
24 Intro| all our life long we are talking with ourselves:—What is
25 Text | that Gorgias, who has been talking a long time, is tired.~CHAEREPHON:
26 Text | of nature; and if he is talking of the rule of nature, you
27 Text | This man will never cease talking nonsense. At your age, Socrates,
28 Text | shoes! What nonsense are you talking?~SOCRATES: Or, if this is
29 Text | CALLICLES: How you go on, always talking in the same way, Socrates!~
30 Text | you are literally always talking of cobblers and fullers
31 Text | without my help, either talking straight on, or questioning
Laches
Part
32 Text | I have heard these lads talking to one another at home,
33 Text | imagine, he who heard us talking about courage just now.~
34 Text | LACHES: How strangely he is talking, Socrates.~SOCRATES: Why
35 Text | having been proved to be talking nonsense himself, he wants
36 Text | true, Nicias; and you are talking nonsense, as I shall endeavour
37 Text | honestly to confess that he is talking nonsense, but that he shuffles
38 Text | serious, and not merely talking for the sake of talking.
39 Text | talking for the sake of talking. Let us ask him just to
Laws
Book
40 2 | there will be no use in talking about true education, whether
41 2 | good friend, when you are talking with a Cretan and Lacedaemonian,
42 3 | about which we are now talking, do you suppose that they
43 3 | only for the pleasure of talking, but for the argument’s
44 4 | until noon, have we been talking about laws in this charming
45 6 | marriages; but, as we are only talking, there is no objection to
46 9 | the gentleman physician talking to his gentleman patient,
47 10 | and with eager interest talking to the Gods, and beseeching
48 12 | uttering vain howlings, and talking other nonsense of the same
Lysis
Part
49 Intro| is sometimes adopted in talking to children, and consists
50 Text | plagued him to death by talking about nothing else. Indeed,
51 Text | mind, said Ctesippus; he is talking nonsense, and is stark mad.~
52 Text | complained that we were talking in secret, and keeping the
Meno
Part
53 Intro| of another opportunity of talking with him, and the suggestion
54 Intro| he and others are always talking about them, especially about
55 Intro| the dialectic of the mind ‘talking to herself.’ The philosophy
56 Text | we were friends, and were talking as you and I are now, I
57 Text | blindfolded has only to hear you talking, and he would know that
58 Text | be another opportunity of talking with him. To sum up our
Parmenides
Part
59 Intro| deficiency when you were talking with Aristoteles, the day
60 Intro| this deficiency in him when talking to Aristoteles on a previous
61 Text | deficiency, when I heard you talking here with your friend Aristoteles,
62 Text | called by the vulgar idle talking, and which is often imagined
Phaedo
Part
63 Intro| should not heat himself with talking. At such a time he naturally
64 Text | prison. There we used to wait talking with one another until the
65 Text | for me to be thinking and talking of the nature of the pilgrimage
66 Text | you are not to talk much, talking, he says, increases heat,
67 Text | real meaning, and were not talking nonsense when they intimated
68 Text | could accuse me of idle talking about matters in which I
69 Text | that I was unconsciously talking nonsense.~Then may we not
70 Text | that he who talks thus is talking nonsense. For the truth
71 Text | passions, fears, as if talking to a thing which is not
72 Text | similar explanation of my talking to you, which he would attribute
73 Text | same Socrates who have been talking and conducting the argument;
74 Text | So we remained behind, talking and thinking of the subject
Phaedrus
Part
75 Intro| the process of the mind talking with herself. The latter
76 Text | because people know that talking to another is natural, whether
77 Text | hands above. I will go on talking to my youth. Listen:—~Thus,
78 Text | imaginary youth to whom I am talking, is by men called love,
79 Text | the sun over our heads are talking to one another and looking
80 Text | amazing nonsense you are talking! As if I forced any man
Philebus
Part
81 Intro| metaphysical enthusiasm, talking about analysis and synthesis
Protagoras
Part
82 Text | going along; and we stood talking in the vestibule until we
83 Text | Sophists, must have heard us talking. At any rate, when we knocked
84 Text | never remember what he is talking about. As then, if I had
85 Text | the person with whom he is talking seems to be like a child
The Republic
Book
86 1 | perhaps you imagine me to be talking of cutpurses. ~Even this
87 3 | fear that I must have been talking darkly, like the tragedians.
88 4 | long time past we have been talking of Justice, and have failed
89 5 | believed that I knew what I was talking about. To declare the truth
90 7 | the wall? Some of them are talking, others silent. ~You have
91 7 | good as a play to hear them talking about their condensed notes,
92 8 | that this is their way of talking. ~And, as in a body which
93 10 | gain from him who knows, by talking to him and being compelled
The Second Alcibiades
Part
94 Text | friend: only the poet is talking in riddles after the fashion
The Sophist
Part
95 Text | your society, instead of talking a little and hearing others
96 Text | or continuous, would be talking nonsense in all this if
The Symposium
Part
97 Intro| he describes himself as talking dithyrambs. It is at once
98 Text | doing, drinking, singing and talking—these actions are not in
Theaetetus
Part
99 Intro| mind after she has been ‘talking to herself’ (Theat.).~We
100 Intro| of thought, as the mind talking to herself; b. the notion
101 Text | whether we are awake, and talking to one another in the waking
102 Text | discussion we have been talking to one another in a dream;
103 Text | own wisdom? Must he not be talking ‘ad captandum’ in all this?
104 Text | monstrous.~SOCRATES: Am I talking nonsense, then? Think: is
105 Text | to strip and fight, I was talking nonsense—I should rather
106 Text | ourselves to the reproach of talking childishly.~THEODORUS: I
107 Text | again and again, me for talking nonsense and you for assenting
108 Text | for there is no use in talking about the inferior sort.
109 Text | sum for the privilege of talking to him, if he had really
110 Text | very likely I have been talking nonsense about them; for
111 Text | appears to me to be just talking—asking questions of herself
112 Text | SOCRATES: But if thinking is talking to oneself, no one speaking
113 Text | opinion is heterodoxy is talking nonsense; for neither in
114 Text | is a man who is fond of talking!~THEAETETUS: What makes
115 Text | or unintentionally he is talking nonsense?~THEAETETUS: Exactly.~