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The Apology
Part
1 Intro | with Plato; but they have lost the flavour of Socratic
2 Text | For which I might have lost my life, had not the power
Charmides
Part
3 PreS | best part of him will be lost to the English reader. It
4 PreS | ease of conversation is lost, and at the same time the
5 Intro | dialogues have not been lost sight of. Much may be said
Cratylus
Part
6 Intro | words is in process of being lost. If at first framed on a
7 Intro | always in process of being lost and being renewed, just
8 Intro | which was beginning to be lost, is now revived; the sound
9 Intro | English or French, which have lost them. Innumerable as are
10 Intro | the traces of it are often lost in the distance. For languages
11 Intro | had been DISCOVERED AND LOST MANY TIMES OVER, such notions
12 Intro | language is it entirely lost. It belongs chiefly to early
13 Intro | one of them should ever be lost in another.~The structure
14 Text | forms of words may have been lost in the lapse of ages; names
Critias
Part
15 Intro | discover the country of the lost tribes. Without regard to
16 Intro | discussions regarding the Lost Tribes (2 Esdras), as showing
17 Text | in front of you, have not lost heart as yet; the gravity
18 Text | which the god settled in the lost island of Atlantis; and
19 Text | respect for them, they are lost and friendship with them.
20 Text(1)| Dialogue of Critias has been lost.~
Crito
Part
21 Text | evil to any one who has lost their good opinion.~SOCRATES:
Euthydemus
Part
22 Intro | serious meaning; but we have lost the clue to some of them,
23 Text | in which he seemed to be lost in the contemplation of
The First Alcibiades
Part
24 Pre | particular writing, if this lost literature had been preserved
Gorgias
Part
25 Intro | in generality they have lost in truth and distinctness.
26 Intro | good.~Callicles has already lost his temper, and can only
Laches
Part
27 Intro | pleasures and pains is here lost in an unmeaning and transcendental
28 Text | interruption I am quite lost. I will therefore beg of
Laws
Book
29 1 | puppets will not have been lost, and the meaning of the
30 1 | courageous of men utterly lost his presence of mind for
31 2 | look on at them. Having lost our agility, we delight
32 3 | had been almost entirely lost, as I may say, with the
33 3 | then, was this advantage lost under Cambyses, and again
34 3 | with wine and brutality, lost his kingdom through the
35 4 | Better for them to have lost many times over the seven
36 10 | persons. Our address to these lost and perverted natures should
37 11 | heir. And if a man have lost his son, when he was a child,
38 11 | second birth, when they have lost their parents, we ought
39 12 | thrown down precipices and lost their arms; and of those
40 12 | does not use or show the lost property in the market or
Lysis
Part
41 Text | you will look at having lost this fairest and best of
Menexenus
Part
42 Pre | particular writing, if this lost literature had been preserved
43 Text | men who are here interred lost their lives—many of them
44 Text | unable to help them, and they lost heart and came to misfortune,
45 Text | of us. Yet in this war we lost many brave men, such as
Meno
Part
46 Intro | few spirits who have been lost in the thought of it. It
47 Intro | They seem, however, to have lost their first aspect of universals
Parmenides
Part
48 Intro | mind seemed to have been lost as well as gained in the
49 Intro | transcendental character is lost; ideas of justice, temperance,
Phaedo
Part
50 Intro | mother is dreaming of her lost children as they were forty
51 Intro | it back again when it is lost. It is really weakest in
52 Intro | desire of recognizing a lost mother or love or friend
53 Intro | and he has in no degree lost his interest in dialectics;
54 Text | acquired before birth was lost by us at birth, and if afterwards
Phaedrus
Part
55 Intro | can ever be obliterated or lost. In the language of some
56 Intro | paintings, but we seem to have lost the gift of creating them.
57 Intro | towards the end. It was lost in doubt and ignorance.
58 Text | his labour has not been lost; but the non-lover is more
59 Text | and therefore, when he lost his eyes, for that was the
60 Text | krisis), for he has never lost the vision of truth.) receive
61 Text | influence, they may have lost the memory of the holy things
Philebus
Part
62 Intro | of the one and many has lost its chief interest and perplexity.
63 Intro | ones, than suppose that he lost hold of further points of
64 Intro | rhetoric and poetry have lost their freshness and charm;
65 Intro | in Plato which have been lost in Aristotle; and many things
66 Text | argument will be blown away and lost. Suppose that we put back,
67 Text | recovers of herself the lost recollection of some consciousness
Protagoras
Part
68 Intro | the scene should not be lost upon us, or the gradual
69 Intro | aspect of the truth which was lost almost as soon as it was
70 Text | Borrowed by Milton, “Paradise Lost”.).’~At length, when the
The Republic
Book
71 1 | mean to say, if they have lost their proper excellence,
72 2 | perplexity; for we have lost sight of the image which
73 3 | of evil? Is not to have lost the truth an evil, and to
74 4 | to light and temperance lost sight of; and therefore
75 5 | is! the children will be lost as well as their parents,
76 5 | army before now has been lost from this love of plunder. ~
77 7 | continue one and not become lost in fractions. ~That is very
78 7 | when by other pursuits lost and dimmed, is by these
79 8 | will be appointed who have lost the guardian power of testing
80 8 | single-minded toward virtue, having lost his best guardian. ~Who
81 8 | and all that he has are lost; he may have been a general
82 8 | friend," as they say, "be lost to them." ~Exactly. ~The
The Second Alcibiades
Part
83 Text | city, while others have lost their lives. And even they
84 Text | than to have had them and lost them. And yet, although
85 Text | Lacedaemonians were at war, our city lost every battle by land and
The Sophist
Part
86 Intro | no end in wandering mazes lost.’~On the other hand, the
87 Intro | created, so long as the mind, lost in the contemplation of
88 Intro | of the Greek thinker was lost in the mazes of the Eleatic
89 Intro | become not.’ Secondly, he has lost sight altogether of the
90 Intro | fractions, until they are lost in generation and flux.
91 Intro | of the finite are alike lost in a higher or positive
92 Intro | absolute, they seemed to be lost in a region beyond human
93 Intro | mind which has entirely lost sight of facts. Nor can
94 Intro | criticize thought we have lost the power of thinking, and,
The Statesman
Part
95 Intro | Laws).~The Statesman has lost the grace and beauty of
96 Intro | labour may not seem to be lost, I must explain the whole
97 Text | many of them have been lost in the lapse of ages, or
The Symposium
Part
98 Text | real existence, but is now lost, and the word ‘Androgynous’
99 Text | another sort, the pair are lost in an amazement of love
Theaetetus
Part
100 Intro | answers. At first the youth is lost in wonder, and is almost
101 Intro | them of children they have lost them by an ill bringing
102 Intro | gained and something is lost by such a resolution or
103 Intro | vestiges are altogether lost, or that we might not, under
104 Text | soon; and have not only lost the children of whom I had
105 Text | tall—not that I should have lost, but that you would have
106 Text | was saying, are you not lost in wonder, like myself,
107 Text | confess to you that I am lost in wonder. At first hearing,
108 Text | mercy; and while you were lost in envy and admiration of
109 Text | he being dismayed, and lost, and stammering broken words,
Timaeus
Part
110 Intro | dreaming of geometrical figures lost in a flux of sense. He contrasts
111 Intro | expression of an age which has lost the power not only of creating
112 Intro | The memory of them was lost, because there was no written
113 Intro | introduce them to you as the lost Athenian citizens of whom
114 Intro | were gradually becoming lost in a common conception of
115 Intro | into one another and are lost sight of. First, let us