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The Apology
Part
1 Intro| ignorance in mythology and figures of speech. The gentleness
Cratylus
Part
2 Intro| with their life and use. Figures of speech, by which the
3 Intro| well sometimes to lay aside figures of speech, such as the ‘
4 Intro| to be delusive. Yet such figures of speech are far nearer
5 Intro| which is not a system. Its figures of speech, pleonasms, ellipses,
6 Text | uses his colours as his figures appear to require them;
7 Text | their works, I mean their figures, better, and the worse execute
8 Text | assignment, whether applied to figures or to names, I call right,
9 Text | appropriate colours and figures, or you may not give them
Crito
Part
10 Intro| the noblest and boldest figures of speech which occur in
Euthyphro
Part
11 Intro| circle, like the moving figures of Daedalus, the ancestor
Gorgias
Part
12 Intro| or even as a painter of figures, if there were other painters
13 Intro| there were other painters of figures; neither can you define
14 Intro| applied to bodies, colours, figures, laws, habits, studies,
15 Intro| of the real and seeming. Figures of speech are made the basis
16 Intro| only be represented under figures derived from visible objects.
17 Intro| visible objects. If these figures are suggestive of some new
18 Intro| them as if they were not figures but realities, is due to
19 Intro| violence in pressing his figures of speech or chains of argument;
20 Intro| and third wave:—on these figures of speech the changes are
21 Intro| transformed into persons, figures of speech into realities.
22 Intro| the meadow, the majestic figures of the judges sitting in
23 Text | you said, ‘The painter of figures,’ should I not be right
24 Text | in asking, ‘What kind of figures, and where do you find them?’~
25 Text | besides, who paint many other figures?~GORGIAS: True.~SOCRATES:
26 Text | such as bodies, colours, figures, sounds, institutions, do
27 Text | SOCRATES: And you would say of figures or colours generally that
Laches
Part
28 Intro| the youths are the central figures, and frequent allusions
Laws
Book
29 2 | they likely to use the same figures and gestures, or to give
30 2 | music there certainly are figures and there are melodies:
31 2 | speak of the melodies or figures of the brave and the coward,
32 2 | tedious, let us say that the figures and melodies which are expressive
33 2 | words, in his rhythms, the figures, and in his melodies, the
34 7 | new and out of the way in figures and colours and the like
35 7 | two kinds: one of nobler figures, imitating the honourable,
36 7 | other of the more ignoble figures, imitating the mean; and
Meno
Part
37 Intro| and yet there are other figures and other colours. Let Meno
38 Intro| relations of geometrical figures. The theorem that the square
39 Intro| various ways and under many figures of speech is seeking to
40 Text | because there are other figures.~MENO: Quite right; and
41 Text | you the names of the other figures if you asked me.~MENO: Courage
42 Text | reason—that there are other figures?~MENO: Yes.~SOCRATES: And
43 Text | proceeded to ask, What other figures are there? you would have
44 Text | and say that they are all figures, even when opposed to one
45 Text | only round and straight figures, but all? Could you not
Parmenides
Part
46 Intro| numbers or of geometrical figures.~The argument is a very
Phaedo
Part
47 Intro| and also on analogies and figures of speech which filled up
48 Intro| form no idea. The words or figures of speech which we use are
49 Intro| Plato represents under the figures of mythology. Doubtless
Phaedrus
Part
50 Intro| in which amid poetical figures, order and arrangement were
51 Intro| described by Socrates in figures of speech which would not
52 Intro| Secondly, the forms or figures which the Platonic philosophy
53 Text | the matter of the poetical figures which I was compelled to
Philebus
Part
54 Intro| there is great variety among figures and colours. Protarchus
55 Text | is like figure, for all figures are comprehended under one
56 Text | class; and yet particular figures may be absolutely opposed
57 Text | and the plane or solid figures which are formed out of
The Republic
Book
58 6 | which the soul uses the figures given by the former division
59 6 | odd, and the even, and the figures, and three kinds of angles,
60 6 | they resemble; not of the figures which they draw, but of
61 7 | vessels, and statues and figures of animals made of wood
62 7 | beauty is like the beauty of figures or pictures excellently
63 10 | judge only by colors and figures. ~Quite so. ~In like manner
The Sophist
Part
64 Intro| alter the proportions of figures, in order to adapt their
65 Intro| are not like numbers and figures, always and everywhere of
The Statesman
Part
66 Intro| his use of mythology and figures of speech. And we observe
The Symposium
Part
67 Text | basso-relievo, like the profile figures having only half a nose
Theaetetus
Part
68 Intro| equal factors, and represent figures which have equal sides,
69 Intro| unequal factors, and represent figures which have unequal sides.
70 Intro| We should say that the figures of the letters, and the
71 Intro| veil our difficulty under figures of speech, but these, although
72 Intro| everywhere. Plato discards both figures, as not really solving the
73 Intro| ourselves from them. Mere figures of speech have unconsciously
74 Intro| sense, the mind’s eye, are figures of speech transferred from
75 Intro| the innumerable lines and figures by which space is or may
76 Intro| the various geometrical figures of which the properties
77 Intro| remark may be made about figures of speech. They fill up
78 Text | which we compared to square figures and called square or equilateral
79 Text | these we compared to oblong figures, and called them oblong
80 Text | admit of probability and figures of speech in matters of
81 Text | from the many in poetical figures, that Oceanus and Tethys,
Timaeus
Part
82 Intro| dreaming of geometrical figures lost in a flux of sense.
83 Intro| symbols or translates into figures of speech. He has no implements
84 Intro| differences of kinds to the figures of the elements and their
85 Intro| labour of telling all the figures of them, moving as in dance,
86 Intro| soft materials on which figures are impressed. In the same
87 Intro| planes, and plane rectilinear figures are made up of triangles.
88 Intro| the four most beautiful figures which are unlike one another
89 Intro| divided into long and round figures, and to these as to anchors,
90 Intro| thoughts of their hearts in figures of speech which to them
91 Intro| speech which to them were not figures, and were already consecrated
92 Intro| without. The numbers and figures which were present to the
93 Intro| combinations of geometrical figures or in the infinite variety
94 Intro| surfaces of geometrical figures have formed solids? We must
95 Intro| personification of the numbers and figures in which the heavenly bodies
96 Intro| by mathematical laws and figures. (We may observe by the
97 Intro| may help to fill up with figures of speech the void of knowledge.~
98 Intro| of imaginary geometrical figures; in other words, we are
99 Intro| combined into regular solid figures: (3) three of them, fire,
100 Intro| differences in geometrical figures. But he does not explain
101 Intro| deductions from geometrical figures or movements. Of the causes
102 Intro| is a sum of numbers and figures has been the most fruitful
103 Intro| which they constructed into figures. Plato adopted their speculations
104 Intro| if not out of geometrical figures, at least out of different
105 Intro| truer far—of mathematical figures. It is this element in the
106 Text | within itself all other figures. Wherefore he made the world
107 Text | most like itself of all figures; for he considered that
108 Text | attempt to tell all the figures of them circling as in dance,
109 Text | person to make all kinds of figures of gold and to be always
110 Text | the triangle or any other figures which are formed in the
111 Text | those who wish to impress figures on soft substances do not
112 Text | and take their own proper figures; or, again, when many small
113 Text | having generated these figures, generated no more; but
114 Text | sides; and of the compound figures which are formed out of
115 Text | soul he distributed into figures at once round and elongated,