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| Alphabetical [« »] passions 26 passive 17 passivity 1 past 110 pastime 11 pastimes 3 pasturage 1 | Frequency [« »] 110 below 110 cebes 110 hellenes 110 past 110 style 109 aim 109 creation | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances past |
Charmides
Part
1 PreS | that the teaching of the past has still a meaning for
2 Text | some one who knows the past and present as well as the
3 Text | happy? the knowledge of what past, present, or future thing?
Cratylus
Part
4 Intro| recollection of their own past history; the use of a word
5 Intro| individual and nation, of the past and present, of the inward
6 Intro| man—of interpreting the past by the present, and of substituting
7 Intro| were but a remnant of the past which has survived to our
Critias
Part
8 Text | had happened in times long past; for mythology and the enquiry
Euthydemus
Part
9 Text | been living for many years past in these regions. As to
The First Alcibiades
Part
10 Text | a slave of his who was past all other work. I might
Gorgias
Part
11 Intro| whole tribe of statesmen, past as well as present, are
12 Intro| among the statesmen of a past age; or with the mention
13 Intro| that the statesman of a past age were no better than
14 Intro| fault with all statesmen past as well as present, not
15 Intro| the greatest deeds of the past. The poet of the future
16 Intro| independent of circumstances, past, present, or to come. He
17 Intro| itself many elements of the past: for example, the tale of
18 Intro| nor any traditions of the past, because men were all born
Laches
Part
19 Intro| the company about their past lives. Nicias has often
20 Intro| the good and evil of the past or present; that is to say,
21 Intro| separable from that of the past and present; in other words,
22 Text | both of his present and past life; and when he is once
23 Text | the present, nor of the past, but is of future and expected
24 Text | knowledge or science of the past, another of the present,
25 Text | equally in all times, present, past, and future; and one science
26 Text | whether future, present, or past?~NICIAS: Yes, indeed Socrates;
27 Text | but of the present and past, and of any time?~NICIAS:
Laws
Book
28 3 | legislators, as they are called, past and present, if we would
29 4 | from any desire to recall past grievances); but he, as
30 6 | either to future, present, or past marriages, shall be referred
31 11 | your whole family, both past and future, and yet more
Lysis
Part
32 Intro| youth or friends of the past regard or be regarded by
Meno
Part
33 Intro| great Athenian statesmen of past times. Socrates replies
34 Intro| into the inheritance of the past. In the Phaedrus, as well
35 Intro| an echo or shadow of the past, coming back by recollection
36 Intro| divorce the present from the past, or the part from the whole,
37 Text | among the best men of the past. Let us take another,—Aristides,
Parmenides
Part
38 Intro| expressions of time, whether past, future, or present, can
39 Intro| time, ‘to have been’ in past, ‘to be about to be’ in
40 Intro| admits of all time, present, past, and future—was, is, shall
41 Intro| we are dependent on the past. We know that the words ‘
42 Text | signify a participation of past time?~Certainly.~And do
43 Text | participation of being at a past time, and to be about to
44 Text | surely in going from the past to the future, it cannot
45 Text | not also partake of the past, the present, and the future?~
46 Text | or that or other, or be past, present, or future. Nor
Phaedo
Part
47 Intro| is good relatively to the past, and yet may be comparatively
48 Intro| eternity’ takes the place of past and future states of existence.
Phaedrus
Part
49 Intro| Such a recollection of past days she receives through
50 Intro| associated with them, in the past and future than in the present.
51 Intro| had no remembrance of the past, no power of understanding
52 Intro| the great authors of the past led to the disappearance
53 Intro| difficulties. He interprets past ages by his own. The greatest
54 Intro| them all the results of the past. The co-operation of many
55 Intro| the recollection of the past, in which are necessarily
56 Text | some affair of love either past or in contemplation; but
57 Text | them. And now forgive the past and accept the present,
58 Text | and like Odysseus sailing past them, deaf to their siren
Philebus
Part
59 Intro| they may represent either past, present, or future. And,
60 Intro| sharing the fate of the past. All philosophies remain,
61 Text | and that now, as in time past, they run about together,
62 Text | which he has no present or past experience?~PROTARCHUS:
63 Text | suffering and yet remembers past pleasures which, if they
64 Text | relation to the present and the past, or in relation to the future
65 Text | produced in us, relate to the past and present only, and not
66 Text | existence either in the past, present, or future?~PROTARCHUS:
67 Text | aught unseemly, at any time, past, present, or future.~SOCRATES:
Protagoras
Part
68 Text | does not retaliate for a past wrong which cannot be undone;
The Republic
Book
69 3 | narration of events, either past, present, or to come? ~Certainly,
70 4 | reality for a long time past we have been talking of
71 6 | beginning when they are hardly past childhood, they devote only
72 6 | our citizens fails and is past civil and military duties,
73 6 | the countless ages of the past, or at the present hour
74 9 | the unknown, whether in past, present, or future: when
75 10 | sirens-Lachesis singing of the past, Clotho of the present,
The Seventh Letter
Part
76 Text | can say about all writers, past or future, who say they
The Sophist
Part
77 Intro| The present has been the past. The succession in time
78 Intro| Whether regarded as present or past, under the form of time
79 Intro| he criticizes, is of the past. No other thinker has ever
80 Intro| part reflections of the past, and it is difficult to
The Statesman
Part
81 Intro| having no traditions of the past; and as the temperature
82 Text | having no memory of the past. And although they had nothing
83 Text | charge, that during the past year they have not navigated
The Symposium
Part
84 Intro| described as having been in past times a humble but inseparable
85 Intro| Apollodorus, who for three years past has made a daily study of
86 Intro| backwards and forwards to past and future states of existence,
Theaetetus
Part
87 Intro| Like the midwives, who are ‘past bearing children,’ he too
88 Intro| only of the present and past, but of the future; and
89 Intro| herself, comparing within her past, present, and future. For
90 Intro| have inherited from the past. Many erroneous conceptions
91 Intro| they belong to all times—past, present, and future. Any
92 Intro| without end. We speak of a past, present, and future, and
93 Intro| recalling impressions from the past.~Thus begins the passage
94 Intro| conceptions of the wisdom of the past as are inseparable from
95 Intro| only be contemplated in the past, that is to say, in the
96 Intro| or reanimating the buried past: (4) thought, in which images
97 Text | but only those who are past bearing.~THEAETETUS: Yes,
98 Text | preparation; for of present or past pleasure we are not as yet
99 Text | comparing in herself things past and present with the future.~
Timaeus
Part
100 Intro| having greater divisions of past, present, and future. These
101 Intro| back into the infinity of past time; they suggested the
102 Intro| described in a figure only as past or future. This is one of
103 Intro| the absolute existence of past and future.) The course
104 Intro| into the romance of the past or some ideal of the future.
105 Intro| by the illusions of the past, which are ever assuming
106 Intro| of all this universe is past finding out; and even if
107 Text | poets present as well as past are no better—not that I
108 Text | of all this universe is past finding out; and even if
109 Text | all parts of time, and the past and future are created species
110 Text | to this man or that, of past, present or future good