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| Alphabetical [« »] created 149 creates 22 creating 22 creation 109 creations 25 creative 24 creator 64 | Frequency [« »] 110 past 110 style 109 aim 109 creation 109 enemies 109 reality 109 share | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances creation |
Cratylus
Part
1 Intro| the word neos implies that creation is always going on—the original
2 Intro| language is as much the creation of the ear as of the tongue,
3 Intro| language, is an unconscious creation of the human mind. We can
4 Intro| in them. Into their first creation we have ceased to enquire:
5 Text | is always in process of creation. The giver of the name wanted
6 Text | and is the instrument of creation in all, and is the subtlest
Critias
Part
7 Intro| origin of the world to the creation of man, and the dawn of
8 Intro| Poseidon and Athene, and the creation of the first inhabitants
Gorgias
Part
9 Intro| novel writing, that peculiar creation of our own and the last
Laws
Book
10 3 | For Xerxes, being the creation of the same education, met
11 5 | constitution of a state—one the creation of offices, the other the
12 6 | courageously mad and daring creation this our city is.~Cleinias.
13 10 | that this and every other creation is for the sake of the whole,
14 10 | as the laws of the common creation admit. Now, as the soul
15 12 | institutions until then our creation is incomplete.~Cleinias.
Phaedrus
Part
16 Intro| and trace the works of creation to their author.~So, partly
17 Text | the whole heavens and all creation would collapse and stand
18 Text | of another, and yet the creation of such an art is not easy.~
Philebus
Part
19 Intro| preceded distinct kinds in the creation of the world; the first
20 Text | less gentle, and at each creation of more or less, quantity
The Republic
Book
21 1 | second love of money as a creation of their own, resembling
22 2 | the State in process of creation, we shall see the justice
23 2 | the State in process of creation also. ~I dare say. ~When
24 4 | That is certain. ~And the creation of health is the institution
25 4 | parts of the body; and the creation of disease is the production
26 4 | True. ~And is not the creation of justice the institution
27 4 | parts of the soul, and the creation of injustice the production
28 10 | by the natural process of creation he is the author of this
The Sophist
Part
29 Intro| well as infinite, of all creation. The divine mind is the
30 Text | suppose the processes of creation to be successive or continuous,
31 Text | begin by dividing the art of creation; for imitation is a kind
32 Text | for imitation is a kind of creation—of images, however, as we
33 Text | there are two kinds of creation.~THEAETETUS: What are they?~
34 Text | existed previously—by the creation of God, or shall we agree
35 Text | us to be each and all the creation and work of God.~THEAETETUS:
36 Text | and these are also the creation of a wonderful skill.~THEAETETUS:
37 Text | the images as well as the creation are equally the work of
38 Text | other products of human creation are also twofold and go
39 Text | there are realities and a creation of a kind of similitudes.~
40 Text | that further division of creation, the juggling of words,
41 Text | the juggling of words, a creation human, and not divine—any
The Statesman
Part
42 Intro| the airiest and freest of creation, in which they are far behind
43 Text | the freest and airiest of creation, and have been running a
44 Text | freest and airiest of creation,’ ‘worthiest and laziest
45 Text | worthiest and laziest of creation.’)~YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly.~
46 Text | men, but with the brute creation, had used all these advantages
47 Text | class, I say, which is the creation and offspring of many other
The Symposium
Part
48 Intro| into an efficient cause of creation. The traces of the existence
49 Text | Who will deny that the creation of the animals is his doing?
50 Text | complex and manifold. All creation or passage of non-being
51 Text | not emulate them in the creation of children such as theirs,
Theaetetus
Part
52 Text | tongue, and the motion and creation of bitterness in and about
Timaeus
Part
53 Intro| the Word, the Church, the creation of the world in a Jewish
54 Intro| concerned with the animal creation, including under this term
55 Intro| naturally inclines to view creation as the work of design. The
56 Intro| Eternal, his theories of creation, his mathematical anticipations,
57 Intro| world, going down to the creation of man, and then I shall
58 Intro| only concerned with the creation of the body and soul.~The
59 Intro| place beside them; for the creation is made up of both, mind
60 Intro| as in every other part of creation, I suppose God to have made
61 Intro| committed to his offspring the creation of the mortal. From him
62 Intro| to divine philosophy.~The creation of bones and flesh was on
63 Intro| been brought down to the creation of man. Completeness seems
64 Intro| the later Jewish idea of creation, according to which God
65 Intro| the Hebrew Scriptures the creation of the world is described,
66 Intro| into the distance. The real creation began, not with matter,
67 Intro| manner before the work of creation begins; and there is an
68 Intro| too, though eternal, is a creation, a world of thought prior
69 Intro| description of the process of creation has less of freedom or spontaneity.
70 Intro| committing the lesser works of creation to inferior powers. (Compare,
71 Intro| self-existent nature, of which creation is the copy. We can only
72 Intro| supposes the process of creation to take place in accordance
73 Intro| means (3) to say that the creation of the world is not a material
74 Intro| mind regarded as a work, as creation—not as the creator. The
75 Intro| up his conception of the creation of the world. The explanation
76 Intro| exhausted in the work of creation.~The proportions in which
77 Intro| settled in their places at the creation: (2) they are four in number,
78 Intro| which God combined in the creation of the world. The soul,
79 Intro| tell us the origin. The creation, in Plato’s sense, is really
80 Intro| Plato’s sense, is really the creation of order; and the first
81 Intro| surfaces in his account of the creation of the world, or the attraction
82 Intro| the teleological theory of creation. Whether all things in the
83 Intro| by the gradual process of creation; but he would have insisted
84 Intro| the nature of God and of creation (c) the morality of the
85 Intro| parallels with the account of creation and of the first origin
86 Intro| thought are in process of creation he is necessarily tentative
87 Intro| of not-being, he admits creation to have an existence which
88 Intro| appear only in the act of creation. In so far as he works with
89 Intro| object.~The first work of creation is perfected, the second
90 Intro| care of human things.~The creation of the world is the impression
91 Intro| the Mosaic account of the creation. Neither when we speak of
92 Intro| fashioned in men at their first creation the rudiments of nails.’
93 Intro| truest sense the origin of creation and of the world, as we
94 Text | world and going down to the creation of man; next, I am to receive
95 Text | or how existing without creation, if we be not altogether
96 Text | and are in a process of creation and created. Now that which
97 Text | truest sense the origin of creation and of the world, as we
98 Text | God in the beginning of creation made the body of the universe
99 Text | than the framer.~Now the creation took up the whole of each
100 Text | and thought of God in the creation of time. The sun and moon
101 Text | which were necessary to the creation of time had attained a motion
102 Text | difficulty in understanding the creation of images in mirrors and
103 Text | through necessity—for the creation is mixed, being made up
104 Text | as they were prior to the creation of the heaven, and what
105 Text | was the creator, but the creation of the mortal he committed
106 Text | They appointed this lower creation his place here in order
107 Text | us assume thus much.~The creation of the rest of the body
108 Text | fashioned in men at their first creation the rudiments of nails.
109 Text | the universe down to the creation of man is nearly completed.