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Alphabetical [« »] meteors 1 meter 2 methinks 6 method 108 methodically 1 methodist 1 methodists 2 | Frequency [« »] 109 value 108 fall 108 likeness 108 method 108 tyrant 107 courageous 107 five | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances method |
The Apology Part
1 Text | consideration, I thought of a method of trying the question. Charmides Part
2 PreS | expected to follow from his method of procedure. For he takes 3 PreS | intentional sequence.~It is this method of taking passages out of 4 PreS | the same with it, to that method which the Fathers practised, 5 PreS | suggest. It is akin to the method employed by Schleiermacher Cratylus Part
6 Intro| must be tested by some new method. Will you help me in the 7 Intro| ours is the true and only method of discovery; otherwise 8 Intro| of language, by rule and method, which they gather from 9 Text | examined according to some new method?~HERMOGENES: Very likely.~ 10 Text | several colours, as his method is when he has to paint 11 Text | proceed, that the higher method is the one which we or others 12 Text | things; or is this only the method of instruction, and is there 13 Text | and is there some other method of enquiry and discovery.~ Gorgias Part
14 Intro| successors, who have applied his method with the most various results. 15 Intro| The value and use of the method has been hardly, if at all, 16 Intro| dialectics, he ends by losing his method, his life, himself, in them. 17 Text | Gorgias; exhibit the shorter method now, and the longer one Laws Book
18 1 | shall gladly welcome any method of enquiry which is right.~ 19 2 | impropriety in our using such a method of persuading them to join 20 4 | gentler, others a ruder method of cure; and as children 21 4 | of the double and single method in legislation?~Cleinias. 22 5 | settlement. Following this method in the present instance, 23 6 | importance.~Cleinias. What method can we devise of electing 24 6 | Athenian. This will be the method:—Sons of the Cretans, I 25 7 | Cleinias. What is their method?~Athenian. To consecrate 26 7 | only find some suitable method of doing so. But what do 27 12 | There never has been a truer method than this discovered by Meno Part
28 Intro| receive knowledge by a new method and to work by observation 29 Intro| groping about for a new method more comprehensive than 30 Intro| distance the promise of such a method, which can hardly be any 31 Intro| hardly be any other than the method of idealized experience, 32 Intro| history of philosophy. It is a method which does not divorce the 33 Intro| us reflect on the want of method which prevails in our own Parmenides Part
34 Intro| taken at random, of a new method. They seem to have been 35 Intro| of Xenophon of any such method being attributed to Socrates; 36 Intro| spoken of that ‘favourite method’ of proceeding by regular 37 Intro| expressly spoken of as the method which Socrates had heard 38 Intro| Parmenides speaks of a similar method being applied to all Ideas. 39 Intro| give an illustration of method. The second view has been 40 Intro| expressly said to follow the method of Zeno, and that the complex 41 Intro| speaker is the same, and the method pursued by him is also the 42 Intro| the first part, that the method of Zeno should, as Socrates 43 Intro| tested by the interrogative method of Socrates; the Eleatic 44 Intro| severer and perhaps impossible method of hypothetical consequences, 45 Intro| been using an imaginary method to work out an unmeaning 46 Intro| above the illusion.~The method of the Parmenides may be 47 Text | difficulty in showing by this method that visible things are Phaedo Part
48 Intro| confused notion of another method in which matters of this 49 Intro| return to the old and safe method of ideas. Though I do not 50 Intro| termed the transcendental method of interpretation, and is 51 Intro| less; the resort to the method of ideas, which to us appear 52 Intro| with his safe and simple method of ideas. He wants to have 53 Text | confused notion of a new method, and can never admit the 54 Text | operation. However, this was the method which I adopted: I first Phaedrus Part
55 Intro| decline. There is the want of method in physical science, the 56 Text | Socrates.~SOCRATES: The method which proceeds without analysis 57 Text | Nor, until they adopt our method of reading and writing, 58 Text | art?~PHAEDRUS: What is our method?~SOCRATES: I cannot give Philebus Part
59 Text | plurality in unity. Having no method, they make their one and Protagoras Part
60 Text | latter or more compendious method.~Socrates, he replied, many 61 Text | and if I had followed the method of disputation which my The Republic Book
62 1 | good, he said. ~And which method do I understand you to prefer? 63 2 | that we had better adopt a method which I may illustrate thus; 64 4 | said. ~And is not a similar method to be pursued about the 65 4 | I do not think that the method which we are employing is 66 4 | this question; the true method is another and a longer 67 7 | that there is any other method of comprehending by any 68 8 | That, he said, is our method. ~Well, I said, and how 69 8 | kinsmen; by the favorite method of false accusation he brings The Seventh Letter Part
70 Text | nor was there any ready method by which I could make new The Sophist Part
71 Intro| developing the dialectical method. On the other hand, the 72 Intro| Sophist: (II) the dialectical method: (III) the nature of the 73 Intro| altogether give up his Socratic method, of which another trace 74 Intro| been asked, whether the method of ‘abscissio infinti,’ 75 Intro| contribution to logical method, he delights also to transfix 76 Intro| out of one another.~This method of opposites has supplied 77 Intro| incline to think that the method of knowledge is inseparable 78 Intro| future knowledge, and a method to which all future philosophies 79 Intro| have already discovered the method to which all philosophy 80 Text | another, or to proceed by the method of question and answer. 81 Text | practise beforehand the method which is to be applied to 82 Text | STRANGER: Of education, one method appears to be rougher, and 83 Text | imitation he is caught. For our method of tackling each and all 84 Text | pursuing the same analytic method as before, I think that 85 Text | Theaetetus. For the right method, I conceive, will be to The Statesman Part
86 Intro| regarded as an illustration of method, and that analogies are 87 Intro| and the illustration of method are connected, not like 88 Intro| for the Sophist, by the method of dichotomy, gives an opportunity 89 Intro| impartiality of the dialectical method, which places birds in juxtaposition 90 Intro| Sophist, the dialectical method is no respecter of persons. 91 Intro| developing the dialectical method and sharpening the wits 92 Intro| Statesman,’ or ‘Concerning Method.’ Dialectic, which in the 93 Intro| the shorter to the longer method;—if we divide in the middle, 94 Intro| distinct subjects—politics and method. Yet they are not so far 95 Intro| is greatly occupied about method, to which he had probably 96 Text | STRANGER: That the dialectical method is no respecter of persons, 97 Text | being to assert the great method of division according to Theaetetus Part
98 Intro| ideas, or illustrated a new method, his aim has been sufficiently 99 Intro| Socrates, to adopt this humaner method, and to avoid captious and 100 Intro| This is the scientific method of studying the mind. But 101 Intro| proceed by the Inductive Method: it has not the necessity 102 Text | may put questions to me—a method to which no intelligent Timaeus Part
103 Intro| the Neo-Platonists had a method of interpretation which 104 Intro| generation of the world by a method with which your scientific 105 Intro| have this character. A true method is the result of many ages 106 Intro| objects. Proceeding by a method of superficial observation, 107 Text | opinion according to the method of discussion which we are 108 Text | in reasoning out by the method of probabilities. A man