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| Alphabetical [« »] five-and-twenty 1 fives 1 fix 23 fixed 105 fixedly 1 fixedness 6 fixes 3 | Frequency [« »] 106 sees 105 arise 105 external 105 fixed 105 immortal 105 reflection 104 assume | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances fixed |
Charmides
Part
1 PreS | gender of any object was once fixed, a similar gender was naturally
2 PreS | terms had not yet acquired a fixed meaning. I have just said
Cratylus
Part
3 Intro| lively-minded person. They are fixed by the simultaneous utterance
4 Intro| words which should have fixed meanings, and stand in the
5 Intro| whether they are now finally fixed and have received their
6 Intro| exercised over thought. Fixed words, like fixed ideas,
7 Intro| thought. Fixed words, like fixed ideas, have often governed
8 Intro| newly-created forms soon become fixed; there are few if any vestiges
9 Intro| exceptions: grammar ties it up in fixed rules. Language has many
10 Intro| completion: they became fixed or crystallized in an imperfect
11 Intro| words should quickly become fixed or set and not continue
12 Intro| suppose that words have a fixed form and sound. Lexicons
Critias
Part
13 Text | boundaries were in those days fixed by the Isthmus, and that
Crito
Part
14 Text | if you had liked, have fixed the penalty at banishment;
Euthydemus
Part
15 Intro| propositions, how to resist the fixed impression of an ‘eternal
Euthyphro
Part
16 Intro| and evil, which have no fixed rule; and these are precisely
17 Text | away and will not remain fixed where they are placed because
18 Text | detain them and keep them fixed. But enough of this. As
The First Alcibiades
Part
19 Text | your thoughts and actions fixed upon them, look away to
Gorgias
Part
20 Intro| of the dialogue has been fixed at 405 B.C., when Socrates
21 Intro| objective character. Had Plato fixed his mind, not on the ideal
22 Intro| world. His thoughts are fixed not on power or riches or
23 Intro| raptures, having his eye fixed on a city which is in heaven.
24 Text | understands his art have his eye fixed upon these, in all the words
25 Text | would seem now to have been fixed and riveted by us, if I
Laches
Part
26 Text | desires and pleasures, either fixed in their rank or turning
Laws
Book
27 1 | obey the law, and impose fixed penalties on those who disobey,
28 2 | As to wisdom and true and fixed opinions, happy is the man
29 2 | strains of virtue. These they fixed, and exhibited the patterns
30 2 | confidently embody them in a fixed and legal form. For the
31 5 | several districts may meet at fixed times, and that they may
32 5 | long to have their property fixed at a moderate limit, and
33 8 | their supply, let him have a fixed measure, which shall be
34 9 | like stones, are already fixed in their places, and others
35 9 | threefold or fourfold, shall be fixed by the judges who convict
36 11 | the price of them, at a fixed place in the agora, and
37 11 | the sight of waxen images fixed either at their doors, or
38 11 | earnest—that is unalterably fixed; but we have still to say
39 12 | and let there be a penalty fixed, which he shall suffer or
Meno
Part
40 Intro| narrowed and has become fixed by the realism of the schoolmen.
41 Intro| practice. There is a gulf fixed between the infinite substance
42 Intro| as we sometimes imagine. Fixed ideas have taken the most
43 Text | do well to have his eye fixed: Do you understand?~MENO:
44 Text | any one who likes, at a fixed price?~ANYTUS: Whom do you
Parmenides
Part
45 Intro| then again emerging as fixed Ideas, in some passages
46 Text | are, as it were, patterns fixed in nature, and other things
Phaedo
Part
47 Intro| of them, which have been fixed in forms of art and can
Phaedrus
Part
48 Intro| disinterested or mad love, fixed on objects of sense, and
Philebus
Part
49 Intro| them; but they soon become fixed or set, and in after life
50 Intro| morality should be plain and fixed, and should use language
51 Text | SOCRATES: How can anything fixed be concerned with that which
Protagoras
Part
52 Text | still speaking; still stood fixed to hear (Borrowed by Milton, “
The Republic
Book
53 1 | believe that if I had not fixed my eye upon him, I should
54 2 | one and the same immutably fixed in his own proper image? ~
55 3 | receive from the citizens a fixed rate of pay, enough to meet
56 4 | opinion was to be indelibly fixed by their nurture and training,
57 4 | spin round with their pegs fixed on the spot, are at rest
58 6 | Adeimantus, whose mind is fixed upon true being, has surely
59 6 | ever directed toward things fixed and immutable, which he
60 6 | visible and intelligible fixed in your mind? ~I have. ~
61 7 | private life must have his eye fixed. ~I agree, he said, as far
62 8 | property falls below the amount fixed to have any share in the
63 10 | second. The largest (or fixed stars) is spangled, and
The Sophist
Part
64 Intro| signified by them as absolutely fixed and defined. These are some
65 Text | would have any clear or fixed notion of being in his mind?~
The Statesman
Part
66 Intro| subordinate to him. (7) Fixed principles are implanted
67 Intro| restless motion: they must be fixed by a mean, which is also
68 Intro| elements must remain—the fixed law and the living will;
69 Intro| compare Republic). It has fixed rules which are the props
70 Intro| to the law, conforms to fixed rules and lies for the most
71 Text | in some cases is firmly fixed by the truth in each particular,
72 Text | any number of men, having fixed laws, in acting contrary
73 Text | to have been most justly fixed upon the politicians, as
The Symposium
Part
74 Intro| which the eye of the mind is fixed in fond amazement. The unity
75 Intro| matter there is a great gulf fixed between Greek and Christian
76 Text | neighbouring house. ‘There he is fixed,’ said he, ‘and when I call
77 Text | until noon—there he stood fixed in thought; and at noon
Theaetetus
Part
78 Intro| when they have been long fixed and defined. In the age
79 Intro| and the new, were not yet fixed. The Greeks, in the fourth
80 Intro| with others; for nothing is fixed in them or their ideas,—
81 Intro| ideas,—they are at war with fixed principles.’ I suppose,
82 Intro| ways, then there is nothing fixed or defined at all, and therefore
83 Intro| ideas alone seemed to be fixed, so to a later generation
84 Intro| philosophical opinions the only fixed points appeared to be outward
85 Intro| laws of the world remain fixed as at the beginning. He
86 Intro| Plato it has not yet become fixed: we are still stumbling
Timaeus
Part
87 Intro| the same. Thus then the fixed stars were created, being
88 Intro| and Furies, typifying the fixed order or the extraordinary
89 Intro| extent over the other—the fixed stars keep the ‘wanderers’
90 Intro| indivisible, the heaven of the fixed stars, partaking of the
91 Intro| outer circle containing the fixed, the inner the wandering
92 Intro| the outer circle of the fixed stars and the inner circle
93 Intro| return. In attributing to the fixed stars only the most perfect
94 Intro| hours, but the orbits of the fixed stars take a different direction
95 Intro| motion of the circle of the fixed stars, and they have a second
96 Intro| parts of the earth. The fixed stars have also two movements—
97 Intro| by Plato, if he had any fixed or scientific conception
98 Intro| myths. These are not the fixed modes in which spiritual
99 Intro| pierced ‘to the heaven of the fixed stars’ which is beyond them.
100 Intro| and the divisible, of the fixed stars and the planets, of
101 Intro| as he works with his eye fixed upon an eternal pattern
102 Text | particulars will be more firmly fixed in our memories?~SOCRATES:
103 Text | And for this reason the fixed stars were created, to be
104 Text | from a living being, but is fixed and rooted in the same spot,
105 Text | into the world having a fixed span, and the triangles