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| Alphabetical [« »] seek 84 seeker 3 seekers 1 seeking 103 seeks 34 seem 317 seemed 88 | Frequency [« »] 103 ground 103 keep 103 partake 103 seeking 102 capable 102 feel 102 moral | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances seeking |
Charmides
Part
1 PreS | imperfectly, but are always seeking in vain to have a more perfect
2 Text | And are not we looking and seeking after something more than
Cratylus
Part
3 Intro| the idea? They were also seeking to distinguish the parts
4 Text | blapton is boulomenon aptein (seeking to hold or bind); for aptein
5 Text | that for which there is a seeking (on ou masma); aletheia
Euthydemus
Part
6 Intro| the knowledge which we are seeking the knowledge of the general.
7 Text | which we have so long been seeking might be discovered in that
8 Text | find the art which you were seeking?~SOCRATES: Find! my dear
9 Text | the very art which we were seeking—the art which is the source
10 Text | is the art which we were seeking, it ought to be useful.~
11 Text | knowledge for which we were seeking? Do you mean to say that
12 Text | knowledge for which we are seeking—May I assume this to be
Euthyphro
Part
13 Intro| moral foundation. He is seeking to realize the harmony of
The First Alcibiades
Part
14 Text | the principle which we are seeking?~ALCIBIADES: It would seem
Laches
Part
15 Text | himself out in words, while seeking to deprive of the honour
Laws
Book
16 1 | conclusion is, and what I am seeking to prove: I maintain that
17 7 | of different men’s souls; seeking truly to consider by what
18 11 | education of the orphans, seeking in every possible way to
19 11 | state; and if anybody begs, seeking to pick up a livelihood
20 12 | ordered city should be ever seeking out, going forth over sea
21 12 | propose to himself, if he were seeking to attain salvation?~Cleinias.
Meno
Part
22 Intro| many figures of speech is seeking to unfold. Poetry has been
23 Intro| required of those who are seeking to express the philosophy
24 Text | SOCRATES: That is what I am seeking.~MENO: If you want to have
25 Text | no knowing and no use in seeking to know what we do not know;—
26 Text | original question, Whether in seeking to acquire virtue we should
Parmenides
Part
27 Intro| having gone beyond them in seeking to apply the paradoxes of
28 Intro| the Idea; and that he is seeking to prove indirectly the
29 Intro| deficiencies which Plato is seeking to supply in an age when
Phaedo
Part
30 Intro| had not been mistakenly seeking for him apart from us, instead
31 Intro| thought, and yet are always seeking to represent the mansions
32 Intro| mystic, the philosopher is seeking to withdraw from impurities
33 Intro| And are not we at this day seeking to discover that which Socrates
34 Text | and they only, are ever seeking to release the soul. Is
35 Text | whole life, I have been seeking, according to my ability,
36 Text | says is true, I am rather seeking to convince myself; to convince
Phaedrus
Part
37 Intro| in the Phaedo, they are seeking to recover from a former
38 Intro| which He governs the world—seeking for a ‘private judgment’
Philebus
Part
39 Intro| sphere of thought which he is seeking to attain. First in his
40 Intro| but as the human reason seeking to attain truth by the aid
41 Intro| Pythagorean doctrines, and seeking to find a truth beyond either
42 Intro| universals of which they are seeking to adjust the relations
43 Intro| eagerness for generalization, seeking, as Aristotle says, for
44 Intro| Whereas the philosopher is seeking after wisdom and not after
45 Intro| distinction which we have been seeking to establish between our
46 Intro| Socrates and Plato ‘grew old in seeking’? Are we not desirous of
47 Text | argument has all along been seeking a parallel to pleasure,
48 Text | finding that which we are seeking in the life which is well
Protagoras
Part
49 Intro| public opinion and Socrates seeking for increased clearness
50 Intro| ironical, tiresome, but seeking for the unity of virtue
51 Text | aggravate a disorder which I am seeking to cure.~Such is the fact,
52 Text | he goes about straightway seeking until he finds some one
53 Text | entirely knowledge, as you are seeking to show, then I cannot but
The Republic
Book
54 1 | at us like a wild beast, seeking to devour us. We were quite
55 1 | intentional. If we were seeking for a piece of gold, you
56 1 | it. And why, when we are seeking for justice, a thing more
57 2 | explanation of them such as we are seeking: he must say that God did
58 3 | of necessity, and he is seeking to persuade God by prayer,
59 3 | and wise judge whom we are seeking is not this man, but the
60 4 | further, but at present we are seeking, not for courage, but justice;
61 4 | looked not at what we were seeking, but at what was far off
62 4 | soul of him who desires is seeking after the object of his
63 6 | every means in their power seeking after truth for the sake
64 6 | images, but they are really seeking to behold the things themselves,
65 7 | the knowledge which we are seeking to discover? No. ~But what
66 7 | that good which you are now seeking. ~You are most accurate,
67 7 | of the kind which we are seeking, and which leads naturally
68 7 | the kind for which we are seeking, having a double use, military
69 7 | or blinks on the ground, seeking to learn some particular
70 7 | the dialectician who is seeking for truth, and not the eristic,
71 8 | are deceived by informers, seeking to do them wrong, then at
72 9 | and discontented, if he be seeking to attain honor and victory
73 10 | conclusion at which I was seeking to arrive when I said that
The Seventh Letter
Part
74 Text | quality, when the soul is seeking to know, not the quality,
75 Text | act that which it is not seeking (i.e., the quality), a thing
76 Text | are scouring the country seeking to arrest Heracleides; and
The Sophist
Part
77 Intro| have stumbled unawares; in seeking after the Sophist we have
78 Intro| answering a difficulty; he is seeking to justify the use of common
79 Intro| upon the world. Man was seeking to grasp the universe under
80 Intro| what all religions were seeking after from the beginning
81 Intro| and knowledge. Are we not ‘seeking the living among the dead’
82 Text | the art which we have been seeking, and which from the nature
83 Text | the Sophist, whom we are seeking; no other name can possibly
The Statesman
Part
84 Intro| trace of those whom we were seeking. But still they are only
85 Intro| navigation and medicine, and is seeking to be wise above what is
86 Intro| pictures of them: he is seeking by the aid of dialectic
87 Text | some one else? For we are seeking the ruler; and our enquiry
88 Text | bipeds, and is what we were seeking after, and have now found,
The Symposium
Part
89 Intro| In an age when man was seeking for an expression of the
90 Text | wisdom and virtue, the other seeking to acquire them with a view
91 Text | people say that lovers are seeking for their other half; but
92 Text | but I say that they are seeking neither for the half of
93 Text | too, the mortal nature is seeking as far as is possible to
94 Text | generate. He wanders about seeking beauty that he may beget
Theaetetus
Part
95 Intro| For the disputer is always seeking to trip up his opponent;
96 Intro| It is Protagoras who is seeking to adapt himself to the
97 Intro| But they have always been seeking after a truth or ideal of
98 Intro| enslaved by them. Instead of seeking to frame a technical language,
99 Text | show that we are wrong in seeking for false opinion until
Timaeus
Part
100 Intro| first, I will begin anew, seeking by the grace of God to observe
101 Intro| fell downward, they were seeking their native elements. He
102 Intro| mystic or ascetic; he is not seeking in vain to get rid of matter
103 Intro| century, when the human mind, seeking for Utopias or inventing