| Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
| Alphabetical [« »] enthusiastically 1 enthusiasts 2 entire 83 entirely 101 entirety 5 entities 3 entitled 8 | Frequency [« »] 102 wanting 101 carry 101 endeavour 101 entirely 101 fancy 101 flesh 101 held | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances entirely |
The Apology
Part
1 Intro| Xenophon, who belongs to an entirely different class of writers.
Charmides
Part
2 PreS | Philology, has put forward an entirely new explanation of the Platonic ‘
3 Text | falsehood of the definition.~I entirely agree, said Critias, and
Cratylus
Part
4 Intro| deeply imbedded in language entirely to drop out. The same verbs
5 Intro| stage of language is it entirely lost. It belongs chiefly
6 Text | would only tell, and could entirely convince me, if he chose
7 Text | permutation will sometimes give an entirely opposite sense; I may instance
8 Text | twisted and disguised and entirely altered the original meaning
Crito
Part
9 Text | business will be attributed entirely to our want of courage.
The First Alcibiades
Part
10 Text | anything.~ALCIBIADES: I entirely believe you; but what are
Gorgias
Part
11 Intro| are saying, but I do not entirely believe you.’~That is because
12 Text | I am not sure whether I entirely understand you, but I dare
13 Text | consideration.~CALLICLES: I entirely agree.~SOCRATES: Go back
14 Text | second place, they shall be entirely stripped before they are
Ion
Part
15 Intro| dramatic interest consists entirely in the contrast between
Laches
Part
16 Intro| would have trusted them entirely, if they had not been diametrically
17 Text | LACHES: Yes, Socrates, entirely.~SOCRATES: That is my view,
Laws
Book
18 1 | Cnosus do, as I believe, entirely agree with you. But we should
19 1 | about laws turns almost entirely on pleasure and pain, both
20 1 | Cleinias. Very true; and we entirely agree with you.~Athenian.
21 1 | Do not these qualities entirely desert a man if he becomes
22 1 | drink?~Cleinias. Yes, they entirely desert him.~Athenian. Does
23 3 | land or sea had been almost entirely lost, as I may say, with
24 4 | who gain the upper hand so entirely monopolize the government,
25 5 | and making life to be most entirely free from sorrow. Let parents,
26 7 | nor, on the other hand, entirely avoid pains, but should
27 7 | the sons of the Gods, is entirely associated with the consciousness
28 8 | against their will, but entirely with their will.~Megillus.
29 9 | them, and impose upon them entirely different penalties?~Athenian.
30 10 | also that legislation is entirely a work of art, and is based
31 10 | in a lathe, and is most entirely akin and similar to the
32 10 | care of all things is most entirely natural to them.~Cleinias.
33 10 | not on any principle be entirely mistaken in praising any
34 11 | it, in order that if not entirely, we may yet partially, cure
Lysis
Part
35 Text | all this—are we not indeed entirely wrong?~How so? he replied.~
36 Text | anywhere.~They both agreed and entirely assented, and for a moment
Menexenus
Part
37 Intro| strong antipathy, he is entirely successful, but he is not
Meno
Part
38 Text | attaining good?~MENO: I entirely approve, Socrates, of the
39 Text | SOCRATES: Then you are entirely unacquainted with them?~
Parmenides
Part
40 Intro| saying the same thing in entirely different forms, is a strain
41 Intro| who profess to base truth entirely upon fact. In an unmetaphysical
42 Text | contain two or three, if entirely deprived of the one?~True.~
43 Text | and if the not one is not, entirely opposed?~They are entirely
44 Text | entirely opposed?~They are entirely opposed.~And suppose a person
Phaedo
Part
45 Intro| perfectly adjusted them, or been entirely consistent with himself
46 Text | Would you not say that he is entirely concerned with the soul
47 Text | waking up. Do you agree?~I entirely agree.~Then, suppose that
48 Text | philosophy and who is not entirely pure at the time of his
49 Text | will agree?~Yes, he said, I entirely agree and go along with
Phaedrus
Part
50 Intro| as showing that Plato was entirely free from what may be termed
51 Text | oration, equal in length and entirely new, on the same subject;
Philebus
Part
52 Intro| regarded from a point of view entirely opposite to that of the
53 Text | not, because you would be entirely devoid of intelligence.~
54 Text | saying is purely mental, is entirely derived from memory.~PROTARCHUS:
55 Text | universally eligible and entirely good cannot possibly be
56 Text | absolute good have been entirely disproven in this argument,
Protagoras
Part
57 Text | and therefore I take an entirely opposite course, and acknowledge
58 Text | answer for him?~You are entirely mistaken, Prodicus, said
59 Text | thought that what I said was entirely true.~Then you agree, I
60 Text | taught; but if virtue is entirely knowledge, as you are seeking
The Republic
Book
61 1 | and night. Oh, no; and so entirely astray are you in your ideas
62 1 | if a city were composed entirely of good men, then to avoid
63 2 | answer: Let the unjust man be entirely unjust, and the just man
64 2 | unjust, and the just man entirely just; nothing is to be taken
65 2 | greatest among the gods. ~I entirely agree with you, he said;
66 2 | the gods and like them. ~I entirely agree, he said, in these
67 4 | States and individuals. ~I entirely agree with you. ~And so,
68 4 | many, but has become one entirely temperate and perfectly
69 5 | women, whose natures are so entirely different, ought to perform
70 5 | on in this way you will entirely forget the other question
71 7 | gymnastics: the toil is more entirely the mind's own, and is not
72 8 | is like him; having a mob entirely at his disposal, he is not
73 9 | character; they associate entirely with their own flatterers
The Second Alcibiades
Part
74 Pre | interpretation of Homer, are entirely in the spirit of Plato (
75 Text | also I suspect that men are entirely wrong when they blame the
76 Text | in any art, while he was entirely ignorant of what was best
The Seventh Letter
Part
77 Text | foregoing events, as if he had entirely forgotten his letter to
78 Text | property of Dion was now entirely done for.~After this I resided
79 Text | the impious, would not be entirely blind to the character of
80 Text | captain, who would not be entirely unaware of the approach
The Sophist
Part
81 Intro| which Plato himself is not entirely free. Instead of saying, ‘
82 Intro| under a higher one, and many entirely apart—he is the true dialectician.
83 Intro| the human mind which has entirely lost sight of facts. Nor
84 Intro| to them are in fact most entirely and hopelessly enslaved
85 Text | towards others, and thus is entirely delivered from great prejudices
86 Text | am examining the question entirely out of regard for you.~THEAETETUS:
87 Text | understand you, when we entirely misunderstand you.’ There
88 Text | unless being and the other entirely differed; for, if the other,
The Statesman
Part
89 Intro| the first place it depends entirely on the personal character
90 Text | although I cannot at present entirely explain myself, I will try,
91 Text | and therefore cannot be entirely free from perturbation.
The Symposium
Part
92 Text | drinking be made easiest?~I entirely agree, said Aristophanes,
93 Text | hymn Love’s praises! So entirely has this great deity been
Theaetetus
Part
94 Intro| that such a supposition entirely destroys the pathetic interest
95 Intro| that what is different is entirely different, and whether active
96 Text | Do you agree?~THEAETETUS: Entirely.~SOCRATES: But when the
Timaeus
Part
97 Intro| the ancients, though not entirely dominated by them, were
98 Text | whenever any opposite or entirely different nature was stamped
99 Text | from two causes which are entirely beyond our control. In such
100 Text | who trail their bodies entirely upon the ground and have
101 Text | were made out of the most entirely senseless and ignorant of