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Alphabetical [« »] distinctness 11 distinguish 120 distinguishable 9 distinguished 98 distinguisher 1 distinguishes 17 distinguishing 29 | Frequency [« »] 98 asking 98 boy 98 cold 98 distinguished 98 got 98 move 98 opposed | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances distinguished |
Charmides Part
1 Intro| and action were not yet distinguished. Hence the confusion between 2 Text | mother’s house is equally distinguished; for your maternal uncle, 3 Text | but I conceive him to have distinguished making from doing and work; 4 Text | the several sciences are distinguished not by the mere fact that 5 Text | Quite true.~And medicine is distinguished from other sciences as having Cratylus Part
6 Intro| expression might not be distinguished from the idea? They were The First Alcibiades Part
7 Pre | Aristotle cannot always be distinguished from that of a later age ( 8 Text | sprung from one of the most distinguished families in your own state, 9 Text | instrument of the harper is to be distinguished from the harper himself?~ 10 Text | and the harper are to be distinguished from the hands and feet Gorgias Part
11 Intro| That pleasure is to be distinguished from good is proved by the 12 Intro| rhetoric has still to be distinguished from cookery. ‘What is rhetoric?’ 13 Text | the poet says, men become distinguished; he creeps into a corner Laches Part
14 Text | of fence have ever been distinguished in war,—there has been a Laws Book
15 1 | vice will be more clearly distinguished by us. And when they have 16 3 | these and others were duly distinguished, nor were the performers 17 5 | offices in states, should be distinguished truly in each case from 18 7 | well as men who have been distinguished in virtue. The order of 19 7 | and how are the two to be distinguished? There are dances of the 20 9 | kinds of actions have been distinguished—the one, voluntary, the 21 11 | which cannot clearly be distinguished. There is the kind just Menexenus Part
22 Pre | Aristotle cannot always be distinguished from that of a later age ( Meno Part
23 Text | are they not rather to be distinguished by some other quality, as Parmenides Part
24 Intro| then by a further analysis distinguished from, and even opposed to 25 Text | something all the same, and is distinguished from other things.~Certainly.~ Phaedo Part
26 Intro| Endymion) would be no longer distinguished from the rest of mankind. 27 Intro| and rhetorical; they are distinguished in much the same manner Phaedrus Part
28 Intro| How is the non-lover to be distinguished from the lover? In all of 29 Text | what way is the lover to be distinguished from the non-lover? Let 30 Text | a thousand years; he is distinguished from the ordinary good man 31 Text | practice, you will be a distinguished speaker; if you fall short Philebus Part
32 Intro| sphere of ideas can hardly be distinguished.~The four principles are 33 Intro| confused but afterwards distinguished. A distinction was also 34 Intro| modern writers have also distinguished between pleasure the test, 35 Intro| philosophers have not always distinguished the theoretical and the 36 Text | voice was infinite, first distinguished in this infinity a certain 37 Text | definite number; and lastly, he distinguished a third class of letters 38 Text | Quite right; but now, having distinguished the four, I think that we Protagoras Part
39 Intro| words—in the presence of a distinguished company consisting of disciples 40 Text | their sons grow up to be distinguished or undistinguished according 41 Text | and how they are to be distinguished, and of explaining when The Republic Book
42 1 | name pilot by which he is distinguished has nothing to do with sailing, 43 2 | the unjust be like other distinguished masters of craft; like the 44 2 | honor of you after you had distinguished yourselves at the battle 45 4 | knowledge which is defined and ~distinguished from other kinds and is 46 4 | rule is exercised by one distinguished man or by many. ~True, he 47 5 | difference of nature, or why we distinguished them when we assigned different 48 5 | Certainly. ~But the hero who has distinguished himself, what shall be done 49 5 | tells how Ajax, after he had distinguished himself in battle, was rewarded 50 6 | soul into three parts; and distinguished the several natures of justice, 51 7 | confused manner; they were not distinguished. ~Yes. ~Whereas the thinking 52 7 | who still survive and have distinguished themselves in every action 53 10 | parts of the soul have been distinguished. ~What do you mean? ~Speaking The Sophist Part
54 Intro| Theaetetus himself is not distinguished by the remarkable traits 55 Intro| enthusiastic defender in the distinguished historian of Greece. He 56 Intro| senses are not always clearly distinguished. Sometimes the generic meaning 57 Intro| thing, how could truth be distinguished from falsehood? The Eleatic 58 Intro| cannot in any degree be distinguished, is clearly repugnant to 59 Intro| phenomenon. For Plato has not distinguished between the Being which 60 Text | There is one part which is distinguished as the sale of a man’s own 61 Text | fighting class, and was further distinguished as a hero of debate, who 62 Text | described as an imitator—to be distinguished from the other, as he who 63 Text | as he who is ignorant is distinguished from him who knows?~THEAETETUS: The Statesman Part
64 Intro| weaving, which will have to be distinguished from the kindred arts; and 65 Intro| yet we have not clearly distinguished the political shepherd from 66 Intro| competitors, from whom he must be distinguished; there are merchants, husbandmen, 67 Intro| distinctions, but as yet have not distinguished the weaving of garments 68 Intro| wizards, who must be carefully distinguished from the true king or statesman. 69 Intro| monarchy we have already distinguished royalty and tyranny; of 70 Intro| plan Plato has invented or distinguished several important forms 71 Text | and which must first be distinguished from one another.~YOUNG 72 Text | which the true one may be distinguished as a seventh.~YOUNG SOCRATES: 73 Text | Rhetoric seems to be quickly distinguished from politics, being a different The Symposium Part
74 Intro| that Phaedrus should have distinguished the heavenly love from the 75 Text | think that he has rightly distinguished two kinds of love. But my Theaetetus Part
76 Intro| which are with difficulty distinguished from them. ‘At first,’ says 77 Intro| not been always clearly distinguished; the relativity of knowledge 78 Intro| change;’ and he expressly distinguished between ‘the general and 79 Intro| that knowledge must be distinguished from opinion. A better distinction 80 Intro| mental processes are hardly distinguished in language from bodily 81 Intro| passive, and by this are distinguished from the active faculty 82 Intro| kind of difference they are distinguished. The same remark may be 83 Intro| educated persons. They are distinguished from one another in thought, 84 Text | which are with difficulty distinguished from them; if they did, 85 Text | SOCRATES: Then they must be distinguished?~THEAETETUS: I suppose that 86 Text | both those ways which we distinguished, that is to say, they move Timaeus Part
87 Intro| Egypt he would have been as distinguished as Homer and Hesiod. ‘And 88 Intro| our former discussion I distinguished two kinds of being—the unchanging 89 Intro| They have no names, but are distinguished as pleasant and unpleasant, 90 Intro| and object were not yet distinguished; (2) that he supposes the 91 Intro| essences or forms of things be distinguished from the eternal ideas, 92 Intro| have them too precisely distinguished. Thus seems to have arisen 93 Text | his front part unlike and distinguished from the rest of his body.~ 94 Text | fiery nature are clearly distinguished and have names. First, there 95 Text | remembering that we have already distinguished between the nature which 96 Text | simple kinds; but they are distinguished only as painful and pleasant, 97 Text | varieties, which must now be distinguished. They are called by the 98 Text | kinds of bile are variously distinguished by their colours. As for