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expired 4
expires 1
explain 170
explained 97
explaining 35
explains 17
explanation 150
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98 wonder
97 considered
97 easy
97 explained
97 mentioned
97 nay
97 peace
Plato
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explained

Charmides
   Part
1 PreS | variously discussed and explained. Thus far we admit inconsistency 2 PreS | opinions, but have nowhere explained the nature of the change.’ 3 PreS | all things, are now to be explained as Forms or Types of some 4 Intro| How is this riddle to be explained?~Critias, who takes the Cratylus Part
5 Intro| reckless and ridiculous. Having explained compound words by resolving 6 Intro| am at a loss. Aer may be explained, oti airei ta apo tes ges; 7 Intro| but much has still to be explained. There is techne, for instance. 8 Intro| arete. The first is easily explained in accordance with what 9 Intro| meaning of sumpheron is explained by previous examples;—like 10 Intro| amathia, again, might be explained, as e ama theo iontos poreia, 11 Intro| fitness shall be intelligibly explained. But he has no idea that 12 Intro| element which cannot be explained, or even adequately described. 13 Intro| without, but which cannot be explained from within. Consciousness 14 Intro| times. Language cannot be explained by Metaphysics; for it is 15 Text | air), Hermogenes, may be explained as the element which raises ( 16 Text | which have still to be explained.~HERMOGENES: True.~SOCRATES: 17 Text | not, however, until I have explained anagke (necessity), which 18 Text | words; for they can only be explained by the primary. Clearly 19 Text | kinesis). But I have not yet explained the meaning of this latter 20 Text | akolasia, for amathia may be explained as e ama theo iontos poreia, Euthydemus Part
21 Intro| nature of definition is explained not by rules but by examples 22 Intro| cannot be either used or explained away. The same absoluteness 23 Text | you did not see, as they explained to you, that the term is Gorgias Part
24 Intro| the inconsistency to be explained?~The fallacy of this argument 25 Intro| writings. But he has not explained how or in what way punishment 26 Text | you have very accurately explained what you conceive to be 27 Text | Gorgias; for I have not as yet explained myself, and our friend Polus, Laches Part
28 Intro| courage is knowledge. This is explained to mean knowledge of things 29 Intro| which in the Protagoras is explained as the faculty of estimating Laws Book
30 3 | reason has been already explained.~Cleinias. Very true.~Athenian. 31 7 | could certainly never have explained them all, old as I am, to 32 10 | which his neglect can be explained? For surely, when it is 33 12 | until we have sufficiently explained what that is to which we 34 12 | now to be investigated and explained.~Athenian. O Megillus and Meno Part
35 Intro| doctrine of reminiscence too is explained more in accordance with 36 Intro| knowledge is more distinctly explained. There is a progression 37 Intro| with some,’ is asserted and explained. But they are spoken of 38 Intro| when they could be least explained and were incapable of proof. Parmenides Part
39 Intro| only that they cannot be explained without a long and laborious 40 Intro| but is not really at all explained. The difficulty arises out 41 Intro| the nature of division is explained; in the Republic the law Phaedo Part
42 Intro| riddles about motion are to be explained by the double conception 43 Intro| their consequences, and not explained by actual causes, but by 44 Intro| the Phaedo—one kind to be explained out of contemporary philosophy, 45 Intro| abstract terms,—these are to be explained out of the position of Socrates 46 Text | thought that when he had explained to me in detail the cause Phaedrus Part
47 Intro| of love—which cannot be explained without enquiring into the 48 Intro| sought to explain this, as he explained universal ideas, by a reference 49 Text | remain, but I have not yet explained in what the goodness or Philebus Part
50 Intro| to be prior to himself, explained a part of the phenomena 51 Intro| think further that he has explained the feeling of the spectator 52 Intro| hypothesis on which they are explained, or which in doubtful cases 53 Intro| including justice, may be explained. Admitting that men rest 54 Intro| elements which cannot be explained by the tendency of actions 55 Intro| if virtue and vice are explained only as the qualities which 56 Intro| differ, and some are best explained upon one principle and some 57 Intro| morals which are better explained and more forcibly inculcated 58 Text | luck.~SOCRATES: We have explained what we term the most exact Protagoras Part
59 Intro| word difficult or hard is explained to meanevil’ in the Cean 60 Text | this were otherwise. I have explained to you, Socrates, the reason 61 Text | explain, as he has already explained so much. If a man were to 62 Text | way in which evil can be explained as other than pain, or good The Republic Book
63 4 | surely, I said, we have explained again and again how and 64 5 | everything else, requires to be explained; for community may be of 65 5 | faculties. Have I clearly explained the class which I mean? ~ 66 6 | are useless has now been explained? ~True. ~Then shall we proceed 67 6 | have now been sufficiently explained: the injustice of the charges 68 7 | curious and require to be explained. ~Yes, I said, and in these The Seventh Letter Part
69 Text | was then a young man, and explained to him my views as to the The Sophist Part
70 Intro| arranged in categories and explained by philosophers. And what The Statesman Part
71 Intro| the nature of example is explained by an example. The child The Symposium Part
72 Intro| whose thoughts are clearly explained in his language. There is Theaetetus Part
73 Intro| matter of fact way, have explained by the residence of Plato 74 Intro| science’ could scarcely be explained to them, except from the 75 Intro| of knowledge, he has not explained the common nature of them; 76 Intro| to use them until I had explained them. And I must explain 77 Intro| false opinion without having explained knowledge. What then is 78 Intro| absolute and infinite, whether explained as self-existence, or as 79 Intro| required.~False opinion is explained by Plato at first as a confusion 80 Intro| mental phenomena be truly explained either by physiology or 81 Intro| was found how was it to be explained or defined? It was not an 82 Intro| say, space, which may be explained in various ways. It is the 83 Intro| which this necessity may be explained. We have been taught it, 84 Text | Socrates, that you have truly explained his meaning.~SOCRATES: Then 85 Text | false opinion cannot be explained as a confusion of thought Timaeus Part
86 Intro| know, though no one has explained their nature, and we erroneously 87 Intro| Light and heavy are wrongly explained with reference to a lower 88 Intro| of liquids, which may be explained in this way:—Finer bodies 89 Intro| hurling of bodies, are to be explained on a similar principle; 90 Intro| are not, he says, to be explained by ‘above’ and ‘below,’ 91 Intro| distinct words, and have explained the relation of its movements 92 Intro| the natures of things been explained by imaginary entities, such 93 Intro| things in the world can be explained as the result of natural 94 Intro| observe how little could be explained by them. Thus we may remark 95 Intro| could Plato himself have explained to us) the relation of the 96 Text | state; for no one has as yet explained the manner of their generation, 97 Text | things cannot be adequately explained without also explaining


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