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Alphabetical [« »] mercury 7 mercy 12 mere 177 merely 96 merge 1 merged 5 meridian 1 | Frequency [« »] 97 spoke 97 voice 96 attributed 96 merely 96 virtues 95 circle 95 colour | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances merely |
Charmides Part
1 PreS | translation will consist, not merely in the faithful rendering 2 PreS | several different forms, not merely an earlier and a later one, 3 Intro| Greek), none of them are merely verbal quibbles, it is implied 4 Text | viewed in this new light merely as a knowledge of knowledge Cratylus Part
5 Intro| the end of the dialogue is merely intended to show that we 6 Intro| extraordinary function; he is merely the Eponymus of the State, 7 Intro| of the weather, and has merely transposed the letters of 8 Intro| two Cratyluses, and not merely Cratylus and the image of 9 Intro| better understood. Many merely verbal questions have been 10 Intro| previous stage of it, but he is merely analyzing what never existed, Euthydemus Part
11 Text | between you and them as merely play. But in what is to 12 Text | there is no advantage in merely having them?~True.~Well, The First Alcibiades Part
13 Pre | paradox of Socrates, or merely following the argument ‘ Gorgias Part
14 Intro| good, or even greater. Not merely rhetoricians, but poets, 15 Intro| should study to be, and not merely to seem. If he is bad, he 16 Intro| criticise this ideal from a merely utilitarian point of view. 17 Intro| utility or public opinion, but merely to point out the existence 18 Intro| that they call science is merely the result of that study 19 Intro| writer of fiction is not merely to give amusement, or to 20 Text | artist of his reputation merely because he has the power; Ion Part
21 Text | understand him, and not merely learn his words by rote, Laches Part
22 Text | Nicias is serious, and not merely talking for the sake of Laws Book
23 1 | Will he be able to command merely because he has military 24 4 | were just now speaking are merely aggregations of men dwelling 25 4 | make a preamble, and not merely consider them to be chance 26 6 | friends, nor good and bad, merely because they are declared 27 7 | children are altered they are merely plays, not seeing that the 28 10 | proven guilty of impiety, not merely from childish levity, but Menexenus Part
29 Pre | paradox of Socrates, or merely following the argument ‘ Meno Part
30 Intro| in their pupils, and not merely instruct them in rhetoric 31 Intro| that this alteration is merely verbal and does not in any Parmenides Part
32 Intro| in the ideas, or do they merely resemble them? Parmenides 33 Intro| better confirmation,’ not merely as the inspirations either 34 Text | become they would be and not merely become. But that is impossible; 35 Text | for if not, it would not merely have participated, but would Phaedo Part
36 Intro| disappear.~For we do not argue merely from the analogy of the 37 Intro| and degrees of evil are merely the negative aspect of degrees 38 Intro| beautiful; and that he is merely reasserting the Eleatic 39 Text | their own souls, and do not merely live moulding and fashioning 40 Text | he suffers from them, not merely the sort of evil which might 41 Text | at the present moment is merely this—that whereas he seeks Phaedrus Part
42 Intro| we regard his Dialogues merely as literary compositions. 43 Intro| is a great deal which is merely ornamental, and the interpreter 44 Intro| to the gods? Or is this merely assigned to them by way 45 Intro| hope to be derived, not merely from the extension of education 46 Text | intercourse with you, shall not merely regard present enjoyment, Philebus Part
47 Intro| the simultaneousness of merely bodily pleasures and pains. 48 Intro| scarcely considered, and the merely physical phenomenon imperfectly 49 Intro| result will be that such merely verbal and trivial conceptions, 50 Intro| associated in their mind with merely animal enjoyment. They could 51 Intro| advance to the cannon’s mouth merely because he believes military 52 Intro| with them of old time, and merely reassert the notions of 53 Text | maintaining this doctrine,—not merely reasserting the notions 54 Text | falsehood, and hence becomes not merely opinion, but opinion of Protagoras Part
55 Intro| thesis of Socrates is not merely a hasty assumption, but 56 Text | inferiority of a man to himself is merely ignorance, as the superiority The Republic Book
57 1 | particular good and not merely a general one-medicine, 58 2 | language which I have been merely repeating, and words even 59 2 | real and natural and not merely conventional good-I would 60 2 | dice or draught player who merely took up the game as a recreation, 61 3 | soul; but if there be any merely bodily defect in another 62 4 | and is hence called not merely science, but the science 63 5 | speaking; and he will pursue a merely verbal opposition in the 64 6 | must behold not the outline merely, as at present-nothing short 65 10 | can be dissolved by any merely external evil which belongs The Seventh Letter Part
66 Text | myself with giving him a merely perfunctory answer. But 67 Text | his father’s empire not merely double what it was but many 68 Text | refutation by the senses, being merely the thing presented to the The Sophist Part
69 Intro| kinds with kinds, and not merely one Being or Good having 70 Intro| And the Sophist is not merely a teacher of rhetoric for 71 Intro| inclined to leave the question, merely remarking that the opposition, 72 Intro| philosophies. Yet he is merely asserting principles which 73 Intro| constructed out of them has merely an imaginary symmetry, and 74 Text | philosophers, and such as are not merely made up for the occasion, 75 Text | of a definition, and not merely about the name minus the The Statesman Part
76 Intro| knowledge;—or again, if they had merely eaten and drunk, and told 77 Intro| as in the Republic: he merely holds up the ideal, and 78 Intro| advantages of law is not merely that it enforces honesty, 79 Text | certain other kindred arts, merely abstract knowledge, wholly 80 Text | Or, again, if they had merely eaten and drunk until they The Symposium Part
81 Intro| knowledge of the tendencies of merely human loves to piety and 82 Intro| and Symposium love is not merely the feeling usually so called, 83 Intro| child of want, and is not merely the love of the congenial 84 Text | that the double love is not merely an affection of the soul Theaetetus Part
85 Intro| and the philosopher is not merely amusing himself by giving 86 Intro| professing to reason, and not merely to dispute; and there is 87 Intro| cleared up. Did Protagoras merely mean to assert the relativity 88 Intro| are in mind is due, not merely to our physical, but to 89 Intro| 1. The senses are not merely ‘holes set in a wooden horse’ ( 90 Intro| such as Psychology is not merely an hypothesis, but an hypothesis 91 Text | answer the nature of ‘clay,’ merely because we added ‘of the 92 Text | and the philosopher is not merely amusing himself by giving 93 Text | virtue or avoid vice, not merely in order that a man may 94 Text | word to ‘know,’ and not merely ‘have an opinion’ of the Timaeus Part
95 Intro| Eternity or the eternal is not merely the unlimited in time but 96 Text | the surrounding region, merely receives the impression,