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Alphabetical [« »] relating 25 relation 303 relational 1 relations 93 relationship 8 relationships 1 relative 97 | Frequency [« »] 93 immortality 93 intended 93 punished 93 relations 92 brother 92 comparison 92 mouth | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances relations |
The Apology Part
1 Intro| corrupting the youth their relations would surely have witnessed 2 Text | together with a host of relations and friends; whereas I, Charmides Part
3 PreS | objects, but of properties, relations, works of art, negative 4 Intro| anything like certainty.~The relations of knowledge and virtue 5 Text | numbers in their numerical relations to themselves and to each Cratylus Part
6 Intro| barbarians, or in close relations to the barbarians. Socrates 7 Intro| Times, persons, places, relations of all kinds, are expressed 8 Intro| has been laid bare; the relations of sounds have been more 9 Intro| is a thing of degrees and relations and associations and exceptions: 10 Intro| comprehended originally many more relations, and that prepositions are 11 Intro| ultimately resolvable into relations of space and time. Nor can 12 Intro| word, this power of forming relations to one another was contained. 13 Intro| there is a similarity of relations by which they are held together.~ 14 Intro| differences of things, and their relations to one another. At first 15 Intro| expression of the logical relations of the clauses is closer Critias Part
16 Intro| own city and kingdom. The relations of the different governments 17 Text | among them and their mutual relations were regulated by the commands The First Alcibiades Part
18 Pre | in the description of the relations of Socrates and Alcibiades. 19 Intro| in social and political relations.’ And what is their aim? ‘ 20 Text | I further say, that our relations are likely to be reversed. Gorgias Part
21 Text | but also their numerical relations to themselves and to one 22 Text | accuse himself and his own relations, and using rhetoric to this Laws Book
23 5 | life. And surely in his relations to the state and his fellow 24 5 | best through life. In his relations to strangers, a man should 25 6 | with orphans dies, let the relations both on the father’s and 26 7 | the country, or to their relations, houses, until they are 27 11 | a still greater lack of relations within the limits of the 28 11 | guardian appears to the relations of the orphan, or to any 29 11 | without a husband, let her relations communicate with the women 30 11 | grandfather and other aged relations, he will have images which 31 11 | large in the city, but his relations shall keep him at home in 32 12 | practise gymnastic and whom the relations of the departed shall choose, 33 12 | and in other companies and relations of private life are perjured. Lysis Part
34 Intro| questions which arise out of the relations of friends have not often Menexenus Part
35 Pre | in the description of the relations of Socrates and Alcibiades. Meno Part
36 Intro| acknowledge some elementary relations of geometrical figures. 37 Intro| mind. Many of them express relations of terms to which nothing 38 Text | of their minds, and their relations and guardians who entrusted Parmenides Part
39 Intro| difficulty begins with the relations of ideas in themselves, 40 Intro| the others have the same relations. This may be illustrated 41 Intro| likeness is similarity of relations. And everything as being 42 Intro| one, as having the same relations, has no difference of relation, 43 Intro| or, as having different relations, is different and unlike. 44 Intro| itself.~And what are the relations of the one to the others? 45 Text | in relation to them; the relations of either are limited to 46 Text | say not.~And what are its relations to other things? Is it or 47 Text | some,’ or of the other relations just now mentioned.~True.~ Phaedo Part
48 Intro| body and entering into new relations, but retaining her own character? ( 49 Intro| erroneous notions respecting the relations of body and mind, and in Phaedrus Part
50 Intro| exclusion of friends and relations: how they pass their days 51 Text | affairs or quarrelled with his relations; he has no troubles to add 52 Text | brethren and descendants and relations of his idea which have been Philebus Part
53 Intro| described as treating of the relations of pleasure and knowledge, 54 Intro| from Heaven of the real relations of them, which some Prometheus, 55 Intro| nature and of mind, in the relations of men to one another. For 56 Intro| are seeking to adjust the relations have been already excluded 57 Intro| in theory about the right relations of the sexes than about 58 Intro| included in a larger whole; the relations of pleasure and knowledge Protagoras Part
59 Text | angry with him, and his relations think that he is mad and 60 Text | measure is there of the relations of pleasure to pain other 61 Text | ascertain the nature and relations of virtue; for if this were The Republic Book
62 1 | which are put upon them by relations, and they will tell you 63 1 | also the complaints about relations, are to be attributed to 64 3 | and humanize them in their relations to one another, and to those 65 5 | which money or children or relations are the occasion. ~Of course 66 5 | war; what are to be the relations of your soldiers to one 67 7 | mother and his supposed relations more than the flatterers; 68 7 | supposed parents or other relations. ~Well, all that is very 69 9 | known him in his family relations, where he may be seen stripped The Seventh Letter Part
70 Text | establish in every case relations of friendship and comradeship 71 Text | into close and intimate relations with me as a pupil and listener 72 Text | they form as the result of relations of hospitality and the intercourse 73 Text | Tarentine circle into friendly relations with Dionysios. There were 74 Text | letter, knowing as he did my relations with Dion and Dion’s eagerness The Sophist Part
75 Intro| that all knowledge is of relations; it also anticipates the 76 Intro| are not all so, and the relations which subsist between them 77 Intro| to bring either into near relations with the other. We may fairly 78 Intro| and effect, and similar relations? It is difficult enough 79 Text | over all things in their relations to one another, and whatever The Statesman Part
80 Text | receives money from the relations of the sick man or from The Symposium Part
81 Intro| grave and guard their young relations, and personal remarks are 82 Intro| of the seasons and in the relations of moist and dry, hot and 83 Intro| termed astronomy, in the relations of men towards gods and Theaetetus Part
84 Intro| say that man in different relations is many or rather infinite 85 Intro| dialectic, the science of relations, of ideas, of the so-called 86 Intro| judge approximately of their relations and distance, although nothing 87 Intro| the rest of mankind. Its relations to other sciences are not 88 Intro| found to have a place in the relations of mind and matter, as in Timaeus Part
89 Intro| composition of bodies, to the relations of colours, the nature of 90 Intro| applied to external nature the relations of them which they found 91 Intro| gathered his views of the relations of the elements seem to 92 Intro| different times of the year. The relations of the earth and heavens 93 Text | below respectively. Now the relations of these must necessarily