Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] speaking 433 speaking-because 1 speaking-how 1 speaks 92 spear 8 spear-skilled 1 spearing 2 | Frequency [« »] 92 necessarily 92 persuade 92 recollection 92 speaks 92 stronger 92 vice 91 apply | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances speaks |
The Apology Part
1 Text | he who says that I have, speaks falsely, and is taking away Charmides Part
2 PreS | Republic the platonic Socrates speaks of ‘a longer and a shorter 3 Text | I believe, that the god speaks to those who enter his temple, Cratylus Part
4 Intro| end of the dialogue, he speaks as in the Symposium and 5 Intro| manner in which Socrates speaks of them, to have been current 6 Intro| words of Hesiod, when he speaks of Oceanus, ‘the origin 7 Text | man speak correctly who speaks as he pleases? Will not 8 Text | speaker rather be he who speaks in the natural way of speaking, 9 Text | say?~SOCRATES: He often speaks of them; notably and nobly 10 Text | you not remember that he speaks of a golden race of men Critias Part
11 Intro| Republic; and that though he speaks of the common pursuits of Euthydemus Part
12 Text | said Ctesippus; but he speaks of things in a certain way 13 Text | mean to say that any one speaks of things as they are?~Yes, 14 Text | contradiction? How can he who speaks contradict him who speaks 15 Text | speaks contradict him who speaks not?~Here Ctesippus was The First Alcibiades Part
16 Text | of your lovers who still speaks to you. The cause of my Gorgias Part
17 Intro| seeks to avert, that he who speaks the truth to a multitude, 18 Intro| the world occasionally speaks of the consequences of their 19 Text | admiring youths, but never speaks out like a freeman in a 20 Text | chastisement of which the argument speaks!~CALLICLES: I do not heed Ion Part
21 Intro| rejoins Socrates, when Homer speaks of the arts, as for example, 22 Intro| when, as in the Apology, he speaks of poets as the worst critics 23 Text | people are speaking, and one speaks better than the rest, there 24 Text | persons are speaking, and one speaks better than the rest, will 25 Text | the same way; but the one speaks well and the other not so 26 Text | least value, when any one speaks of any other poet; but when Laches Part
27 Text | unable to decide which of you speaks truly; neither discoverer 28 Text | to me; and the better he speaks the more I hate him, and Laws Book
29 1 | the war of which Tyrtaeus speaks, many a mercenary soldier 30 3 | said of the Cyclopes, he speaks the words of God and nature; 31 4 | virtue of which the Stranger speaks, must be temperance?~Athenian. 32 4 | Cleinias. Yes; and he certainly speaks well.~Athenian. Very true: 33 11 | legislation about orphans, the law speaks in serious accents, both Meno Part
34 Intro| himself with diffidence. He speaks in the Phaedo of the words 35 Text | SOCRATES: He is Greek, and speaks Greek, does he not?~MENO: Parmenides Part
36 Intro| pre-Socratic philosophers, he speaks of them with the greatest 37 Intro| manner in which Parmenides speaks of a similar method being Phaedo Part
38 Intro| Dante or Bunyan, the ethical speaks to us still in the same Phaedrus Part
39 Intro| the love of which Plato speaks is the love of men or of 40 Intro| higher love, of which Plato speaks, is the subject, not of 41 Text | side, declaring that she speaks falsely, and that rhetoric 42 Text | Exactly.~SOCRATES: And when he speaks in the assembly, he will 43 Text | SOCRATES: When any one speaks of iron and silver, is not 44 Text | SOCRATES: But when any one speaks of justice and goodness 45 Text | Byzantian word-maker also speaks, if I am not mistaken, of 46 Text | and yet declares that he speaks by rules of art, he who 47 Text | probability of which he speaks was engendered in the minds Philebus Part
48 Intro| truth in a figure, when he speaks of carving the whole, which 49 Intro| remark, in the Republic he speaks at one time of God or Gods, 50 Intro| their kinds.~III. 1. Plato speaks of pleasure as indefinite, 51 Intro| and many of which he here speaks, is illustrated by examples 52 Intro| cultivated in his youth, he speaks in the Philebus, as in the Protagoras Part
53 Intro| spirit in which Socrates speaks of the introduction of the 54 Text | patient enough of any man who speaks of them, as is also natural, 55 Text | bad sense, and that no one speaks of being ‘awfully’ healthy 56 Text | saying of Pittacus. For he speaks in what follows a little The Republic Book
57 2 | very similar strain; for he speaks of one whose fame is ~"As 58 3 | true. ~But when the poet speaks in the person of another, 59 3 | that the speaker, if he speaks correctly, is always pretty 60 9 | painless-how shall we know who speaks truly? ~I cannot myself 61 9 | Unquestionably, he said, the wise man speaks with authority when he approves 62 9 | of justice is right and speaks the truth, and the disapprover 63 10 | words, imagine that if he speaks of cobbling, or of military 64 10 | and harmony and rhythm, he speaks very well-such is the sweet 65 10 | one knows and therefore speaks with authority about the The Seventh Letter Part
66 Text | men of substance, whom he speaks of as the enemy, and to The Sophist Part
67 Intro| and old,’ of whom Plato speaks, probably include both. 68 Intro| as for example, when he speaks of the ‘ground’ of Leibnitz (‘ 69 Intro| sound theory of language. He speaks as if thought, instead of 70 Text | cannot admit that a man speaks and says nothing, he who 71 Text | another, no one when he speaks of false words, or false 72 Text | me of whom the sentence speaks.~THEAETETUS: I will, to 73 Text | STRANGER: And therefore speaks of things which are not The Statesman Part
74 Intro| transcendental world; he speaks of what in modern language 75 Text | misfortune of which the proverb speaks.~YOUNG SOCRATES: What misfortune?~ The Symposium Part
76 Intro| prescribing for the hiccough, speaks as follows:—~He agrees with 77 Intro| defence of such loves; and he speaks of them as generally approved 78 Intro| and reconciliation, and speaks of Love as the creator and Theaetetus Part
79 Intro| himself, will deny that he speaks truly; and his truth will 80 Intro| person? The last example speaks ‘ad hominen.’ For Protagoras 81 Intro| sense themselves.~Physiology speaks to us of the wonderful apparatus 82 Intro| another point of view. It speaks of the relation of the senses 83 Intro| derivative conscience, which speaks to men, not only of right Timaeus Part
84 Intro| Plato is referring when he speaks of the uncertainty of his 85 Intro| language of philosophy which speaks of first and second causes 86 Intro| meaning to his words when he speaks of the visible being in 87 Intro| phenomena of light and heavy he speaks afterwards, when treating 88 Intro| intelligent. Yet Plato also speaks of an ‘annus magnus’ or 89 Intro| himself implies when he speaks of a ‘fountain of fire which 90 Intro| relation to a centre. He speaks also of the world as one 91 Intro| now become a person, and speaks and is spoken of as God. 92 Intro| what Plato means when he speaks of the soul ‘moving about