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Alphabetical [« »] pasin 1 pass 181 passable 1 passage 83 passages 74 passed 116 passenger 5 | Frequency [« »] 83 justly 83 lead 83 lot 83 passage 83 position 83 union 82 attained | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances passage |
The Apology Part
1 Intro| who informs us in another passage, on the testimony of Hermogenes, 2 Text | Let me relate to you a passage of my own life which will Charmides Part
3 PreS | characteristics, but will re-write the passage as his author would have 4 PreS | repeated twice over in the same passage without any new aspect or 5 PreS | meanings occur in the same passage, varying them by an ‘or’— 6 PreS | Aristotle’s Metaphysics, a passage containing an account of 7 PreS | writings or even in the same passage. They are the universal Cratylus Part
8 Intro| is e an agke iousa, the passage through ravines which impede 9 Intro| a striking and familiar passage gives a complexion to its 10 Intro| meaning or spirit of the passage. This is the higher onomatopea 11 Intro| the rhythm of the whole passage.~iv. Next, under a distinct 12 Intro| the same or in some other passage: without comparing the context Critias Part
13 Intro| statement made in an earlier passage that Poseidon, being a God, 14 Text | outermost zone, making a passage from the sea up to this, 15 Text | of the zones into which a passage was cut from the sea was The First Alcibiades Part
16 Pre | he never attributes any passage found in the extant dialogues 17 Pre | perhaps, be found in that passage of the Symposium in which Gorgias Part
18 Intro| majesty and power of the whole passage—especially of what may be Ion Part
19 Intro| have been suggested by the passage of Xenophon’s Memorabilia 20 Text | recitation of some striking passage, such as the apparition 21 Text | SOCRATES: You know the passage in which Hecamede, the concubine 22 Text | Odyssee; as, for example, the passage in which Theoclymenus the Laws Book
23 12 | class are like birds of passage, taking wing in pursuit Menexenus Part
24 Pre | he never attributes any passage found in the extant dialogues 25 Pre | perhaps, be found in that passage of the Symposium in which Meno Part
26 Intro| of irony in this curious passage, which forms the concluding 27 Intro| recognized by Plato in this passage. But he is far from saying, 28 Intro| are mingled in the same passage. The ideas are sometimes Parmenides Part
29 Intro| absurdity.~Perhaps there is no passage in Plato showing greater 30 Intro| diminution, equalization, a passage from motion to rest, and 31 Text | the same principle, in the passage from one to many and from 32 Text | nor aggregated; and in the passage from like to unlike, and 33 Text | dissimilation; and in the passage from small to great and Phaedo Part
34 Intro| of generation be only a passage from living to dying, for 35 Text | which equally involve a passage into and out of one another. Phaedrus Part
36 Intro| of the short introductory passage about mythology which is 37 Intro| reconcile all the details of the passage: it is a picture, not a 38 Intro| first impression of such a passage, in which no attempt is 39 Intro| love are suggested by this passage. First of all, love is represented 40 Intro| grasshoppers.~The first passage is remarkable as showing 41 Intro| little of the context of any passage which he was explaining. 42 Text | then the orifices of the passage out of which the wing shoots Philebus Part
43 Intro| media axiomata’) in the passage from unity to infinity. 44 Intro| to be an allusion to the passage in the Gorgias, in which 45 Intro| be some confusion in this passage. There is no difficulty Protagoras Part
46 Intro| explanation of the whole passage. The explanation is as follows:—~ 47 Intro| or that in this or that passage—e.g. in the explanation 48 Intro| interpreter.~This curious passage is, therefore, to be regarded 49 Text | virtue, but in reference to a passage of a poet. Now Simonides 50 Text | This way of reading the passage accounts for the insertion The Republic Book
51 3 | but simple narration. The passage would have run as follows ( 52 10 | conceive, when we listen to a passage of Homer or one of the tragedians, The Second Alcibiades Part
53 Pre | very un-Platonic. The best passage is probably that about the The Sophist Part
54 Intro| Sophists in a well-known passage of the Republic, where they 55 Intro| justifying the Sophists in the passage just quoted, but only representing 56 Intro| point of view in which this passage should also be considered. 57 Intro| knowledge is defective. In the passage from the world of sense The Statesman Part
58 Intro| Gorgias. But in a well-known passage of the Philebus occurs the 59 Intro| allusion to them in a single passage (Laws).~VI. The Statesman 60 Text | Others however refer the passage to the division into quadrupeds The Symposium Part
61 Text | manifold. All creation or passage of non-being into being Theaetetus Part
62 Intro| indeed, we suppose the passage in which the allusion occurs 63 Intro| the past.~Thus begins the passage from the outward to the 64 Intro| of matter he might open a passage to worlds beyond. He liked 65 Intro| A word may bring back a passage of poetry or a whole system Timaeus Part
66 Intro| harmonious beauty of a similar passage in the Phaedrus.~To the 67 Intro| put together, and was the passage to other islands and to 68 Intro| into it. So much for their passage into one another: I must 69 Intro| in this way retarding the passage of food through the body, 70 Intro| place, they contrived the passage of liquids, which may be 71 Intro| the mouth was closed the passage connected with it might 72 Intro| to be understood in this passage as meaning benevolence or 73 Intro| yet further by him in the passage already quoted from the 74 Intro| unfortunate doubt in this passage (1) about the meaning of 75 Intro| revolving.’ For the second passage, in which motion on an axis 76 Intro| unless (Greek) in the first passage meant rotation on an axis. ( 77 Intro| circulation of the blood. The passage is partly imagination, partly 78 Intro| compared with his (Greek). The passage of one element into another 79 Intro| himself; in one and the same passage vice is attributed to the 80 Text | kind. So much for their passage into one another. I have 81 Text | which are larger, force a passage, and dissolve and melt the 82 Text | fast within followed the passage of the air either way, never 83 Text | breath inwards through the passage of the mouth and the nostrils.