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Alphabetical    [«  »]
heartily 2
hearts 25
hearty 3
heat 83
heated 9
heating 3
heats 2
Frequency    [«  »]
83 considering
83 entire
83 face
83 heat
83 holy
83 justly
83 lead
Plato
Partial collection

IntraText - Concordances

heat

Charmides
   Part
1 Text | confidence, and the vital heat returned. Such, Charmides, 2 Text | self-motion, and the power of heat to burn, this relation to Cratylus Part
3 Intro| fire in the abstract, or heat in the abstract; which is 4 Text | but the abstraction of heat in the fire.’ Another man Laws Book
5 1 | against the violent summer heat; and there are many similar 6 3 | the dotage of age or the heat of youth, having no sense 7 8 | to winter cold or summer heat; and they should go out 8 10 | accompany them, such as heat and cold, heaviness and 9 11 | storm, or cool shade in the heat; and then instead of behaving 10 12 | of winter cold and summer heat, and of hard couches; and, Phaedo Part
11 Intro| them. For example, cold and heat are opposed; and fire, which 12 Intro| which is inseparable from heat, cannot co-exist with cold, 13 Intro| inseparable from cold, with heat. Again, the number three 14 Intro| intimation that he should not heat himself with talking. At 15 Text | talking, he says, increases heat, and this is apt to interfere 16 Text | is a thing which you term heat, and another thing which 17 Text | snow?~Most assuredly not.~Heat is a thing different from 18 Text | is under the influence of heat, they will not remain snow 19 Text | will not remain snow and heat; but at the advance of the 20 Text | but at the advance of the heat, the snow will either retire 21 Text | hot,’ you will reply not heat (this is what I call the 22 Text | remained and admitted the heat?~True, he said.~Again, if 23 Text | the even, or fire or the heat in the fire, of the cold. 24 Text | have held good of fire and heat and any other thing.~Very Phaedrus Part
25 Intro| remain, at any rate until the heat of noon has passed; he would 26 Intro| rhetorician he prophesies. The heat of the day has passed, and 27 Text | Socrates; not until the heat of the day has passed; do 28 Text | shudder passes into an unusual heat and perspiration; for, as 29 Text | after their manner in the heat of the sun over our heads 30 Text | seriousness plant them during the heat of summer, in some garden 31 Text | I will; and now as the heat is abated let us depart.~ Philebus Part
32 Intro| which in hunger, thirst, heat, cold, is impaired—this 33 Intro| of ‘the morrow,’ when the heat of imagination which forged 34 Text | Or, again, when cold and heat prevail, does not the introduction 35 Text | and dissolution caused by heat is painful, and the natural 36 Text | pleasure and pain, like heat and cold, and other things Protagoras Part
37 Text | able to resist the summer heat, so that they might have The Republic Book
38 1 | Assuredly not. ~Any more than heat can produce cold? ~It cannot. ~ 39 2 | least from winds or the heat of the sun or any similar 40 3 | also of food, of summer heat and winter cold, which they 41 3 | the cold of winter and the heat of summer. ~I suppose that 42 4 | several times under the heat of a scorching sun, might 43 4 | thirst be accompanied by heat, then the desire is of cold 44 10 | marched on in a scorching heat to the plain of Forgetfulness, The Sophist Part
45 Intro| in common language; that heat and cold, day and night, 46 Text | are becoming, or again of heat mingling with cold, assuming The Statesman Part
47 Intro| and also shields against heat and cold, and shields against 48 Intro| cold, and shields against heat and cold are shelters and 49 Text | and also shields against heat and cold, and shields against 50 Text | cold, and shields against heat and cold are shelters and The Symposium Part
51 Text | show all this eagerness and heat which is called love? and Theaetetus Part
52 Intro| Hardness, softness, cold, heat, etc. are not absolutely 53 Text | smelling; there is the sense of heat, cold, pleasure, pain, desire, 54 Text | example, take the case of heat:—When an ordinary man thinks 55 Text | fever, and that this kind of heat is coming on, and another 56 Text | both right? —he will have a heat and fever in his own judgment, 57 Text | explain the generation of heat, whiteness, or anything 58 Text | or agent becomes neither heat nor whiteness but hot and Timaeus Part
59 Intro| that burns not, (3) the red heat of the embers of fire. And 60 Intro| rigidity and susceptibility to heat and cold, he contrived sinews 61 Intro| second to guard against heat and cold, and to be a protection 62 Intro| account of the extremes of heat and cold, nor be allowed 63 Intro| the body, and the internal heat followed the air to and 64 Intro| mingled under the influence of heat with salt, is malignant 65 Intro| overcomes the fibres by its heat and reaches the spinal marrow, 66 Intro| inverse order.~Plato found heat and air within the human 67 Intro| should describe as a state of heat or temperature in the interior 68 Intro| The ‘fountain of fire’ or heat is also in a figure the 69 Text | disease. Considering that if heat and cold and other powerful 70 Text | because they freeze and heat, and contract and dilate, 71 Text | affection which we call heat; and hence the origin of 72 Text | and are made smooth by the heat of the mouth, and which 73 Text | respiration and alleviate the heat. Wherefore they cut the 74 Text | protection against the summer heat and against the winter cold, 75 Text | account of the extremes of heat and cold in the different 76 Text | forth, and the liquid and heat which was pure came away, 77 Text | Now we must admit that heat naturally proceeds outward 78 Text | there are two exits for the heat, the one out through the 79 Text | is cooled. But when the heat changes its place, and the 80 Text | mingled by the power of heat with any salt substance, 81 Text | may not be so liquefied by heat as to exude from the pores 82 Text | overcomes the fibres by its heat, and boiling up throws them 83 Text | excess of fire, continuous heat and fever are the result;


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