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Alphabetical [« »] menschlichen 2 mensura 1 mensuration 11 mental 81 mentally 1 mention 84 mention-he 1 | Frequency [« »] 81 arrived 81 book 81 contained 81 mental 81 offer 81 system 81 wanted | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances mental |
Cratylus Part
1 Intro| themselves.~Parallel with this mental process the articulation 2 Intro| inconsistent with our own mental experience, and throws some 3 Intro| use of speech with other mental and bodily operations; for 4 Intro| meeting-point of the physical and mental sciences, and also the mirror 5 Intro| When we analyze our own mental processes, we find words 6 Intro| played so great a part in mental science, were either banished 7 Intro| called forth, not by familiar mental processes, but by the interruption 8 Intro| of the phonetic from the mental element of language; they 9 Intro| with the Natural or the Mental sciences, if we frankly Euthydemus Part
10 Intro| Euthydemus, we should imagine a mental state in which not individuals The First Alcibiades Part
11 Text | stature, and birth, and mental endowments, she would think Gorgias Part
12 Intro| happy, unless he knows his mental and moral condition. Polus 13 Intro| always compensated by a mental satisfaction. Still we regard Laws Book
14 3 | accomplishments, and feats of mental dexterity; and the opposite 15 11 | there is some bodily or mental malady or defect among those Lysis Part
16 Intro| superiority; he will find out his mental trials, but only that he Meno Part
17 Intro| him into an objective; the mental phenomenon of the association 18 Intro| an observation of curious mental phenomena. They gather up 19 Intro| or impersonal form was a mental necessity to the first thinkers 20 Text | virtue is of such a class of mental goods, will it be taught Parmenides Part
21 Intro| explain to him the sort of mental gymnastic which he should Phaedo Part
22 Intro| are always perturbing his mental vision. He wants to get 23 Intro| proposes to narrate his own mental experience. When he was 24 Intro| the suffering physical or mental? And does the worship of 25 Intro| will not interfere with mental improvement; when the physical Phaedrus Part
26 Text | not these only, are the mental defects of the beloved;— Philebus Part
27 Intro| pleasure and pain are both mental. Of unmixed pleasures there 28 Intro| the definite. Health and mental qualities are in the concrete 29 Intro| more ideal conceptions of mental pleasure, happiness, and 30 Intro| distinction between bodily and mental, between necessary and non-necessary 31 Intro| discovers that continuous mental energy is not granted to 32 Intro| are bodily and there are mental pleasures, which were at 33 Intro| philosophy or the practice of mental analysis, or infected by 34 Intro| relation of bodily pleasures to mental, which is hardly treated 35 Intro| to show how great was the mental activity which prevailed 36 Text | we were saying is purely mental, is entirely derived from 37 Text | is not this a very common mental phenomenon?~PROTARCHUS: 38 Text | SOCRATES: Have not purely mental pleasures and pains been 39 Text | often experiences of purely mental feelings.~PROTARCHUS: What 40 Text | acknowledged by us to be mental pain, and laughter is pleasant; The Republic Book
41 2 | True. ~And also of the mental ones; his soul is to be 42 6 | endowments are like his mental ones? ~Certainly, he said. ~ The Sophist Part
43 Intro| arose in the infancy of mental science, and which was born 44 Intro| the great source of all mental improvement in after ages. 45 Intro| intelligible expression of the same mental phenomenon. For Plato has 46 Intro| service rendered by him to mental science is the recognition 47 Intro| purification; and from this, mental purification; and from mental 48 Intro| mental purification; and from mental purification, instruction; 49 Intro| the many-sidedness of the mental and moral world be truly 50 Text | concerned with the soul; of this mental purification instruction Theaetetus Part
51 Intro| human thought. All times of mental progress are times of confusion; 52 Intro| if he were to praise the mental endowments of either of 53 Intro| indivisible, though capable of a mental analysis into subject and 54 Intro| observe that these are purely mental conceptions. Thus we are 55 Intro| they lead us to dwell upon mental phenomena which if expressed 56 Intro| proceeding by the path of mental analysis, was perplexed 57 Intro| our physical, but to our mental antecedents which we trace 58 Intro| history of philosophy. Nor can mental phenomena be truly explained 59 Intro| consciousness; but this mental unity is apt to be concealed 60 Intro| rather than enlightened mental science. It is hard to say 61 Intro| thoughts about ourselves, and mental processes are hardly distinguished 62 Intro| view sensation is of all mental acts the most trivial and 63 Intro| instincts. But they have not the mental inheritance of thoughts 64 Intro| Sensation, like all other mental processes, is complex and 65 Intro| them the least amount of mental effort.~As a lower philosophy 66 Intro| occasional explanation of mental phenomena to be the only 67 Intro| indeed certain, that of many mental phenomena there are no mental 68 Intro| mental phenomena there are no mental antecedents, but only bodily 69 Intro| considerable degree to our stock of mental facts.~f. The parallelism 70 Intro| the body, and so to reduce mental operations to the level 71 Intro| process of sense from its mental antecedent, or any mental 72 Intro| mental antecedent, or any mental energy from its nervous 73 Intro| expression.~i. The fact that mental divisions tend to run into 74 Intro| mind, and accompanies all mental operations. There are two 75 Intro| memory, it accompanies all mental operations, but not always 76 Intro| us, not the processes of mental action, but the conditions 77 Text | or wisdom which are the mental endowments of either of 78 Text | SOCRATES: And what of the mental habit? Is not the soul informed, 79 Text | nature or origin of the mental experience to which I refer.~ Timaeus Part
80 Intro| difficulty shaken off.~Of mental disorders there are two 81 Intro| causes indicates a higher mental state than the absence of