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Alphabetical    [«  »]
philosophers 187
philosophia 1
philosophic 11
philosophical 75
philosophie 5
philosophies 33
philosophy 670
Frequency    [«  »]
75 inference
75 inspired
75 lie
75 philosophical
75 piety
75 progress
75 violence
Plato
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philosophical

Charmides
   Part
1 PreF | utilitarianism or any other modern philosophical system. He is the poet or 2 PreF | no dreamer, but a great philosophical genius struggling with the 3 PreS | provide expressions for philosophical terms of very indefinite 4 PreS | or from any other of the philosophical treatises of Aristotle, 5 PreS | clouded by controversy, and philosophical terms had not yet acquired 6 PreS | Republic and the Laws, have no philosophical importance. They do not 7 Intro| from the popular to the philosophical. The first two are simple Cratylus Part
8 Intro| former opinion. Some profound philosophical remarks are scattered up 9 Intro| invention of them the result of philosophical reflection; they have been 10 Intro| greatest lesson which the philosophical analysis of language teaches 11 Intro| its flow and freedom. No philosophical writer with the exception 12 Text | derived from their making philosophical enquiries (mosthai); and Euthydemus Part
13 Intro| to satisfy the minds of philosophical enquirers at a certain stage, The First Alcibiades Part
14 Pre | by as wide an interval of philosophical speculation as that which 15 Pre | marks either of poetical or philosophical excellence; and (3) considering Laches Part
16 Intro| more popular to the more philosophical; it has never occurred to Menexenus Part
17 Pre | by as wide an interval of philosophical speculation as that which 18 Pre | marks either of poetical or philosophical excellence; and (3) considering Meno Part
19 Intro| with a simpler and more philosophical definition, into which no 20 Intro| knowledge in the higher or philosophical sense is admitted to be 21 Intro| which, partaking both of a philosophical and poetical character, 22 Intro| refuted. Like some other philosophical paradoxes, it would have Phaedo Part
23 Intro| he attempts to found on a philosophical assumption that all opposites— 24 Intro| Crito shows no aptitude for philosophical discussions. Nor among the 25 Intro| who takes no part in the philosophical discussion is the excitable 26 Intro| have been out of place at a philosophical discussion, but who returns 27 Text | which I usually feel in philosophical discourse (for philosophy Phaedrus Part
28 Intro| Starting again from the philosophical basis which has been laid 29 Intro| those of Zeus seek out some philosophical and imperial nature; the 30 Intro| other things. This is the philosophical theme or proem of the whole. 31 Intro| truer than an elaborate philosophical analysis.~It is too often 32 Text | they seek out some one of a philosophical and imperial nature, and 33 Text | himself wholly to love and to philosophical discourses.~PHAEDRUS: I Philebus Part
34 Intro| subordinate to the speculative and philosophical. In the development of abstract 35 Intro| the other educational and philosophical. Of the creative arts, there 36 Intro| pleasure, we may say that the philosophical use of them is purer than 37 Intro| hardly be made the basis of a philosophical system. The exactness which 38 Text | is popular, and the other philosophical.~PROTARCHUS: How would you 39 Text | is used in building with philosophical geometry, or the art of Protagoras Part
40 Intro| especially of the popular and philosophical aspect; and after many interruptions 41 Text | heartily applaud and love your philosophical spirit, and I would gladly 42 Text | country, and they hold a philosophical seance unknown to strangers; The Republic Book
43 3 | spirited and the other the philosophical, some god, as I should say, 44 5 | come to anything like a philosophical discussion, if they could 45 6 | mean? ~Let us suppose that philosophical minds always love knowledge 46 6 | Another criterion of the philosophical nature has also to be considered. ~ 47 6 | distinguish even in youth the philosophical nature from the unphilosophical. ~ 48 7 | double use, military and philosophical; for the man of war must 49 9 | the whole soul follows the philosophical principle, and there is The Seventh Letter Part
50 Text | of erroneous teaching on philosophical questions. These, it seems, 51 Text | Tarentines, praising the philosophical studies of Dionysios and 52 Text | will venture to express his philosophical views in language, especially The Sophist Part
53 Intro| are plunged at once into philosophical discussions; the poetical 54 Intro| expression without increasing his philosophical power. The mind easily becomes 55 Intro| metaphysics, and confused his own philosophical fancies with the laws of 56 Text | unworthy of an educated or philosophical mind.~THEAETETUS: Why so?~ The Statesman Part
57 Intro| the myth consists in the philosophical lessons which Plato presents 58 Intro| reflection, that there may be a philosophical disregard of words. The The Symposium Part
59 Intro| has been the cause of more philosophical discussions than any other 60 Intro| that of Socrates as the philosophical. But these and similar distinctions 61 Intro| speaking of ‘the heavenly and philosophical love, or of the coarse Polyhymnia:’ 62 Text | extraordinary, I have met with a philosophical work in which the utility Theaetetus Part
63 Intro| he imagine that a great philosophical problem can be tied up within 64 Intro| assumed to be a current philosophical opinion of the age. ‘The 65 Intro| amid the fluctuation of philosophical opinions the only fixed 66 Intro| that both religious and philosophical idealism have not unfrequently 67 Intro| of thought and life. The philosophical imagination is another name 68 Intro| into formulas. A difficult philosophical problem is better understood 69 Text | better able to follow a philosophical enquiry than a great many Timaeus Part
70 Intro| and perhaps improving the philosophical speculations of others. 71 Intro| more theological and less philosophical mould than the other dialogues, 72 Intro| which characterizes the philosophical poem of Lucretius. There 73 Intro| figure or myth ends and the philosophical truth begins; we cannot 74 Intro| or no value, either in a philosophical or philological point of 75 Text | degree both passionate and philosophical; and that then they would


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