Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] pheidias 4 phelleus 1 phemius 1 phenomena 73 phenomenal 1 phenomenon 26 pherecrates 1 | Frequency [« »] 73 high 73 instance 73 mixed 73 phenomena 73 popular 73 presence 73 reasons | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances phenomena |
Charmides Part
1 Intro| opposition of ideas and phenomena which occurs in the Prologues Cratylus Part
2 Intro| he is speaking of actual phenomena. To have made etymologies 3 Intro| unity to infinitely various phenomena. There is no abstract language ‘ Euthydemus Part
4 Intro| or relative nature of all phenomena. Plato is aware that his Meno Part
5 Intro| than he is deriding the phenomena of love or of enthusiasm 6 Intro| observation of curious mental phenomena. They gather up the elements 7 Text | and of many other similar phenomena.~MENO: Quite true.~SOCRATES: Parmenides Part
8 Intro| ascertain their relation to phenomena. Still he affirms the existence 9 Intro| Idea in the multiplicity of phenomena.~We may now endeavour to 10 Intro| to the expression of the phenomena of motion or change, and 11 Intro| universals, could they classify phenomena? How could they investigate 12 Intro| modes or degrees in which phenomena are connected. Yet we accept Phaedo Part
13 Intro| ideas were separable from phenomena, mind was also separable 14 Intro| the relation of ideas to phenomena, nor their correlation to Philebus Part
15 Intro| explained a part of the phenomena of the external world, he 16 Intro| we come to view either as phenomena of consciousness, the same 17 Intro| see any wonder in these phenomena; his difficulties begin 18 Intro| nor give an explanation of phenomena which is in accordance with 19 Intro| it rejects them. Now the phenomena of moral action differ, 20 Intro| known to us only through the phenomena of this world, but it extends 21 Text | not obvious and every-day phenomena furnish the simplest illustration?~ 22 Text | illustration?~PROTARCHUS: What phenomena do you mean?~SOCRATES: Hunger, 23 Text | unconscious of this and similar phenomena?’ You must answer for them.~ The Sophist Part
24 Intro| sensible world and all the phenomena of experience were comprehended 25 Intro| explanation in their relation to phenomena? If many of them are correlatives 26 Intro| explanation of abstractions by the phenomena which they represent, as The Statesman Part
27 Intro| origin of these remarkable phenomena. Nor is Plato, here or elsewhere, 28 Text | several novel and remarkable phenomena, and of one in particular, Theaetetus Part
29 Intro| passion, out of which endless phenomena are created, also in two 30 Intro| would deny the continuity of phenomena; he would say that what 31 Intro| us to dwell upon mental phenomena which if expressed in an 32 Intro| philosophy. Nor can mental phenomena be truly explained either 33 Intro| another and with our own. The phenomena of which Psychology treats 34 Intro| occasional explanation of mental phenomena to be the only or complete 35 Intro| certain, that of many mental phenomena there are no mental antecedents, 36 Intro| relation to us. For of all the phenomena present to the human mind 37 Intro| thus arise the intermittent phenomena of consciousness or self-consciousness. 38 Intro| another of the ever-present phenomena of the human mind. We speak 39 Intro| impulse. These are the greater phenomena of mind, and he who has 40 Intro| exceptional, but from ordinary phenomena. It should be careful to 41 Text | can be raised about these phenomena, notably about dreaming Timaeus Part
42 Intro| philosopher to describe physical phenomena. The early physiologists 43 Intro| These, as we affirm, are the phenomena of respiration. And all 44 Intro| through the pores.~The phenomena of medical cupping-glasses, 45 Intro| I will now return to the phenomena of respiration. The fire, 46 Intro| internal flame. To all which phenomena some physician or philosopher 47 Intro| was ready to explain the phenomena of the heavens by the most 48 Intro| the production of physical phenomena. He could imagine cities 49 Intro| he was aware that natural phenomena like the Delta of the Nile 50 Intro| Musing in themselves on the phenomena of nature, they were relieved 51 Intro| essential. He could not isolate phenomena, and he was helpless against 52 Intro| comparison. The course of natural phenomena would have passed unheeded 53 Intro| the higher, e.g. in the phenomena of life, further tended 54 Intro| account of the multiplicity of phenomena. To these a priori speculations 55 Intro| on the singular numerical phenomena of the existence of one 56 Intro| size. The obvious physical phenomena from which Plato has gathered 57 Intro| account of respiration.~Of the phenomena of light and heavy he speaks 58 Intro| absolutely no idea of the phenomena of respiration, which he 59 Intro| dilate it, a white. Other phenomena are produced by the variety 60 Intro| the slower.~The general phenomena of sensation are partly 61 Intro| blindness to the most obvious phenomena. He measures them not by 62 Intro| late years. Even if all phenomena are the result of natural 63 Intro| explanation of the equally complex phenomena of the universe. They seemed 64 Intro| explanation did not suit all phenomena; and the simpler explanation, 65 Intro| superficial explanations of phenomena which were current in his 66 Intro| opposition between ideas and phenomena—they easily pass into one 67 Intro| beyond him; then the world of phenomena disappears, but the doctrine 68 Intro| explaining and arranging phenomena, he is unwilling to give 69 Text | called rust. The remaining phenomena of the same kind there will 70 Text | which we assign to these phenomena. As to the smooth and the 71 Text | us once more consider the phenomena of respiration, and enquire 72 Text | inspiration and expiration.~The phenomena of medical cupping-glasses 73 Text | find that such wonderful phenomena are attributable to the