Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] heaven-born 1 heaven-sent 1 heavenly 58 heavens 73 heavenward 1 heavenwards 1 heavier 16 | Frequency [« »] 73 ears 73 feelings 73 greatly 73 heavens 73 high 73 instance 73 mixed | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances heavens |
Cratylus Part
1 Text | legislator was thinking of the heavens, and may be only a disguise Euthydemus Part
2 Text | another of the same sort.~Good heavens, I said; and your last question 3 Text | if they know one thing.~O heavens, Dionysodorus, I said, I Euthyphro Part
4 Text | impiety.~SOCRATES: Good heavens, Euthyphro! and is your Gorgias Part
5 Intro| orrery, or model of the heavens, and a picture of the Day 6 Text | said about all this? By heavens, Gorgias, I wish that you Laws Book
7 10 | tell of the origin of the heavens and of the world, and not 8 10 | that she orders also the heavens?~Cleinias. Of course.~Athenian. 9 10 | souls carries round the heavens.~Athenian. You have understood Meno Part
10 Intro| forth to contemplate the heavens, and are borne round in Phaedo Part
11 Intro| placed in the centre of the heavens, and is maintained there 12 Text | body in the centre of the heavens, and therefore has no need Phaedrus Part
13 Intro| soul soars upwards into the heavens, but the mortal drops her 14 Intro| world which is beyond the heavens, who can tell? There is 15 Intro| which were spread over the heavens during so many ages without 16 Text | begotten, else the whole heavens and all creation would collapse 17 Text | heaven which is above the heavens, what earthly poet ever 18 Text | into the interior of the heavens and returns home; and there Philebus Part
19 Text | the argument.~SOCRATES: Heavens! Protarchus, that will be 20 Text | the whole circle of the heavens; and never will I say or 21 Text | single name?~PROTARCHUS: By heavens, Socrates, that is a question The Republic Book
22 2 | the happier of the two. ~Heavens! my dear Glaucon, I said, 23 2 | shower of benefits which the heavens, as they say, rain upon 24 3 | immortals." ~And again: ~"O heavens! verily in the house of 25 3 | as to make him say - ~"O heavens! with my eyes verily I behold 26 4 | harbors, and the like.. But, O heavens! shall we condescend to 27 5 | general? ~Undoubtedly. ~Good heavens! my dear friend, I said, 28 7 | whether a man gapes at the heavens or blinks on the ground, 29 7 | he replied. ~The spangled heavens should be used as a pattern 30 7 | employ problems, and let the heavens alone if we would approach 31 9 | about his parents. ~But, O heavens! Adeimantus, on account 32 10 | enough make the sun and the heavens, and the earth and yourself, The Second Alcibiades Part
33 Text | savour’ was borne ‘to the heavens by the winds;~‘But the blessed The Sophist Part
34 Intro| creatures, the earth and the heavens and the gods, and would 35 Text | and the earth, and the heavens, and the gods, and of all 36 Text | True.~STRANGER: And, O heavens, can we ever be made to The Statesman Part
37 Intro| unchangeable; but the earth and heavens, although endowed with many 38 Intro| reversal of the motion of the heavens seemed necessarily to produce Theaetetus Part
39 Text | long as the sun and the heavens go round in their orbits, Timaeus Part
40 Intro| lifts up his eyes to the heavens and seeks to guide by their 41 Intro| numbers to persons,—from the heavens to man, from astronomy to 42 Intro| The construction of the heavens is for the most part ideal; 43 Intro| the soul has a view of the heavens in a prior state of being. 44 Intro| touch. He soars into the heavens, and then, as if his wings 45 Intro| created together with the heavens, in order that if they were 46 Intro| to be scattered over the heavens, of which they were to be 47 Intro| seen the sun, stars, and heavens, the words which we have 48 Intro| behold the order of the heavens and create a corresponding 49 Intro| work out good. Before the heavens there existed fire, air, 50 Intro| three, existed before the heavens, and the nurse or vessel 51 Intro| pursue the study of the heavens by sight; these were transformed 52 Intro| before we can behold the heavens or the earth as they appeared 53 Intro| explain the phenomena of the heavens by the most trivial analogies 54 Intro| at the blue circle of the heavens and it flashed upon him 55 Intro| ruling the courses of the heavens and of the human body is 56 Intro| times we contemplate the heavens, a certain amount of scientific 57 Intro| the circumference of the heavens. We speak of a soul of the 58 Intro| order is the division of the heavens into an inner and outer 59 Intro| mythical account of the heavens in the Republic and in the 60 Intro| appearance of them in the heavens. All the planets, including 61 Intro| actual observation of the heavens with his desire to find 62 Intro| and of the sun and outer heavens around the earth in equal 63 Intro| produced by the motion of the heavens alone, or by the immobility 64 Intro| diurnal revolution of the heavens was present to his mind. 65 Intro| or to revolve with the heavens, no explanation is given 66 Intro| relations of the earth and heavens are so indistinct in the 67 Intro| mind have comprehended the heavens? Astronomy, even in modern 68 Intro| does not look out upon the heavens and describe what he sees 69 Intro| last to a worship of the heavens, and that to him, as to 70 Intro| nature. Man contemplating the heavens is to regulate his erring 71 Text | the bodies moving in the heavens around the earth, and a 72 Text | us to the division of the heavens, may be elucidated by the 73 Text | about the nature of the heavens, because they had ceased