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Alphabetical [« »] acid 15 acidity 1 acknowledge 132 acknowledged 73 acknowledged-did 1 acknowledgement 1 acknowledges 28 | Frequency [« »] 74 skill 74 stand 74 worst 73 acknowledged 73 besides 73 boys 73 characters | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances acknowledged |
Charmides Part
1 PreF | style, which must be equally acknowledged as a fact, even in the Dialogues Cratylus Part
2 Intro| name of Hermogenes, who is acknowledged to have no luck in him, 3 Text | have we not several times acknowledged that names rightly given Crito Part
4 Intro| has clearly shown that he acknowledged the agreement, which he 5 Text | and as has been already acknowledged by us? Are all our former 6 Text | the principles which were acknowledged by us to be just—what do 7 Text | above all other men have acknowledged the agreement. ‘There is Euthydemus Part
8 Text | something; and you have already acknowledged that no one can do what 9 Text | them’ or not? for you have acknowledged that you have always and 10 Text | made a speech, in which I acknowledged that I had never seen the Euthyphro Part
11 Text | say that the holy has been acknowledged by us to be loved of God The First Alcibiades Part
12 Text | your lovers, and they have acknowledged that you were too much for 13 Text | true.~SOCRATES: And having acknowledged that the just is the same Gorgias Part
14 Text | the rhetorician has been acknowledged to be incapable of making 15 Text | mistaken, you have admitted and acknowledged more than once, that there 16 Text | which as you have often acknowledged he should have—if he be 17 Text | this has been repeatedly acknowledged by us to be the best sort Laches Part
18 Text | or free, he is generally acknowledged to have improved. But if 19 Text | SOCRATES: Whereas courage was acknowledged to be a noble quality.~LACHES: Laws Book
20 10 | they two—five in all—have acknowledged that they are good and perfect?~ 21 11 | of certain parents and is acknowledged by them, but there is need Meno Part
22 Intro| divine insight, but, though acknowledged to have been clever men 23 Text | anything about which even the acknowledged ‘gentlemen’ are sometimes 24 Text | surely the good man has been acknowledged by us to be useful?~MENO: 25 Text | SOCRATES: But surely we acknowledged that there were no teachers 26 Text | Yes.~SOCRATES: Then we acknowledged that it was not taught, Parmenides Part
27 Intro| partake of time? This must be acknowledged, if the one partakes of Phaedo Part
28 Intro| body. But is not the soul acknowledged to be a harmony, and has 29 Intro| God was more distinctly acknowledged, the conception of the human 30 Text | true.~But we have already acknowledged that the soul, being a harmony, 31 Text | Then the soul, as has been acknowledged, will never receive the 32 Text | imperishable; for this has not been acknowledged, but if this had been acknowledged, 33 Text | acknowledged, but if this had been acknowledged, there would have been no Phaedrus Part
34 Intro| as he would himself have acknowledged, they will appear to be 35 Text | SOCRATES: But that was not acknowledged by Lysias in his speech, Philebus Part
36 Intro| body; and in this is to be acknowledged, not an element of evil, 37 Text | Protarchus, are the common and acknowledged paradoxes about the one 38 Text | not yet become common and acknowledged?~SOCRATES: When, my boy, 39 Text | divisions, and we readily acknowledged it to be by nature one?~ 40 Text | pain, for envy has been acknowledged by us to be mental pain, 41 Text | have let me off, and have acknowledged as a general truth that Protagoras Part
42 Text | that folly has already been acknowledged by us to be the opposite 43 Text | pleasant?~It has certainly been acknowledged to be so, he replied.~And The Republic Book
44 1 | Then you must also have acknowledged justice not to be for the 45 1 | propositions, he further acknowledged that the stronger may command 46 2 | the principle which was acknowledged by all of us when we were 47 4 | And the individual will be acknowledged by us to be just in the 48 5 | the possibility has been acknowledged? ~Yes. ~The very great benefit 49 5 | pleasure or pain? ~That we acknowledged, and very rightly. ~Then 50 5 | when that which we have acknowledged to be discord occurs, and 51 6 | them, when philosophers are acknowledged by us to be of no use to 52 8 | replied Glaucon, has been acknowledged. ~Yes, I said; and we have 53 8 | said; and we have further acknowledged that the governors, when 54 10 | admitted; and the soul has been acknowledged by us to be full of these The Second Alcibiades Part
55 Text | who the foolish. For we acknowledged that there are these two The Sophist Part
56 Intro| us to exist, and we have acknowledged that the Sophist is to be 57 Text | have just used were before acknowledged by us to be unutterable, 58 Text | weight than that which is acknowledged by inferior men. Moreover 59 Text | STRANGER: Not-being has been acknowledged by us to be one among many The Statesman Part
60 Text | one of those universally acknowledged,—the art of working in wool.~ The Symposium Part
61 Intro| is obvious; it is almost acknowledged to be so by Socrates himself. 62 Text | temperate, for Temperance is the acknowledged ruler of the pleasures and 63 Text | with a smile, ‘can Love be acknowledged to be a great god by those 64 Text | as we have several times acknowledged; for here again, and on Theaetetus Part
65 Intro| And having such a mass of acknowledged truth in the mathematical 66 Intro| than Heracleitus would have acknowledged the ‘uneducated fanatics’ 67 Intro| unity and plurality, are acknowledged to be the creations of the 68 Intro| race, embodied in language, acknowledged by experience, and corrected 69 Text | For, as has been already acknowledged, the patient and agent meet 70 Text | Certainly; that has been already acknowledged.~SOCRATES: But when I am 71 Text | since all the parts are acknowledged to be the same as the whole?~ Timaeus Part
72 Intro| universe has been already acknowledged. We cannot tell (nor could 73 Text | kinds of causes should be acknowledged by us, but a distinction