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Alphabetical [« »] understanding-there 1 understandings 3 understands 20 understood 71 undertake 16 undertaken 4 undertakes 4 | Frequency [« »] 71 sensible 71 substance 71 trouble 71 understood 71 zeno 70 examine 70 excess | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances understood |
The Apology Part
1 Intro| The above remarks must be understood as applying with any degree Charmides Part
2 PreS | which would not have been understood by him. ‘I cannot think,’ 3 Text | thought how well Cydias understood the nature of love, when, Cratylus Part
4 Intro| Prodicus,’ we should have understood Plato better, and many points 5 Intro| meaning, though hard to be understood, because really a sentence 6 Intro| imitation of the object understood, is the first rudiment of 7 Intro| other minds, is neither understood nor seen by us, and is with 8 Intro| of a language is better understood. Many merely verbal questions 9 Intro| other preposition ‘being understood’ in a Greek sentence is 10 Intro| from any necessity of being understood,—much less articulation 11 Intro| us, which is more readily understood or more easily remembered. 12 Intro| individuals, are better understood by us when we know something 13 Intro| and when they are better understood by us, we feel more kindly 14 Text | meaning, although hard to be understood, because really like a sentence, Euthydemus Part
15 Intro| abstract notions, were not understood; in which there was no analysis 16 Text | you ask in one sense is understood and answered by me in another, Gorgias Part
17 Intro| implies that he will be understood or appreciated by very few.~ 18 Intro| truths before they can be understood, as in all ages the words 19 Intro| his great ideas are not understood by the many; he is a thousand Laws Book
20 2 | use his voice in what is understood to be the right manner, 21 7 | serious things cannot be understood without laughable things, 22 9 | itself? How can a word not understood be the basis of legislation? 23 10 | to a multitude hard to be understood, not to mention that they 24 10 | heavens.~Athenian. You have understood my meaning right well, Cleinias, Parmenides Part
25 Intro| regardless of whether we understood them or not.’~The Parmenides 26 Intro| abstract terms is perfectly understood by us, and we are inclined 27 Intro| of Plato had been truly understood and appreciated. Upon the 28 Intro| nature, better known and understood by us, and less liable to 29 Text | Zeno; you have correctly understood my general purpose.~I see, Phaedo Part
30 Text | same, although I have never understood what was meant by any of 31 Text | time when I thought that I understood the meaning of greater and Phaedrus Part
32 Intro| the speech had better be understood, for if in the censure of 33 Intro| their honeymoon they never understood that they must provide against 34 Intro| of the body can only be understood as a whole’? (Compare Charm.) 35 Text | of the body can only be understood as a whole. (Compare Charmides.)~ Philebus Part
36 Intro| of pleasure will be best understood from an examination of the 37 Text | are to do:—Socrates, if I understood him rightly, is asking whether Protagoras Part
38 Text | is written, as before he understood only what was spoken, they The Republic Book
39 3 | fairly expect who never understood that, if Asclepius did not 40 5 | This, however, is not to be understood as an absolute prohibition 41 6 | the good, just as if we understood them when they use the term " The Sophist Part
42 Intro| of the Eleatic, that he understood their doctrine of Not-being; 43 Intro| regardless of whether we understood them or not;’ the picture 44 Intro| nature of his art is not understood? And that we may not be 45 Intro| without much caring whether we understood them or not. For tell me, 46 Intro| worth understanding can be understood in a moment; common sense 47 Intro| regardless of whether we understood him or not’; or, as he is 48 Intro| complexity of mechanics cannot be understood without mathematics, so 49 Intro| and absolute as ordinarily understood are tiresome because they 50 Intro| Aristotle and Plato, rightly understood, we cannot trace this law 51 Intro| much read, and so little understood. The Pre-Socratic philosophies 52 Text | knowledge are tending, is not understood.~THEAETETUS: I should imagine 53 Text | I used to fancy that I understood quite well what was meant 54 Text | you always from the first understood your own meaning, whereas 55 Text | we once thought that we understood you, but now we are in a The Statesman Part
56 Text | you mean? I cannot have understood your previous remark about The Symposium Part
57 Intro| which could hardly have been understood or interpreted at the time 58 Intro| satirically that he has not understood the terms of the original 59 Text | never, as I think, at all understood the power of Love. For if 60 Text | of Love. For if they had understood him they would surely have Theaetetus Part
61 Intro| which this statement may be understood are set aside, like the 62 Intro| and original could not be understood by the next generation, 63 Intro| philosophical problem is better understood when translated into the Timaeus Part
64 Intro| connect abstractions, was not understood by them at all. Yet the 65 Intro| and rheums which are not understood, or assigned to their true 66 Intro| goodness’ is not to be understood in this passage as meaning 67 Intro| sense in which Aristotle understood the word, but that the rotation 68 Intro| and Simplicius supposed, understood (Greek) in the Timaeus to 69 Text | and the heavy will be best understood when examined in connexion 70 Text | which will be more easily understood if we begin by admitting 71 Text | of this phenomenon is not understood by most professors of medicine,