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Alphabetical [« »] conjuring 1 connatural 1 connect 11 connected 68 connecting 18 connection 40 connections 5 | Frequency [« »] 68 anytus 68 bear 68 belongs 68 connected 68 educated 68 expressed 68 fairest | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances connected |
Charmides Part
1 PreS | which they are construed or connected, and passes into the general 2 PreS | intended the two parts to be connected with each other. We cannot Cratylus Part
3 Intro| have been added. Pluto is connected with ploutos, because wealth 4 Intro| onesis, and in any case is connected with pheresthai; gnome is 5 Intro| There is episteme, which is connected with stasis, as mneme is 6 Intro| having a bad sense, which are connected with ideas of motion, such 7 Intro| side by side or slightly connected by the copula. But within 8 Text | imagine that the term Hades is connected with the invisible (aeides) 9 Text | motion), but is at any rate connected with pheresthai (motion); 10 Text | are the words which are connected with agathon and kalon, Critias Part
11 Intro| nature. The Critias is also connected with the Republic. Plato, The First Alcibiades Part
12 Text | noblest of them, highly connected both on the father’s and Laws Book
13 12 | in process of burial is connected with him; he should consider Lysis Part
14 Intro| of different sexes, not connected by ties of relationship, Meno Part
15 Intro| higher sense of systematic, connected, reasoned knowledge, such Parmenides Part
16 Intro| in which individuals are connected with them. Do they participate 17 Intro| degrees in which phenomena are connected. Yet we accept them as the 18 Text | anything which is not, be connected with any of the others; Phaedo Part
19 Intro| we inhabit: but all are connected by passages and perforations 20 Intro| immortality of the soul is connected with the doctrine of ideas. 21 Intro| Timaeus, and in all of them is connected with a doctrine of retribution. Phaedrus Part
22 Intro| The Phaedrus is closely connected with the Symposium, and 23 Intro| digressions which are but remotely connected with the main subject.~Thus 24 Intro| Dialogues are so closely connected as the Phaedrus and Symposium, 25 Text | Cratylus), who would never have connected prophecy (mantike) which Philebus Part
26 Intro| These are only partially connected with one another. The dialogue 27 Intro| thinkers who have idealized and connected them—by the lives of saints 28 Intro| justice seems to be naturally connected with one theory of morals, 29 Text | are those other marvels connected with this subject which, Protagoras Part
30 Intro| at any rate as closely connected with it. The Io and the The Republic Book
31 5 | parent of those who are thus connected with him. ~Capital, I said; The Seventh Letter Part
32 Text | intercourse and from services connected with his return that these 33 Text | with Dionysios on questions connected with such subjects, in the The Sophist Part
34 Intro| a somewhat forced manner connected with each other. The first 35 Intro| of the Theaetetus, and is connected with the Parmenides by a 36 Intro| principles must be filled up and connected with one another. In Plato 37 Intro| in which our ideas may be connected. The triplets of Hegel, 38 Text | whether all names may be connected with one another, or none, 39 Text | when in sequence may be connected, but that words which have 40 Text | when in sequence cannot be connected?~THEAETETUS: What are you The Statesman Part
41 Intro| illustration of method are connected, not like the love and rhetoric 42 Intro| medicine, were naturally connected in the minds of early thinkers, 43 Intro| the dialogue are closely connected with the dialectical. As 44 Intro| The Statesman is naturally connected with the Sophist. At first 45 Text | various sorts of business connected with the government of states— The Symposium Part
46 Intro| raising.~The Symposium is connected with the Phaedrus both in Theaetetus Part
47 Intro| Again, the Theaetetus may be connected with the Gorgias, either 48 Intro| though not very closely connected, neither is the digression 49 Intro| theory of Protagoras is connected by Aristotle as well as 50 Intro| negative, but gradually, when connected with the world and the divine 51 Intro| which it is inseparably connected. This is the natural memory 52 Intro| which they are organically connected. There is no use of them 53 Intro| heir of all the ages, or connected with all other minds. It 54 Intro| that they are very nearly connected. But in endeavouring to 55 Intro| appetites and the reason; and connected with this, at a higher stage 56 Intro| and is not and cannot be a connected system. We cannot define 57 Intro| that is to say, it is not a connected unity of knowledge. Compared Timaeus Part
58 Intro| which he has expressly connected; was ever present to his 59 Intro| sentences are less closely connected and also more involved; 60 Intro| mouth was closed the passage connected with it might still be fed 61 Intro| outlet for liquids they connected with the living principle 62 Intro| science, but indissolubly connected with some theory of one, 63 Intro| like the world, are always connected by two middle terms and 64 Intro| solid bodies are always connected by two middle terms’ or 65 Intro| of the blood is closely connected with his theory of respiration. 66 Intro| and ‘Mind’; and these are connected by Plato in the Timaeus, 67 Intro| Atlantis, though not closely connected with the voyages of the 68 Text | and the sinews which are connected with them. These disorders