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| Alphabetical [« »] analysed 4 analyses 3 analysing 1 analysis 68 analytic 1 analytical 4 analytics 1 | Frequency [« »] 69 supposing 69 training 69 wants 68 analysis 68 anytus 68 bear 68 belongs | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances analysis |
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Charmides
Part
1 PreS | the pages and a marginal analysis to the text of each dialogue.~
Cratylus
Part
2 Intro| names is to be found in the analysis of their elements. But why
3 Intro| however far we carry back our analysis some ultimate elements or
4 Intro| which they gather from analysis and observation.~(2) There
5 Intro| cold, and so on. Plato’s analysis of the letters of the alphabet
6 Intro| which the philosophical analysis of language teaches us is,
7 Intro| perfection, and that the analysis of them can only be carried
8 Intro| human mind.~In the later analysis of language, we trace the
9 Intro| error of supposing that the analysis of grammar and logic has
10 Intro| is the result rather of analysis than of synthesis, or possibly
11 Intro| language is really only the analysis of it, and this analysis
12 Intro| analysis of it, and this analysis admits of innumerable degrees.
13 Intro| could be elicited from the analysis of the proposition, in this
14 Intro| jabbering of animals, from the analysis of sounds in relation to
15 Text | primary names which precede analysis show the natures of things,
Critias
Part
16 Intro| INTRODUCTION AND ANALYSIS~The Critias is a fragment
Euthydemus
Part
17 Intro| nature of synthesis and analysis is graphically described
18 Intro| doctrine of predication and an analysis of the sentence are given
19 Intro| understood; in which there was no analysis of grammar, and mere puns
Gorgias
Part
20 Intro| to the defective logical analysis of his age.~Nor does he
Meno
Part
21 Intro| reflection as well as sense. His analysis and construction of ideas
Parmenides
Part
22 Intro| INTRODUCTION AND ANALYSIS~The awe with which Plato
23 Intro| one; and then by a further analysis distinguished from, and
24 Intro| he obtains partly by an analysis of the proposition, partly
Phaedo
Part
25 Intro| which is supplied by the analysis of language and the history
Phaedrus
Part
26 Intro| parts in a whole; secondly, analysis, or the resolution of the
27 Intro| elaborate philosophical analysis.~It is too often forgotten
28 Intro| the power of psychological analysis, which is given by dialectic,
29 Text | method which proceeds without analysis is like the groping of a
30 Text | proceeded thus far in his analysis, he will next divide speeches
Philebus
Part
31 Intro| INTRODUCTION AND ANALYSIS~The Philebus appears to
32 Intro| stage of thought such an analysis involved the same kind of
33 Intro| enthusiasm, talking about analysis and synthesis to his father
34 Intro| or the practice of mental analysis, or infected by the corruption
35 Intro| yielded to the inevitable analysis. Even in the opinion of ‘
36 Text | SOCRATES: Right; for in the analysis of these, pure, as I suppose
37 Text | the body; and the previous analysis helps to show the nature
The Republic
Book
38 3 | to Damon himself, for the analysis of the subject would be
The Sophist
Part
39 Intro| INTRODUCTION AND ANALYSIS~The dramatic power of the
40 Intro| generalization, of synthesis and analysis, of division and cross-division,
41 Intro| to be elicited from the analysis of the simple ideas of Unity
42 Intro| Hegelian subtlety in the analysis of one and Being.~It is
43 Intro| ideas to the process of analysis which he applies to every
44 Intro| attempt to obtain a complete analysis we lose all fixedness. If,
45 Intro| persons denied, such an analysis may be justified from the
46 Intro| can be expressed. Such an analysis may be of value as a corrective
The Statesman
Part
47 Intro| INTRODUCTION AND ANALYSIS~In the Phaedrus, the Republic,
48 Text | committed at the end of our analysis.~YOUNG SOCRATES: What was
Theaetetus
Part
49 Intro| INTRODUCTION AND ANALYSIS~Some dialogues of Plato
50 Intro| points of view containing an analysis of the real and apparent (
51 Intro| age in which the power of analysis had outrun the means of
52 Intro| question involved in them. The analysis of sense, and the analysis
53 Intro| analysis of sense, and the analysis of thought, were equally
54 Intro| though capable of a mental analysis into subject and object.)
55 Intro| private judgment. Such an analysis lay beyond his sphere of
56 Intro| mythological symbols. But he has no analysis of sensible perception such
57 Intro| proceeding by the path of mental analysis, was perplexed by doubts
58 Intro| ancient philosophies the analysis of the mind is still rudimentary
59 Intro| them. Or we may assist the analysis by attempting to imagine
60 Intro| revealed by mathematical analysis. And the certainty of these
61 Intro| in advance of our actual analysis or observation.~According
62 Intro| needed. This is the first analysis of the human mind; having
63 Intro| there has been too much analysis and too little synthesis,
64 Text | imputation, that in our fresh analysis of his thesis we are making
65 Text | their hands, and make the analysis ourselves, as if we were
Timaeus
Part
66 Intro| INTRODUCTION AND ANALYSIS~Of all the writings of Plato
67 Intro| physiology of Plato, and (7) his analysis of the senses to be briefly
68 Intro| which is a brief but clear analysis of the Timaeus of Plato,