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Alphabetical [« »] pickles 1 pickling 1 pictorial 4 picture 66 pictured 3 pictures 30 picturesqueness 1 | Frequency [« »] 66 favour 66 likes 66 observation 66 picture 66 pursuit 66 respecting 66 solon | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances picture |
Charmides Part
1 PreS | that a translation, like a picture, is dependent for its effect Cratylus Part
2 Intro| again into words, until the picture or figure—that is, language— 3 Intro| man and say ‘this is year picture,’ and again, he may go and 4 Intro| the colours makes a good picture, and he who gives only some 5 Intro| imperfect one, but still a picture; so he who gives all the 6 Intro| the former has created the picture sounds which represent natural 7 Intro| distinctly perceived. The picture passes into a symbol, for 8 Intro| being renewed, just as the picture is brought back again in 9 Intro| conquest, or the like. The picture of the word which was beginning 10 Intro| like manner only a pleasing picture. (2) There is the fallacy 11 Intro| colour to give effect to his picture. It would be ridiculous 12 Text | say to him, ‘This is your picture,’ showing him his own likeness, 13 Text | for the name, like the picture, is an imitation. May I 14 Text | gives all gives a perfect picture or figure; and he who takes 15 Text | away or adds also gives a picture or figure, but not a good 16 Text | Returning to the image of the picture, I would ask, How could 17 Text | could any one ever compose a picture which would be like anything 18 Text | imitated, and out of which the picture is composed?~CRATYLUS: Impossible.~ Critias Part
19 Text | we are satisfied with a picture of divine and heavenly things Euthydemus Part
20 Intro| chief study of all is the picture of the two brothers, who Gorgias Part
21 Intro| human race. It is a similar picture of suffering goodness which 22 Intro| abstract are represented in a picture: (9) the fiction of the 23 Intro| liveliness and consistency of the picture. The structure of the fiction 24 Intro| model of the heavens, and a picture of the Day of Judgment.~ 25 Intro| a few touches bring the picture home to the mind, and make 26 Intro| the whole is to create a picture not such as can be painted Laws Book
27 6 | brighten up and improve the picture, all his great labour will 28 10 | Cleinias. What a dreadful picture, Stranger, have you given, 29 10 | terrify men, and which they picture to themselves as in a dream, Menexenus Part
30 Intro| if any, in drawing the picture of the Silenus Socrates, Meno Part
31 Intro| in history. The repulsive picture which is given of him in 32 Intro| the carpenter makes, the picture of the bed which is drawn Parmenides Part
33 Text | In what way?~Just as in a picture things appear to be all Phaedo Part
34 Intro| Cebes, or from seeing a picture of Simmias may remember 35 Intro| longer be described, as in a picture, by the symbol of a creature 36 Intro| overthrow of the argument, the picture of Socrates playing with 37 Text | not also from seeing the picture of a horse or a lyre remember 38 Text | remember a man? and from the picture of Simmias, you may be led Phaedrus Part
39 Intro| speech. For it is like a picture, which can give no answer 40 Intro| of the passage: it is a picture, not a system, and a picture 41 Intro| picture, not a system, and a picture which is for the greater 42 Intro| Laws.) Add to this that the picture of Socrates, though in some Philebus Part
43 Text | pleasures ensuing, and in the picture there may be a likeness The Republic Book
44 2 | will describe around me a picture and shadow of virtue to 45 6 | tablet, they will rub out the picture, and leave a clean surface. 46 6 | could they make a fairer picture. ~And now, I said, are we 47 6 | short of the most finished picture should satisfy us. When 48 9 | himself. Have we not here a picture of his way of life? ~Yes, 49 10 | when he shows them his picture of a carpenter from a distance, 50 10 | nothing of cobbling; and his picture is good enough for those The Sophist Part
51 Intro| understood them or not;’ the picture of the materialists, or 52 Intro| secondly, the Materialists.~The picture which he gives of both these 53 Intro| representations in which the picture vanishes and the essence The Statesman Part
54 Intro| mythus may be compared to a picture, which is well drawn in 55 Intro| of description than any picture. ‘But what, Stranger, is 56 Intro| presiding over them all.~‘Your picture, Stranger, of the king and 57 Text | discussion might be compared to a picture of some living being which 58 Text | happiness.~YOUNG SOCRATES: Your picture, Stranger, of the king and The Symposium Part
59 Intro| Socrates, and agrees with the picture given of him in the first Theaetetus Part
60 Intro| described in the Symposium. The picture which Theodorus gives of 61 Intro| will you have the companion picture of philosophers? or will 62 Intro| of sense, an indistinct picture of the object which accompanies 63 Intro| term the mind’s eye the picture of the surrounding scene, 64 Text | Will you have the companion picture of the philosopher, who 65 Text | quite disappointed; the picture, which at a distance was Timaeus Part
66 Text | so that like an indelible picture they were branded into my