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Alphabetical    [«  »]
phusodes 1
phylarchs 3
physic 5
physical 65
physician 184
physicians 50
physicist 3
Frequency    [«  »]
65 introduction
65 leaving
65 marriage
65 physical
65 receives
65 rhetorician
65 sacrifices
Plato
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physical

The Apology
   Part
1 Intro| identified with the teachers of physical science and with the Sophists. 2 Text | have nothing to do with physical speculations. Very many Charmides Part
3 PreS | gracious to the modern physical philosopher, and the more 4 PreS | philosophy, and between physical and metaphysical science; Cratylus Part
5 Intro| degree as to most of the physical sciences. For after we have 6 Intro| the meeting-point of the physical and mental sciences, and 7 Intro| fallen under the dominion of physical science. Even Kant himself Euthydemus Part
8 Intro| like some of our great physical philosophers, seem to be Gorgias Part
9 Intro| without pain, or that their physical suffering is always compensated 10 Intro| scarcely distinguishable from physical; mankind would avoid vice 11 Text | except perhaps for their physical strength, get together, Laches Part
12 Intro| courage is moral as well as physical: (2) That true courage is Laws Book
13 10 | vain opinion of all those physical investigators; and I would Menexenus Part
14 Intro| un-Platonic than the threat of physical force which Phaedrus uses Parmenides Part
15 Intro| superseded in the vocabulary of physical philosophers by ‘force,’ Phaedo Part
16 Intro| of men? Is the suffering physical or mental? And does the 17 Intro| mental improvement; when the physical frame may be strengthened 18 Intro| the contrast between the physical laws to which we are subject Phaedrus Part
19 Intro| interpretation? Why did the physical sciences never arrive at 20 Intro| is the want of method in physical science, the want of criticism Philebus Part
21 Intro| enemy of pleasure, was not a physical philosopher; the atomists, 22 Intro| the atomists, who were physical philosophers, were not enemies 23 Intro| considered, and the merely physical phenomenon imperfectly analysed, Protagoras Part
24 Text | putting to Hippias certain physical and astronomical questions, The Republic Book
25 5 | those years are the prime of physical as well as of intellectual The Sophist Part
26 Intro| organic and inorganic, to the physical and moral, their respective 27 Intro| repulsion of ideas of which the physical phenomenon described under 28 Intro| arise in thought between the physical and moral and between the 29 Intro| require. We cannot say that physical science, which at present The Symposium Part
30 Intro| Eryximachus and Aristophanes the physical speakers, while in Agathon 31 Intro| reduce the moral to the physical; or recognises one law of Theaetetus Part
32 Intro| in the mathematical and physical, not to speak of the moral 33 Intro| the wicked, which is not physical suffering, but the perpetual 34 Intro| is due, not merely to our physical, but to our mental antecedents 35 Intro| like ourselves, have the physical inheritance of form, scent, 36 Intro| is exercised over them by physical science. But any interpretation 37 Intro| interpretation of nature by physical science is far in advance 38 Intro| itself the curtain of the physical world and is satisfied. 39 Intro| by the false analogy of Physical Science and has great expectations 40 Intro| all; it cannot, like the Physical Sciences, proceed by the 41 Intro| The parallelism of the Physical Sciences, which leads us Timaeus Part
42 Intro| arises in the infancy of physical science, out of the confusion 43 Intro| the spirit of the ancient physical philosopher. He has no notion 44 Intro| the attribution of evil to physical causes accords with the 45 Intro| philosopher to describe physical phenomena. The early physiologists 46 Intro| behind them; they were to physical science what the poems of 47 Intro| ages in the production of physical phenomena. He could imagine 48 Intro| use of analogy the ancient physical philosopher would have stood 49 Intro| spell over the beginnings of physical philosophy, leading to error 50 Intro| in a dream.~The ancient physical philosophers have been charged 51 Intro| their supposed failure in physical investigations. ‘They had 52 Intro| Plato probably did more for physical science by asserting the 53 Intro| differences of size. The obvious physical phenomena from which Plato 54 Intro| escape him.~The general physical doctrines of the Timaeus 55 Intro| it, that vice is due to physical causes. In the Timaeus, 56 Intro| modern science. The modern physical philosopher is apt to dwell 57 Intro| not consider that ancient physical philosophy was not a free 58 Intro| the metaphysical to the physical. Before men can observe 59 Intro| we should consider the physical philosophy of the ancients 60 Intro| delusions of language, that physical philosophy and metaphysical 61 Intro| hear the latest word of physical or metaphysical philosophy. 62 Intro| the discoveries of modern physical science. First, the doctrine 63 Intro| previous philosophies. For the physical science of the ancients 64 Intro| own day by the progress of physical science, how the responsibility 65 Intro| often been supported by physical facts.~The Timaeus also


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