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differs 34
difficilius 1
difficult 112
difficulties 65
difficulty 385
diffidence 1
diffuse 2
Frequency    [«  »]
65 assent
65 constitution
65 cut
65 difficulties
65 earlier
65 extent
65 familiar
Plato
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difficulties

Charmides
   Part
1 PreS | impropriety point out the difficulties which he has had to encounter. 2 PreS | not one of the greatest difficulties of the translator; much 3 PreS | ones.~Such are a few of the difficulties which have to be overcome 4 PreS | thoughts as ourselves, the same difficulties which characterize all periods 5 Intro| disturbed by theological difficulties, ‘Do not trouble yourself Cratylus Part
6 Intro| some of the characteristic difficulties of early Greek philosophy, 7 Intro| and irregularity. And the difficulties of the subject become not Euthyphro Part
8 Intro| their religious beliefs and difficulties. The chief difference between Gorgias Part
9 Intro| that they have escaped all difficulties, not seeing that what they Laws Book
10 5 | country will be full of difficulties. That is a danger which, 11 6 | determine. There have been many difficulties already, but this will be 12 7 | certainly am afraid of the difficulties to which you allude, but Meno Part
13 Intro| to escape the dialectical difficulties which are urged against Parmenides Part
14 Intro| for answering some of the difficulties which have been suggested, 15 Intro| These are some of the difficulties which are involved in the 16 Intro| Socrates. ‘Yet if these difficulties induce you to give up universal 17 Intro| The first of these two difficulties mankind, as we may say, 18 Intro| even this second class of difficulties as hopeless or insoluble. 19 Intro| Parmenides attributes the difficulties in which Socrates is involved 20 Intro| compare Phil.). The same difficulties about Unity and Being are 21 Intro| absolutely denied. But certain difficulties and consequences are shown 22 Text | few, and only a few of the difficulties in which we are involved 23 Text | attention on these and the like difficulties, does away with ideas of 24 Text | youngest? He will not make difficulties and will be the most likely Phaedo Part
25 Intro| compounded into one? These are difficulties which Socrates cannot answer. 26 Intro| subtraction, and the other difficulties of relation. These subtleties 27 Intro| it, seem to involve equal difficulties in the moral government 28 Intro| or evil to another. The difficulties which are urged about the 29 Intro| in death inspire in us.~Difficulties of two kinds occur in the Phaedrus Part
30 Intro| is thrown by him on real difficulties. He interprets past ages Philebus Part
31 Intro| He touches on the same difficulties and he gives no answer to 32 Intro| hackneyed illustrations; such difficulties had long been solved by 33 Intro| Parmenides, where similar difficulties are raised, Plato seems 34 Intro| the scale of goods. Some difficulties occur to us in the enumeration: 35 Intro| in these phenomena; his difficulties begin with the application 36 Intro| entirety in each object? These difficulties are but imperfectly answered 37 Intro| or the spirit of God. The difficulties of ethics disappear when 38 Text | Protarchus, are the real difficulties, and this is the one and Protagoras Part
39 Intro| often supposed to be full of difficulties. These are partly imaginary 40 Intro| There is another class of difficulties, which may be ascribed to 41 Intro| definite results.~The real difficulties arise out of the extreme 42 Text | that of clearing up my own difficulties. For I think that Homer The Republic Book
43 6 | doubt about the numerous difficulties in which this question is The Second Alcibiades Part
44 Pre | Alcibiades shows that the difficulties about prayer which have The Sophist Part
45 Intro| be one of the most unreal difficulties of ancient philosophy. We 46 Intro| and to nearly all other difficulties of early Greek philosophy, 47 Intro| not-being, and now I am in great difficulties even about being.~Let us 48 Intro| These are a few of the difficulties which are accumulating one 49 Intro| nothing of anything. To these difficulties Plato finds what to us appears 50 Intro| occasionally we come across difficulties like the time-honoured controversy 51 Intro| Having in view some of these difficulties, he seeks—and we may follow 52 Intro| infinitesimals in mathematics. Many difficulties arise in practical religion 53 Intro| and there may be peculiar difficulties in his age which he cannot 54 Intro| knowledge, and has solved many difficulties. We cannot receive his doctrine 55 Text | handles for objection and the difficulties which will arise are very 56 Text | at all, all the previous difficulties remain the same, and there 57 Text | or two.~THEAETETUS: The difficulties which are dawning upon us The Statesman Part
58 Intro| Plato a statement of the difficulties which arise in conceiving Theaetetus Part
59 Intro| concluded.~There are two special difficulties which beset the student 60 Intro| reached presented other difficulties hardly intelligible to us, 61 Intro| amazed, Socrates, by these difficulties.’ ‘That is because you are 62 Text | regard them only as the difficulties of others, and the ridicule 63 Text | opinion may exist, and the difficulties which were previously raised Timaeus Part
64 Intro| unchanging? All the old difficulties about the ideas come back 65 Text | he will meet with many difficulties in the discussion which


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