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2001 Phaedr Text | pure ourselves and not yet enshrined in that living tomb which
2002 Timae Text | together by sinews, and then enshrouded them all in an upper covering
2003 7Lett Text | is better neither for the enslavers nor for the enslaved, for
2004 Laws 9 | promoting a man to power enslaves the laws, and subjects the
2005 7Lett Text | mischief-makers, that he might be ensnared, and so Dion would prove
2006 7Lett Text | time, sending a trireme to ensure me comfort on the voyage;
2007 7Lett Text | of continuous effort; it ensures that such a man shall not
2008 Thaeet Intro| own point of view. But he entangles him in the meshes of a more
2009 Phaedo Intro| Aristotle, that the soul is the entelechy or form of an organized
2010 1Alci Text | the Persians; for no one entertains a suspicion that the father
2011 Protag Text | that while we are thus enthusiastically pursuing our object some
2012 Craty Text | introduced the sound in endos and entos: alpha he assigned to the
2013 Charm PreS | freshness and a suitable ‘entourage.’ It is strange to observe
2014 Sympo Text | youths, whose presence now entrances you; and you and many a
2015 Laws 11 | gladness of his heart earnestly entreats the Gods in his prayers
2016 Laws 8 | depart, let him erase all the entries which have been made by
2017 Charm PreF | Susemihl’s ‘Genetische Entwickelung der Paltonischen Philosophie;’
2018 Sympo Text | arms about one another, entwined in mutual embraces, longing
2019 Laws 7 | gymnastic and wrestling and to enunciate better ones.~Athenian. Now
2020 Sophis Intro| Plato may have extended and envenomed the meaning, or that he
2021 Laws 5 | fool. Neither condition is enviable, for the untrustworthy and
2022 Ion Intro| Panathenaea. Socrates admires and envies the rhapsode’s art; for
2023 Criti Text | described the city and the environs of the ancient palace nearly
2024 Phileb Intro| should we not allow them to envisage morality accordingly, and
2025 2Alci Text | the shrine of Ammon. Their envoys were also to ask, ‘Why the
2026 Laws 3 | there any contentions or envyings. And therefore they were
2027 Thaeet Intro| in all.’ E pollaplasion, eoe, to ergon e os nun zeteitai
2028 Phaedr Intro| Athenian audience (tettigessin eoikotes). The story is introduced,
2029 Craty Text | be supposed to have been eone, but this has been altered
2030 Protag Text | he uses a Lesbian word, epainemi (approve), because he is
2031 Craty Text | motion, and the touching (epaphe) of motion is expressed
2032 Craty Intro| aphaeresis of tau and an epenthesis of omicron in two places,
2033 Craty Text | compare omartein, sunienai, epesthai, sumpheresthai); and much
2034 Craty Text | good for anything follows (epetai) the motion of things, neither
2035 Repub 10 | there followed the soul of Epeus the son of Panopeus passing
2036 Sympo Intro| figure of human (compare Eph. ‘This is a great mystery,
2037 Craty Text | HERMOGENES: Surely.~SOCRATES: Ephaistos is Phaistos, and has added
2038 Sympo Text | told the tale of Otys and Ephialtes who, as Homer says, dared
2039 1Alci Text | the guardianship of the Ephori, who are public officers
2040 Phaedr Text | Yes, he was staying with Epicrates, here at the house of Morychus;
2041 Ion Text | Asclepius.~SOCRATES: And do the Epidaurians have contests of rhapsodes
2042 Repub 3 | cured, or on occasion of an epidemic, but just because, by indolence
2043 Phaedr Intro| forged epistles, a great many epigrams, biographies of the meanest
2044 Craty Text | epsilon (not pioteme, but epiisteme). Take another example:
2045 Craty Text | were just now considering. Epioteme (knowledge) is akin to this,
2046 Thaeet Intro| for the introduction of an episode in a poem, or of a topic
2047 Craty Text | go along with), and, like epistasthai (to know), implies the progression
2048 Thaeet Intro| toiauten omologian pote epistemen genesthai; Plato Republic.~
2049 Craty Text | should rather be read as epistemene, inserting epsilon nu. Sunesis (
2050 Charm PreS | de Platonis quae feruntur Epistolis). They are full of egotism,
2051 Phaedr Text | applying uncomplimentary epithets, as you and I have been
2052 Repub 8 | motley and manifold and an epitome of the lives of many; he
2053 Craty Intro| phroneseos; episteme is e epomene tois pragmasin—the faculty
2054 Craty Intro| function; he is merely the Eponymus of the State, who prescribes
2055 Timae Intro| two kinds of triangles the equal-sided has but one form, the unequal-sided
2056 States Text | State, and who exchange and equalise the products of husbandry
2057 Timae Intro| describing the path of the equator, the second, the path of
2058 Charm Intro| Tusc. ‘(Greek), quam soleo equidem tum temperantiam, tum moderationem
2059 Protag Text | Prometheus and Epimetheus to equip them, and to distribute
2060 Timae Text | shields and spears, a style of equipment which the goddess taught
2061 Laws 8 | he shall run in the full equipments of an archer a distance
2062 Protag Text | without swiftness, while he equipped the weaker with swiftness;
2063 Phaedr Intro| element, though not wholly eradicated, is reduced to order and
2064 Laws 6 | depart life let them be erased. The limit of marriageable
2065 Laws 8 | diminution, let there be an erasure made. And let the same rule
2066 Phaedr Text | their report of them; of Erato for the lovers, and of the
2067 1Alci Text | three-hundred acre patch at Erchiae, and he has a mind to go
2068 Sympo Text | Socrates, said Agathon, and ere long you and I will have
2069 1Alci Text | demus of the great-hearted Erechteus is of a fair countenance,
2070 Laws 8 | districts. And the first erection of houses shall be around
2071 Craty Text | strike), thrauein (crush), ereikein (bruise), thruptein (break),
2072 Laws 3 | report to Athens that no Eretrian had escaped him; for the
2073 Thaeet Intro| E pollaplasion, eoe, to ergon e os nun zeteitai prostatteis.~
2074 Repub 9 | godless and detestable? Eriphyle took the necklace as the
2075 Craty Intro| meaning. But then, why do the Eritreans call that skleroter which
2076 Craty Intro| momenos, that is, eiremes or ermes—the speaker or contriver
2077 Craty Text | was no true son of Hermes (Ermogenes), for I am not a good hand
2078 Phaedr Text | prophetic, initiatory, poetic, erotic, having four gods presiding
2079 Craty Intro| breath (pnoe) which creeps (erpei) through the soul: euphrosune
2080 Craty Intro| and terpnon is properly erpnon, because the sensation of
2081 Craty Text | breath (pnoe) and is properly erpnoun, but has been altered by
2082 Craty Text | from the pleasure creeping (erpon) through the soul, which
2083 Charm PreF | corrections under the head of errata at the end of the Introduction.
2084 Timae Intro| graces of speech, in their erratic way of life having never
2085 Phaedr Text | a name, is called love (erromenos eros).’~And now, dear Phaedrus,
2086 Sympo Intro| exhaustive article of Meier in Ersch and Grueber’s Cyclopedia
2087 Timae Intro| admiring the diligence and erudition of M. Martin, we cannot
2088 Timae Text | body, generating leprous eruptions and similar diseases. When
2089 Repub 6 | no single one of them can escape-who will venture to affirm this? ~
2090 Laws 1 | legislator commanded to eschew all great pleasures and
2091 Craty Text | most draws the soul dia ten esin tes roes— because flowing
2092 States Text | by private betrothals and espousals. For most persons form marriage
2093 Craty Text | the first to marry, and he espoused his sister Tethys, who was
2094 Craty Intro| which he describes Oceanus espousing his sister Tethys. Tethys
2095 Phaedo Intro| life (compare his jeu d’esprit about his burial, in which
2096 Sophis Intro| foreigner, the prince of esprits-faux, the hireling who is not
2097 Craty Intro| called because it flows into (esrei) the soul from without:
2098 Craty Text | called because flowing in (esron) from without; the stream
2099 Sympo Intro| swiftness; and they were essaying to scale heaven and attack
2100 Apol Intro| magister aut dominus videretur esse judicum’ (Cic. de Orat.);
2101 Thaeet Text | that in all these cases the esse-percipi theory appears to be unmistakably
2102 Phileb Intro| years old already knows the essentials of morals: ‘Thou shalt not
2103 Sophis Intro| Pericles), but honourable and estimable persons, who supplied a
2104 Craty Intro| sought after—on ou masma estin. On and ousia are only ion
2105 Repub 6 | that nature is warped and estranged; as the exotic seed which
2106 Phileb Intro| would cause a quarrel, an estrangement, a war. ‘How can I contribute
2107 Craty Text | en eauto, and etos from etazei, just as the original name
2108 Meno Intro| Contemplatio rerum sub specie eternitatis.’ According to Spinoza finite
2109 Phileb Intro| accompanied by generation (Nic. Eth.).~4. Plato attempts to
2110 Phileb Text | pleasures of smell are of a less ethereal sort, but they have no necessary
2111 Charm Intro| moderationem appellare, nonnunquam etiam modestiam.’), Modesty, Discretion,
2112 Charm PreF | Phaedrus;’ Th. Martin’s ‘Etudes sur le Timee;’ Mr. Poste’
2113 Phaedr Intro| ridicules the fancies of Etymologers; as in the Meno and Gorgias
2114 Craty Intro| merry at the expense of the etymologists. The simplicity of Hermogenes,
2115 Thaeet Intro| egkekalummenos (‘obvelatus’) of Eubulides. For he who sees with one
2116 Phileb Intro| transcendental or with an eudaemonistic system of ethics, with a
2117 Craty Text | which he compares to sleep (eudein); but the original meaning
2118 Craty Intro| the figure of sleep, to eudon; the psi is an addition.
2119 Meno Text | Xanthias, and the other of Eudorus, who had the reputation
2120 Phileb Intro| action. From the days of Eudoxus (Arist. Ethics) and Epicurus
2121 Phaedr Intro| from what may be termed the Euhemerism of his age. For there were
2122 Phaedr Intro| his age. For there were Euhemerists in Hellas long before Euhemerus.
2123 Phaedr Intro| Euhemerists in Hellas long before Euhemerus. Early philosophers, like
2124 Laws 7 | the laws, should receive eulogies; this will be very fitting.~
2125 Gorg Text | harm; while they proceed to eulogize the men who have been the
2126 Thaeet Text | he hears a tyrant or king eulogized, he fancies that he is listening
2127 Thaeet Intro| that case the hearer of the eulogy ought to examine into what
2128 Menex Text | against the invasion of Eumolpus and the Amazons, or of their
2129 Craty Intro| furious, vires acquirit eundo, remind us strongly of the
2130 Laws 5 | this dismissal of them is euphemistically termed a colony. And every
2131 Phaedr Text | Stesichorus the son of Godly Man (Euphemus), who comes from the town
2132 Craty Intro| pheretapha, which is only an euphonious contraction of e tou pheromenou
2133 Craty Intro| poreuesthai to go), and arete is euporia, which is the opposite of
2134 Craty Text | sumpheron (expedient), euporon (plenteous), the same conception
2135 Sympo Text | as Euripides would say (Eurip. Hyppolytus)) was a promise
2136 Phaedo Text | like the currents in the Euripus, are going up and down in
2137 Protag Text | only too glad to meet with Eurybates and Phrynondas, and you
2138 7Lett Text | said.”~On the following day Eurybios and Theodotes came to me
2139 Menex Text | fought by sea at the river Eurymedon, and who went on the expedition
2140 Laws 3 | of Messene, Procles and Eurysthenes of Lacedaemon.~Megillus.
2141 Craty Text | expression of a wish like Eutychides (the son of good fortune),
2142 Gorg Text | like case who strive to evade justice, which they see
2143 Protag Intro| inference which Protagoras evades by drawing a futile distinction
2144 Criti Text | Ampheres, and the other Evaemon. To the elder of the third
2145 Thaeet Intro| consciousness’ are equally evanescent; they are facts which nobody
2146 Timae Text | putrefying, or liquefying, or evaporating, and are perceptible only
2147 Timae Intro| a state of transition or evaporation; he also makes the subtle
2148 Euthyp Intro| weary of the subterfuges and evasions of Euthyphro, remains unshaken
2149 Craty Intro| ceased when they were on the eve of completion: they became
2150 Charm PreS | was also indebted to Mr. Evelyn Abbott, Fellow and Tutor
2151 Phileb Text | deliverance! Yet I like the even-handed justice which is applied
2152 Sophis Text | of a well-rounded sphere, Evenly balanced from the centre
2153 Timae Text | divine and eternal animals, ever-abiding and revolving after the
2154 Repub 8 | numerous, and various, and ever-changing army of his. ~If, he said,
2155 Sophis Intro| appears and reappears in an ever-widening circle. Or our attention
2156 Craty Text | who is the single one, the everdarting, the purifier, the mover
2157 Craty Intro| the opposite of this—the everflowing (aei reousa or aeireite),
2158 Repub 1 | thieves, or any other gang of evildoers could act at all if they
2159 Repub 5 | never have rest from their evils-no, nor the human race, as
2160 Laws 11 | but he shall abstain from evilspeaking; for out of the imprecations
2161 Sophis Intro| thoughts of philosophy were evolved.~There is nothing like this
2162 Timae Intro| legend of the Ten Tribes (Ewald, Hist. of Isr.), which perhaps
2163 Laws 11 | entertainment of evil thoughts, and exacerbating that part of his soul which
2164 Phileb Intro| the more exact. And the exacter part of all of them is really
2165 Laws 9 | and equal.~Touching the exaction of penalties, when a man
2166 Repub 4 | about any impositions and exactions of market and harbor dues
2167 Sophis Text | hook only with pleasure and exacts nothing but his maintenance
2168 Gorg Intro| follow. He will neither exaggerate nor undervalue the power
2169 Protag Text | also greatly increases the exasperation of mankind; for they regard
2170 Criti Intro| power readily enabled him to excavate and fashion, and, as there
2171 Criti Text | what I was told. It was excavated to the depth of a hundred
2172 Laws 6 | property either by buildings or excavations. Further, they ought to
2173 Timae Intro| the children of the gods, excelling all men in virtue, and many
2174 Sophis Text | about from city to city exchanging his wares for money?~THEAETETUS:
2175 Laws 2 | to be taken against the excitableness of youth;—afterwards they
2176 States Text | do you mean?~STRANGER: We exclaim How calm! How temperate!
2177 Repub 2 | recommends. But I hear someone exclaiming that the concealment of
2178 Phileb Text | utters the most irrational exclamations.~PROTARCHUS: Yes, indeed.~
2179 Sophis Intro| actuality before possibility, in excluding from the philosopher’s vocabulary
2180 Craty Intro| of discourse; it was an excrescence which had to be cut out,
2181 Repub 7 | was just now saying, most excusable. ~Yes, he said; and, I may
2182 Repub 1 | that the inferior should execute-is he a ruler in the popular
2183 Timae Intro| his mind a plan which he executes by the help of his servants.
2184 Laws 9 | contrivance, let the public executioner take him in the direction
2185 Phileb Intro| prophets who have taught and exemplified them. The schools of ancient
2186 Meno Intro| class of uncertainties he exempts the difference between truth
2187 Repub 7 | which were passed in bodily exercise-will that be enough? ~Would you
2188 Timae Intro| all three dialogues he is exerting his dramatic and imitative
2189 Craty Text | within itself (en eauto exetazei)’: this is broken up into
2190 States Intro| sort of mephitic vapour exhaling from some ancient chaos,—
2191 Charm Intro| Wisdom, without completely exhausting by all these terms the various
2192 Sympo Intro| Creta and the admirable and exhaustive article of Meier in Ersch
2193 Phaedr Text | have spoken better or more exhaustively.~SOCRATES: There I cannot
2194 Gorg Intro| only flatters them, and he exhorts Callicles to choose the
2195 States Text | State by killing some, or exiling some; whether they reduce
2196 Timae Text | element; and as there are two exits for the heat, the one out
2197 Laws 1 | there is one answer which exonerates the practice in question
2198 Crito Text | they are far from being exorbitant in their demands—a little
2199 Craty Intro| and to-morrow I will be exorcised by some priest or sophist. ‘
2200 Repub 6 | warped and estranged; as the exotic seed which is sown in a
2201 Thaeet Text | and not allowing him to expatiate at will: and there is his
2202 Gorg Intro| theorist, nor yet a dealer in expedients; the whole and the parts
2203 Timae Intro| ancient philosopher never experimented: in the Timaeus Plato seems
2204 Charm PreS | that when he appears to be experimenting on the different points
2205 Euthyd Text | yourselves with them, then fiat experimentum in corpore senis; I will
2206 Repub 3 | that the Achaeans might expiate his tears by the arrows
2207 Laws 9 | be purified and undergo expiation according to law; and then
2208 Laws 6 | before his term of office expires, let those whose business
2209 Charm PreS | the frequent occurrence of expletives, would, if reproduced in
2210 Timae Text | intellect and knowledge ought to explore causes of intelligent nature
2211 Sophis Intro| retails or exports; and the exporter may export either food for
2212 Repub 2 | mention the importers and exporters, who are called merchants? ~
2213 Sophis Intro| Sophist when, instead of exporting his wares to another country,
2214 Sophis Intro| merchant either retails or exports; and the exporter may export
2215 States Intro| and appears only as the expositor of a political ideal, in
2216 Timae Text | unaware that they are only the expositors of dark sayings and visions,
2217 Charm PreS | element of obscurity into the expostion’ (J. of Philol.). The great
2218 Euthyp Intro| had died from hunger and exposure.~This is the origin of the
2219 Laws 1 | liked to have heard you expound the matter?~Cleinias. By
2220 Craty Intro| brother of the rich Callias, expounds the doctrine that names
2221 Repub 7 | at your desire, I have expressed-whether rightly or wrongly, God
2222 Thaeet Text | must be intelligible and expressible, since all the parts are
2223 Craty Intro| of language. He does not expressively distinguish between mere
2224 Repub 3 | to naught." ~We must also expunge the verse which tells us
2225 Repub 7 | them would appreciate the exquisiteness of their workmanship, but
2226 States Text | different from these and very extensive, moving or resting on land
2227 Phaedo Text | of another under the like extenuating circumstances—these are
2228 Laws 12 | one might adduce by way of extenuation, and with the view of justifying
2229 Protag Text | the entire race would be exterminated, and so he sent Hermes to
2230 Phileb Intro| far as they are manifested externally, and can therefore be reduced
2231 Phaedr Intro| beauty, of a sort which extinguishes rather than stimulates vulgar
2232 Criti Text | which they had sworn, and extinguishing all the fire about the temple,
2233 Repub 6 | the very study which you extol. ~Well, and do you think
2234 Repub 9 | positive enjoyment, are extolled by them as the greatest
2235 States Text | the case of the Sophist we extorted the inference that not-being
2236 Laws 11 | unjust, abominable, and extortionate ransom—these are the sort
2237 Sophis Intro| acquaintances, whom he criticizes ab extra; we do not recognize at
2238 Parme Intro| transition involves the singular extra-temporal conception of ‘suddenness.’
2239 Laws 3 | there any possibility of extracting ore from them; and they
2240 Sympo Intro| mysterious woman of foreign extraction. She elicits the final truth
2241 Phaedr Intro| compilations, of scholia, of extracts, of commentaries, forgeries,
2242 Timae Intro| far as they illustrate the extravagances of which men are capable.
2243 Phaedr Text | is the hour of agony and extremest conflict for the soul. For
2244 Lysis Intro| quam amicitiam usque ad extremum vitae permanere’? Is not
2245 Timae Text | liquefied by heat as to exude from the pores of the body,
2246 Phaedr Text | to me ostentatiously to exult in showing how well he could
2247 Phaedo Intro| Phaedo, who has been the eye-witness of the scene, and by the
2248 Thaeet Text | of which they were not eye-witnesses, while a little water is
2249 Repub 6 | the perfect State would be eyed with jealousy and was difficult
2250 Repub 1 | so small a matter in your eyes-to determine how life may be
2251 Repub 7 | reverse of blind, but his keen eyesight is forced into the service
2252 Laws 10 | heard or been yourself an eyewitness of many monstrous impieties,
2253 2Alci Text | have been not hearers, but eyewitnesses,—who have desired to obtain
2254 Timae Text | all three natures, and was fabricated by these second causes,
2255 States Text | against winter cold, which fabricates woollen defences, and has
2256 Criti Intro| the whole narrative is a fabrication, interpreters have looked
2257 Sympo Text | stage with the actors and faced the vast theatre altogether
2258 Repub 7 | natural gifts which will facilitate their education. ~And what
2259 Repub 5 | rewards, might have greater facilities of intercourse with women
2260 Thaeet Intro| however, that this was only a “facon de parler,” by which he
2261 Timae Intro| expelled, like an exile from a factious state, causing associating
2262 Thaeet Intro| language has been the greatest factor in the formation of human
2263 Repub 5 | assign each to their proper faculty-the extremes to the faculties
2264 Timae Intro| blood is separated from the faeces.~Of the anatomy and functions
2265 Phaedr Intro| be more success and fewer failures in the search for it. Lastly,
2266 Sophis Text | STRANGER: Shall we then be so faint-hearted as to give him up?~THEAETETUS:
2267 Timae Intro| both, the track becomes fainter and we can only follow him
2268 Sympo Text | makes Menelaus, who is but a fainthearted warrior, come unbidden (
2269 Timae Intro| only, not mirrored, however faintly, in the glass of science,
2270 Repub 7 | for the mind more often faints from the severity of study
2271 Timae Intro| whole this little tract faithfully reflects the meaning and
2272 Gorg Text | you may think that I have fallen-upon one condition:~POLUS: What
2273 Thaeet Intro| discovered that his appeal to the fallibility of sense was really an illusion.
2274 Apol Intro| rhetoric but truth; he will not falsify his character by making
2275 Phileb Text | and pains with their own falsity.~PROTARCHUS: Very true.~
2276 Repub 10 | even now makes the words falter on my lips, for he is the
2277 Craty Intro| something also from the falterings of old age, the searching
2278 Charm PreS | dependent on one another, unless familiarised by idiom, have an awkward
2279 Gorg Intro| trifles of courtesy and the familiarities of daily life are not overlooked.~
2280 Phileb Intro| the opinion of the world, familiarizes them to us; and they take
2281 Sophis Intro| Hence the importance of familiarizing the mind with forms which
2282 Craty Intro| case the language which is familiarly spoken may have grown up
2283 Phileb Intro| easily be in excess, may be fanatical, may be interested, may
2284 States Intro| perfect in virtue, who was fancifully said to be a king; but neither
2285 Repub 8 | a dicast, if you have a fancy-is not this a way of life which
2286 Repub 3 | Thou hast wronged me, O Far-darter, most abominable of deities.
2287 Thaeet Intro| of this he is to make a far-sighted calculation;—he is to be
2288 Phaedr Text | exchange ‘tu quoque’ as in a farce, or compel me to say to
2289 2Alci Text | even they who seem to have fared best, have not only gone
2290 Euthyp Text | a field labourer on our farm in Naxos, and one day in
2291 Phaedo Intro| two sparrows sold for one farthing?’ etc.), but the truth is
2292 Sympo Text | and golden images of such fascinating beauty that I was ready
2293 Craty Text | say to you, that the fine fashionable language of modern times
2294 Laws 2 | were young, and that this fashioner of them is the same who
2295 Phaedr Intro| before he begins to write. He fastens or weaves together the frame
2296 Timae Intro| he combines idealism with fatalism.~The soul of man is divided
2297 Sophis Intro| Many a man has become a fatalist because he has fallen under
2298 Parme Intro| of all philosophies were fathered upon the founder of the
2299 Repub 9 | and will keep his dear old fatherland or motherland, as the Cretans
2300 Repub 8 | private advisers offer the fatherly counsel of the aged will
2301 Timae Text | conveyance which is not fatiguing; the third sort of motion
2302 Laws 7 | other valiant beast whose fatness is worn down by brave deeds
2303 Laws 7 | the due reward of the idle fatted beast is that he should
2304 Gorg Intro| And those whom they have fattened applaud them, instead of
2305 Repub 6 | such a nature, placed under favorable circumstances, will not
2306 Repub 4 | that is usual among the favorites of fortune; but our poor
2307 Repub 5 | and sisters; if the lot favors them, and they receive the
2308 Gorg Intro| being judged, there was favouritism, and Zeus, when he came
2309 Repub 4 | regime and indulges them and fawns upon them and is skilful
2310 Repub 5 | which you propose, if only feasible, would do all sorts of good
2311 Repub 8 | to the knowledge of human fecundity and sterility all the wisdom
2312 Repub 1 | pay because a man takes fees when he is engaged in healing? ~
2313 Gorg Intro| man of ability can easily feign the language of piety or
2314 Repub 7 | not suppose that he would felicitate himself on the change, and
2315 Craty Intro| mere synonym for it,—e.g. felicity and happiness. The cultivated
2316 Criti Intro| the globe, America, Arabia Felix, Ceylon, Palestine, Sardinia,
2317 Laws 3 | had scarcely any means of felling timber. Even if you suppose
2318 Menex Text | they should war with the fellow-countrymen only until they gained a
2319 Repub 5 | Fellow-rulers. ~And what in ours? ~Fellow-guardians. ~Did you ever know an example
2320 Gorg Text | cannot tell which of his fellow-passengers he has benefited, and which
2321 Repub 7 | wisdom of the den and his fellow-prisoners, do you not suppose that
2322 Repub 5 | another in other States? ~Fellow-rulers. ~And what in ours? ~Fellow-guardians. ~
2323 1Alci Text | them to rule over their fellow-singers?~ALCIBIADES: The art of
2324 Repub 8 | pilgrimage or a march, as fellow-soldiers or fellowsailors; aye, and
2325 Sympo Text | is willing to tell his fellow-sufferers only, as they alone will
2326 Lache Text | may have met him among his fellow-wardsmen, in company with his father,
2327 Protag Text | their fathers? He and his fellow-workmen have taught them to the
2328 Repub 8 | march, as fellow-soldiers or fellowsailors; aye, and they may observe
2329 States Text | separated off the process of felting and the putting together
2330 Apol Intro| fence and play, as he had fenced with other ‘improvers of
2331 Gorg Text | reason why the trainers or fencing-masters should be held in detestation
2332 Timae Intro| liquid, which boils and ferments, the other of pure and transparent
2333 7Lett Text | out an unintelligible and ferocious war cry. Dionysios took
2334 Charm PreS | Critica de Platonis quae feruntur Epistolis). They are full
2335 Protag Intro| before the dawn had risen—so fervid is his zeal. Socrates moderates
2336 Repub 3 | until they silently gather a festering mass of corruption in their
2337 Timae Text | unclean matter, swells and festers, but, again, when the body
2338 Laws 2 | all, to the mystery and festivity of the elder men, making
2339 1Alci Text | and do they not run to fetch the same thing, when they
2340 Apol Text | four went to Salamis and fetched Leon, but I went quietly
2341 Repub 2 | wish also to see a State at fever-heat, I have no objection. For
2342 Laws 3 | your government was still feverish and excited, tempered your
2343 Timae Intro| observed in some intermittent fevers correspond to the density
2344 Euthyd Text | yourselves with them, then fiat experimentum in corpore
2345 Phaedr Text | Once more, if you fear the fickleness of friendship, consider
2346 Sympo Intro| than England in the time of Fielding and Smollett, or France
2347 7Lett Text | higher power or avenging fiend has fallen upon them, inspiring
2348 Thaeet Text | fortune made him, and he had a fiftieth, and so on? He amuses himself
2349 Repub 5 | beget children until he be fifty-five. ~Certainly, he said, both
2350 Laws 8 | the bunch, or figs on the fig–tree. Let a metic purchase
2351 Repub 2 | implement of war become a good fighter all in a day, whether with
2352 Lache Text | Whereas I perceive that these fighters in armour regard Lacedaemon
2353 Craty Intro| more troublesome than the figments of grammar, because they
2354 Sophis Intro| alternation of opposites or figured to the mind by the vibrations
2355 Repub 5 | are willing to command a file; and if they cannot be honored
2356 Repub 5 | father be implied and the filial reverence and duty and obedience
2357 Gorg Intro| the other leaky; the first fils his jars, and has no more
2358 Sympo Text | and so I have put on my finery, because he is such a fine
2359 Repub 7 | clearer: here are three fingers-a little finger, a second
2360 Timae Intro| tempore sed cum tempore finxit Deus mundum,’ says St. Augustine,
2361 Laws 4 | building?~Cleinias. There is no fir of any consequence, nor
2362 Lache Text | and his ambition is once fired, he will go on to learn
2363 Sophis Text | called firing, or spearing by firelight.~THEAETETUS: True.~STRANGER:
2364 Repub 4 | couches, and feast by the fireside, passing round the wine-cup,
2365 Sophis Text | hunters themselves called firing, or spearing by firelight.~
2366 Timae Intro| seemed to recognize ‘the firstborn of every creature.’ Nor
2367 Laws 3 | expedition against Troy. For, firstly, the people of that day
2368 Lache Text | that they are by no means firstrate in the arts of war. Further,
2369 States Intro| have probably heard of the fish-preserves in the Nile and in the ponds
2370 Repub 10 | prefer the passionate and fitful temper, which is easily
2371 Laws 12 | religious ceremonies which may fittingly be performed, whether appertaining
2372 Repub 5 | forty; a man may begin at five-and-twenty, when he has passed the
2373 Laws 6 | seventeen composed of the fives and twelves, shall determine
2374 Phaedo Text | answer him?~Socrates looked fixedly at us as his manner was,
2375 Sophis Text | unmeaningness an everlasting fixture?~THEAETETUS: That would
2376 Laws 11 | the paternal lot and the fixtures on the lot. And if there
2377 Charm PreF | plagiarized from him, but flagrantly at variance with historical
2378 Timae Intro| body came into contact with flaming fire, or the solid earth,
2379 Charm Text | his own shoes, and his own flask and strigil, and other implements,
2380 Phaedr Text | short thick neck; he is flat-faced and of a dark colour, with
2381 7Lett Text | of right government and flatly refuse to move in the right
2382 States Intro| prejudices may sometimes be flattered and yielded to for the sake
2383 Repub 3 | names for diseases, such as flatulence and catarrh; is not this,
2384 Apol Intro| but they have lost the flavour of Socratic irony in the
2385 Laws 6 | him who will correct the flaws which time may introduce,
2386 States Text | of all articles made of flax and cords, and all that
2387 Craty Text | garments, thin or thick, of flaxen, woollen, or other material,
2388 Repub 10 | and threw them down and flayed them with scourges, and
2389 Sympo Text | is himself the witness, fleeing out of the way of age, who
2390 Repub 7 | incapable of counting his own fleet-how could he if he was ignorant
2391 Thaeet Intro| early thinkers, amid the fleetings of sensible objects, ideas
2392 States Intro| should have served in her fleets and armies. But though we
2393 Repub 8 | has plenty of superfluous flesh-when he sees such a one puffing
2394 Charm PreS | Alcibiades; and to Mr Frank Fletcher, of Balliol College, my
2395 Repub 3 | daughter, and that Agamemnon flew into a passion with him;
2396 Sympo Text | youngest, and also he is of flexile form; for if he were hard
2397 Lysis Intro| fear, and Hippothales the flighty lover, who murders sleep
2398 Meno Intro| has wisdom, but the rest flit like shadows.’~This Dialogue
2399 Phaedr Intro| recollections of childhood might float about them still; they might
2400 Repub 7 | water or by land, whether he floats or only lies on his back. ~
2401 Thaeet Text | all sorts of birds—some flocking together apart from the
2402 Gorg Intro| The Sophists are still floundering about the distinction of
2403 Laws 12 | whole state and country flourishes and is happy; but if the
2404 Sympo Text | immortal, but alive and flourishing at one moment when he is
2405 Repub 10 | be old and miserable are flouted alike by stranger and citizen;
2406 Sympo Text | is spent in mocking and flouting at them. But when I opened
2407 Timae Intro| resisting the impressions which flowed in upon it. He hardly allows
2408 Craty Text | us, or influenced by us, fluctuating according to our fancy,
2409 Thaeet Intro| later generation amid the fluctuation of philosophical opinions
2410 Craty Text | the very expression of the fluency and diffusion of the soul (
2411 Repub 1 | all these admissions, not fluently, as I repeat them, but with
2412 Craty Text | virtue, but while they are flustered and maddened by the body,
2413 Repub 3 | But what do you say to flute-makers and flute-players? Would
2414 Repub 10 | in use; for example, the fluteplayer will tell the flute-maker
2415 Sympo Text | that your nerves could be fluttered at a small party of friends.~
2416 Repub 4 | and thirsts, and feels the flutterings of any other desire, may
2417 Phaedr Intro| eager to quit its cage, she flutters and looks upwards, and is
2418 Craty Text | before supposed of a horse foaling a calf.~HERMOGENES: Quite
2419 Apol Text | if your two sons were foals or calves, there would be
2420 Sympo Intro| preparation for Socrates and a foil to him. The rhetoric of
2421 Apol Intro| of Meletus, who is easily foiled and mastered in the hands
2422 Phaedo Text | the earth with one or many folds like the coils of a serpent,
2423 Craty Intro| to the swimming in some folks’ heads. On the other hand,
2424 Repub 5 | that beauty is unable to follow-of such a one I ask, Is he
2425 Gorg Intro| as Euripides says, ‘is fondest of that in which he is best.’
2426 Repub 2 | with such tales, even more fondly than they mould the body
2427 Phaedo Text | of all kinds, and endless foolery, and in fact, as men say,
2428 Protag Text | confidence of the coward or foolhardy or madman, on the contrary,
2429 Repub 5 | most need to be sure of my footing, and drag my friends after
2430 Laws 9 | kill him, or if he slay a footpad in self–defence, he shall
2431 Repub 9 | thieves, burglars, cut-purses, footpads, robbers of temples, man-stealers
2432 Sophis Text | and shown him more than he forbad us to investigate.~THEAETETUS:
2433 Timae Text | bones of the arms and the forearms, and other parts which have
2434 Phaedo Intro| dialectics; he will not forego the delight of an argument
2435 7Lett Text | But not long after the foregoing events, as if he had entirely
2436 Gorg Intro| not bring them into the foreground, or expect to discern them
2437 Phaedr Text | veiled and ashamed, but with forehead bold and bare.~PHAEDRUS:
2438 Timae Text | all of them. But the gods, foreknowing that the palpitation of
2439 Timae Intro| kindred earth, and put their forelegs to the ground, and their
2440 7Lett Text | should be betraying first and foremost my friendship and comradeship
2441 Sophis Text | just and unjust, that is forensic controversy.~THEAETETUS:
2442 Repub 1 | ironical style! Did I not foresee-have I not already told you,
2443 Gorg Intro| politician, although he foresees the dangers which await
2444 Criti Intro| is intended by Virgil to foreshadow the wars of Carthage and
2445 Phaedo Intro| in these aspirations the foretaste of immortality; as Butler
2446 Repub 8 | them owe money, some have forfeited their citizenship; a third
2447 Menex Text | her feeling was that she forgave the barbarians, who had
2448 Charm PreF | and every temptation to forge them; and in which the writings
2449 Menex Text | mutually received and granted forgiveness of what we have done and
2450 Repub 8 | one. See, too, I said, the forgiving spirit of democracy, and
2451 Timae Intro| entrance to the latter is forked or divided into two passages
2452 Timae Intro| appears to him to be the form-fairer and truer far—of mathematical
2453 Phaedr Intro| by way of contrast to the formality of the two speeches (Socrates
2454 Laws 11 | reconcile them they shall be formally reconciled; but if their
2455 Gorg Intro| trampling under foot all our formularies, and then the light of natural
2456 Charm PreS | have two ‘buts’ or two ‘fors’ in the same sentence where
2457 Phaedo Text | my philosopher altogether forsaking mind or any other principle
2458 Apol Text | are full of them. And so, forsooth, the youth are said to be
2459 Gorg Text | you agree with me I may fortify myself by the assent of
2460 Euthyd Text | match for one of you, and a fortiori I must run away from two.
2461 Sympo Text | tested before long. His fortitude in enduring cold was also
2462 Repub 6 | durance and come into a fortune-he takes a bath and puts on
2463 Thaeet Intro| Theaetetus at his death forty-five or forty-six. This a little
2464 Euthyd Intro| and who died at the age of forty-four, in the year 404 B.C., suggests
2465 Sympo Intro| year B.C. 384, which is the forty-fourth year of Plato’s life. The
2466 Thaeet Intro| his death forty-five or forty-six. This a little impairs the
2467 Euthyd Text | Critobulus, but he is much forwarder and very good-looking: the
2468 Laws 12 | sustenance which the earth, their foster–parent, is naturally inclined
2469 Repub 5 | Their maintainers and foster-fathers. ~And what do they call
2470 Timae Text | of that which we call the foster-mother and nurse of the universe,
2471 Phileb Intro| capable of being greatly fostered and strengthened. So far
2472 Gorg Intro| easily persuaded that the fouler of two things must exceed
2473 Laws 5 | these respects he is most foully and disgracefully abusing
2474 Repub 4 | class will temperance be found-in the rulers or in the subjects? ~
2475 Laws 3 | dwelling at the foot of many–fountained Ida. For indeed, in these
2476 Timae Text | is only purged away in a four-fold period, the result is a
2477 States Intro| two feet; and the power of four-legged creatures, being the double
2478 Timae Intro| intervals of thirds, 3:2, of fourths, 4:3, and of ninths, 9:8.
2479 Laws 1 | I can get as far as the fouth head, which is the frequent
2480 Laws 7 | allowed to hunt anywhere. The fowler in the mountains and waste
2481 Sophis Text | THEAETETUS: Certainly.~STRANGER: Fowling is the general term under
2482 Gorg Text | our friend Socrates, of Foxton, say—does he assent to this,
2483 Sympo Intro| earth and heaven. (Aesch. Frag. Dan.) Love became a mythic
2484 Phaedr Text | blossom and the greatest fragrance; and the stream which flows
2485 Phaedo Intro| human notions, and upon this frail bark let him sail through
2486 Laws 11 | credit to the man who buys fram him, he must do this on
2487 Craty Intro| language only begins when the frame-work is complete. The savage
2488 Sympo Intro| Fielding and Smollett, or France in the nineteenth century.
2489 States Intro| listen to a proposal that the franchise should be confined to the
2490 Gorg Intro| saint, St. Bernard, St. Francis, St. Catharine of Sienna,
2491 Laws 8 | exportation of goods; and as to frankincense and similar perfumes, used
2492 Repub 8 | city full of freedom and frankness-a man may say and do what
2493 Repub 4 | they will make an end of frauds in contracts, and the other
2494 Laws 10 | punishment of sacrilege, whether fraudulent or violent, and now we have
2495 Gorg Text | Athens, which is the most free-spoken state in Hellas, you when
2496 Laws 8 | touch any person of the freeborn or noble class except his
2497 Charm PreS | the reader. Greek has a freer and more frequent use of
2498 Apol Intro| nowhere represented to us as a freethinker or sceptic. There is no
2499 Laws 7 | nor should any freeman or freewoman be discovered taking pains
2500 Timae Text | all things, because they freeze and heat, and contract and
2501 Phileb Text | SOCRATES: And the unnatural freezing of the moisture in an animal