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6003 Lysis Intro| commonly due to a want of tact and insight. There is not
6004 Lache Intro| characteristic manner. Nicias, the tactician, is very much in favour
6005 Laws 11 | war, in which generals and tacticians are the craftsmen, who undertake
6006 Phaedr Text | his head and puts up his tail, and takes the bit in his
6007 Laws 9 | consider that he has become tainted by a curse. And if he disobeys
6008 Craty Intro| lithou talanteias, or apo tou talantaton einai, signifying at once
6009 Craty Text | person who wanted to call him Talantatos (the most weighted down
6010 Craty Text | had the stone suspended (talanteia) over his head in the world
6011 Craty Intro| either apo tes tou lithou talanteias, or apo tou talantaton einai,
6012 7Lett Text | entreaties, it was the same old tale-that I must not betray Dion and
6013 Sophis Intro| the many other writers and talkers at Athens and elsewhere,
6014 Parme Intro| as well as to the others (talla). Yet one, being in itself,
6015 Sympo Text | and that we shall be like tallies. Wherefore let us exhort
6016 Ion Text | huge bloody dragon in his talons, still living and panting;
6017 Charm PreS | Haec non sunt Aristotelis, tamen utitur auctor Aristotelis
6018 Gorg Intro| surely he would be a bad tamer of animals who, having received
6019 Meno Text | order that no one might tamper with them; and when they
6020 Gorg Intro| convenient to them.’ The tangle of good and evil can no
6021 Charm PreS | auctor Aristotelis nomine tanquam suo.)~(2) There is no hint
6022 7Lett Text | and my other friends in Taras, telling them the plight
6023 Apol Text | great and noble steed who is tardy in his motions owing to
6024 Gorg Text | like, is at last impaled or tarred and burned alive, will he
6025 Phaedo Text | he be a wise man, and not tarry; and that to-day I am likely
6026 Apol Intro| private instructions; his tarry-at-home life to their wandering
6027 Repub 9 | experience has not of necessity tasted-or, I should rather say, even
6028 Repub 9 | desired, could hardly have tasted-the sweetness of learning and
6029 Repub 8 | with unholy tongue and lips tasting the blood of his fellow-citizens;
6030 Euthyd Intro| things, who tear arguments to tatters, who deny predication, and
6031 2Alci Pre | echthes kai proen gegonota tauta, k.t.l. There are several
6032 Laws 11 | purpose. The hireling and the tavern–keeper, and many other occupations,
6033 Laws 12 | simply die. With a view to taxation, for various reasons, every
6034 Timae Intro| found a translator (Thomas Taylor, a kindred spirit, who was
6035 7Lett Text | those ancient and sacred teachings, which declare that the
6036 Repub 7 | they rejoice in pulling and tearing at all who come near them. ~
6037 Phaedr Intro| aspects of philosophy the technicalities of rhetoric are absorbed.
6038 Phaedr Text | upon him to tolerate the tedium of his company even from
6039 Sympo Text | conception arrives, and the teeming nature is full, there is
6040 Repub 8 | form of government which teems with evils: thirdly, democracy,
6041 Craty Intro| edone is e pros ten onrsin teinousa praxis—the delta is an insertion:
6042 2Alci Text | the play, when he beholds Teiresias with his crown and hears
6043 7Lett Text | flight. Dionysios sent out Teisias and some peltasts with orders
6044 Phileb Intro| upsipodes, ouranian di aithera teknothentes.~To satisfy an imaginative
6045 States Intro| organisation of posts or telegraphs, hardly the introduction
6046 Laws 7 | the spirit of the poet:~Telemachus, some things thou wilt thyself
6047 Phaedo Text | as Aeschylus says in the Telephus, a single and straight path—
6048 Thaeet Intro| gar arche men o me oide, teleute de kai ta metaxu ex ou me
6049 Sympo Intro| innocent in themselves in a few temperaments they are liable to degenerate
6050 Charm Intro| quam soleo equidem tum temperantiam, tum moderationem appellare,
6051 Timae Text | waters, or was caught in the tempest borne on the air, and the
6052 Sophis Intro| Megarian paradoxes have temporarily afforded him, is proved
6053 Repub 3 | virtue as guardians, nor tempt them to prey upon the other
6054 Laws 9 | desire by night and by day tempts to go and rob a temple,
6055 Phileb Intro| the one thousandth or one ten-thousandth part of human actions. This
6056 Craty Intro| pass away, but are far more tenacious of life than the tribes
6057 Craty Intro| still a young man. With a tenacity characteristic of the Heracleitean
6058 Gorg Intro| of them in a deeper and tenderer way than they are ordinarily
6059 Sympo Text | things? Of a truth he is the tenderest as well as the youngest,
6060 States Text | the same may be said of tenders of animals in general.~YOUNG
6061 Timae Text | so twists back the great tendons and the sinews which are
6062 Phaedo Text | note at variance with the tensions and relaxations and vibrations
6063 Laws 12 | had been brought to the tent still alive but without
6064 Laws 6 | they should be used. The tenure of the priesthood should
6065 7Lett Text | other way save this for terminating the troubles of a city that
6066 Craty Intro| into groups the roots or terminations of words, we should not
6067 Sophis Text | I cannot be mistaken in terming him the true and very Sophist.~
6068 Charm PreS | in agreement with modern terminology, in the latter half. But
6069 Phaedo Text | and Phaedondes; Euclid and Terpison, who came from Megara.~ECHECRATES:
6070 Craty Intro| soul: terpsis is apo tou terpnou, and terpnon is properly
6071 Phaedr Text | earth. They win the love of Terpsichore for the dancers by their
6072 Timae Intro| might there be reflected, terrifying the belly with the elements
6073 Laws 4 | then holding the penalty in terrorem to go on to another law;
6074 Protag Text | out some notable saying, terse and full of meaning, with
6075 Timae Text | air, then the fever is a tertian; when of earth, which is
6076 Repub 3 | enchantments-that is the third sort of test-and see what will be their behavior:
6077 Laws 11 | them we must begin with the testamentary wishes of the dying and
6078 Laws 11 | established laws respecting testaments, both as to other matters
6079 Charm PreS | mind of Plato. The other testimonies to the voyages of Plato
6080 Timae Intro| raptures to the limits of the tetrachord or of the flute.~The Hesiodic
6081 Timae Intro| the equilateral pyramid or tetrahedron; secondly, the octahedron;
6082 Phaedr Intro| represent an Athenian audience (tettigessin eoikotes). The story is
6083 Laws 7 | the others to receive them thankfully. Nor, again, must we omit
6084 Sympo Intro| had been sacrificing in thanksgiving for his tragic victory on
6085 Laws 6 | go to weddings nor to the thanksgivings after the birth of children;
6086 Laws 9 | to instruct them how they thay live on friendly terms with
6087 Repub 9 | as the general umpire in theatrical contests proclaims the result,
6088 Laws 3 | aristocracy, an evil sort of theatrocracy has grown up. For if the
6089 Craty Text | to be partly derived from thele (the teat), because the
6090 Craty Intro| thelu is derived apo tes theles, because the teat makes
6091 Repub 6 | seeing this land open to them-a land well stocked with fair
6092 Repub 10 | understanding-there is the beauty of them-and the apparent greater or
6093 Repub 6 | and preserve the order of them-are not such persons, I ask,
6094 Repub 6 | neither one nor many of them-do you think that they ever
6095 Repub 9 | better desires prevail over them-either they are wholly banished
6096 Repub 10 | horseman who knows how to use them-he knows their right form. ~
6097 Repub 6 | accusation which I bring against them-not one of them is worthy of
6098 Repub 10 | only two ideas or forms of them-one the idea of a bed, the other
6099 Repub 8 | said, there are plenty of them-that is certain. ~The evil blazes
6100 Repub 5 | matter which never troubles them-they would rather not tire themselves
6101 Repub 3 | constructive art are full of them-weaving, embroidery, architecture,
6102 Repub 7 | and requiring him to name them-will he not be perplexed? Will
6103 Ion Text | example, the passage in which Theoclymenus the prophet of the house
6104 Gorg Intro| secular age succeeds to a theocratical. In this fanciful tale Plato
6105 Thaeet Text | meaning to write the name of Theododorus, thinks that he ought to
6106 Repub 3 | said, are our principles of theology-some tales are to be told, and
6107 Craty Text | Gods or runners (Theous, Theontas); and when men became acquainted
6108 Euthyp Text | from one another. For one (theophiles) is of a kind to be loved
6109 Phileb Intro| from an investigation of Theophrastus as well as Aristotle and
6110 Sympo Intro| Athenaeus on the authority of Theopompus). (5) A small matter: there
6111 Phileb Intro| building and binding, or theoretically by philosophers. And, borrowing
6112 Gorg Intro| mankind. He is not a mere theorist, nor yet a dealer in expedients;
6113 Craty Intro| is still prevalent among theorizers about the origin of language).
6114 Apol Text | is Nicostratus the son of Theosdotides, and the brother of Theodotus (
6115 Craty Text | theounoa is a curtailed form of theou noesis, but the omitted
6116 Craty Text | that the word theonoa = theounoa is a curtailed form of theou
6117 Craty Text | called Gods or runners (Theous, Theontas); and when men
6118 Timae Text | the origin of the name (thepmos, Kepma). Now, the opposite
6119 Repub 8 | the liberty which reigns there-they have a complete assortment
6120 7Lett Text | and in the fourth month or thereabouts, charging Dion with conspiracy
6121 | thereafter
6122 | thereof
6123 Sympo Intro| satirized by Aristophanes in the Thesmophoriazusae, for his effeminate manners
6124 Timae Text | life within them in the thickest and most solid flesh. So
6125 Sophis Intro| reinen Physiker sind nur die Thiere.’ The disciple of Hegel
6126 Repub 7 | white or black, or thick or thin-it makes no difference; a finger
6127 Repub 4 | saying is, of the one great thing-a thing, however, which I
6128 Repub 7 | grows old may learn many things-for he can no more learn much
6129 Repub 2 | applies to all composite things-furniture, houses, garments: when
6130 Repub 1 | Certainly. ~And so of all other things-justice is useful when they are
6131 Repub 6 | whatever good there is in other things-of a principle such and so
6132 Repub 10 | animals, himself and all other things-the earth and heaven, and the
6133 Repub 6 | State-you understand the sort of things-these also have a corrupting and
6134 Repub 10 | honor those who say these things-they are excellent people, as
6135 Repub 5 | might have possessed all things-to whom we replied that, if
6136 Repub 2 | to have no care of human things-why in either case should we
6137 Laws 10 | to the great whole. And thinkest thou, bold man, that thou
6138 Laws 6 | would be likely to occur in thinly–peopled places, and in times
6139 Repub 7 | qualities of thickness or thinness, of softness or hardness?
6140 Repub 10 | of virtue, and not in the third-not an image maker or imitator-and
6141 Repub 7 | suppose we make astronomy the third-what do you say? ~I am strongly
6142 Thaeet Intro| 390, when Plato was about thirty-nine years of age. No more definite
6143 7Lett Text | their city, they sent a thirty-oared galley with Lamiscos, one
6144 Repub 6 | knowledge still higher than this-higher than justice and the other
6145 Charm PreF | the ‘Politicus;’ Professor Thompson’s ‘Phaedrus;’ Th. Martin’
6146 Repub 10 | the side, carding them on thorns like wool, and declaring
6147 Thaeet Intro| view of some who are not thorough-going followers of Protagoras,—
6148 Repub 2 | lightly told to young and thoughtless persons; if possible, they
6149 Phileb Intro| not extending to the one thousandth or one ten-thousandth part
6150 Phaedo Text | herself up again to the thraldom of pleasures and pains,
6151 Meno Intro| democrat, and had joined Thrasybulus in the conflict with the
6152 Repub 5 | we have come here, said Thrasymachus-to look for gold, or to hear
6153 Repub 1 | care or thought about us, Thrasymachus-whether we live better or worse
6154 Repub 2 | time, and in the remaining three-fourths of his time be employed
6155 1Alci Text | son who is possessed of a three-hundred acre patch at Erchiae, and
6156 Repub 7 | distinguishing one, two, and three-in a word, number and calculation:
6157 Repub 10 | time? The whole period of threescore years and ten is surely
6158 Thaeet Text | Hippol.: e gloss omomoch e de thren anomotos.)~THEAETETUS: Very
6159 Laws 5 | a rich man if he be also thrifty. On the other hand, the
6160 Phaedr Intro| literature was concealed a soul thrilling with spiritual emotion.
6161 States Intro| courageous. The two classes thrive and flourish at first, but
6162 Criti Text | fruit and flower, grew and thrived in that land; also the fruit
6163 Phaedr Text | shut up with the emotion, throbbing as with the pulsations of
6164 Ion Text | stands on end and my heart throbs.~SOCRATES: Well, Ion, and
6165 Timae Text | overladen with fruit, has many throes, and also obtains many pleasures
6166 Laws 12 | deserve to be called the thrower away of his shield; he may
6167 Protag Text | Phason, gave a tremendous thump with his staff at my door;
6168 Sympo Text | annihilate the race with thunderbolts, as they had done the giants,
6169 Repub 10 | of the night there were a thunderstorm and earthquake, and then
6170 Laws 1 | Milesian, and Boeotian, and Thurian youth, among whom these
6171 Phaedo Text | the mysteries, ‘are the thyrsus-bearers, but few are the mystics,’—
6172 Repub 8 | king within him, girt with tiara and chain and scimitar? ~
6173 Sympo Text | and if it still continues, tickle your nose with something
6174 Phaedr Text | feeling of uneasiness and tickling; but when in like manner
6175 Thaeet Intro| philosophical problem can be tied up within the limits of
6176 7Lett Text | me back and of keeping a tight hold on Dion’s property.
6177 Repub 1 | beyond a musician in the tightening and loosening the strings? ~
6178 Repub 3 | may be relaxed or drawn tighter until they are duly harmonized. ~
6179 Repub 2 | wanted by us for pasture and tillage, and they will want a slice
6180 Laws 8 | lower ground injures some tiller of the upper ground, or
6181 Sympo Intro| contra Simonem; Aesch. c. Timarchum.)~The character of Alcibiades
6182 Repub 8 | than timocracy or perhaps timarchy. We will compare with this
6183 7Lett Text | which happened in no great time-Dion returned from the Peloponnese
6184 Repub 2 | with the men of our own time-no one has ever blamed injustice
6185 Euthyd Text | therefore, is most happily timed; and I hope that you will
6186 Thaeet Text | and said that the boy’s timidity was made to tell against
6187 Sophis Text | of one, some in the dual (tine) of two, some in the plural (
6188 Sophis Text | two, some in the plural (tines) of many?~THEAETETUS: Exactly.~
6189 Sympo Intro| opinions coloured with a tinge of philosophy. They furnish
6190 Phileb Text | undercurrent of pain makes him tingle, and causes a gentle irritation;
6191 Protag Text | looks at his face and at the tips of his fingers, and then
6192 Repub 2 | and nurses wet and dry, tirewomen and barbers, as well as
6193 Gorg Text | that you, Callicles, and Tisander of Aphidnae, and Andron
6194 Thaeet Intro| apparatus of nerves, muscles, tissues, by which the senses are
6195 Laws 3 | imitate the old so called Titanic nature, and come to the
6196 Laws 3 | to the same point as the Titans when they rebelled against
6197 Craty Intro| omega of tupto or the mu of tithemi, though analogous to ego,
6198 Repub 6 | with fair names and showy titles-like prisoners running out of
6199 Timae Intro| for which there is not a tittle of evidence, and which are
6200 Thaeet Intro| sumpeplektai, tis mechane ten toiauten omologian pote epistemen
6201 Repub 7 | when their turn comes, toiling also at politics and ruling
6202 Repub 2 | honorable, but grievous and toilsome; and that the pleasures
6203 Craty Intro| another by ara, de, oun, toinun and the like. In English
6204 Meno Intro| and enquiry (ouden dei to toiouto zeteseos). Characteristic
6205 Phaedo Text | world below—prowling about tombs and sepulchres, near which,
6206 Apol Text | array and have persuasive tongues, they have filled your ears
6207 Repub 2 | and which was a bad lie too-I mean what Hesiod says that
6208 Repub 10 | I ought to be, and you too-there is no difficulty in proving
6209 Repub 2 | will the builder make his tools-and he, too, needs many; and
6210 7Lett Text | as it is called, on this topic-except for some few, who are able
6211 Laws 6 | children, handing on the torch of life from one generation
6212 Repub 1 | Has no one told you of the torch-race on horseback in honor of
6213 Repub 1 | novelty. Will horsemen carry torches and pass them one to another
6214 Meno Text | as well as the cause of torpidity in others, then indeed I
6215 Meno Text | touch him, as you have now torpified me, I think. For my soul
6216 Meno Text | the flat torpedo fish, who torpifies those who come near him
6217 1Alci Intro| idealism by crooked and tortuous paths, in which many pitfalls
6218 Repub 3 | doctoring found out a way of torturing first and chiefly himself,
6219 Laws 10 | them? As if wolves were to toss a portion of their prey
6220 Laws 7 | night and day, and who is totally unacquainted with the revolution
6221 Parme Intro| bringing together by a ‘tour de force,’ as in the Phaedrus,
6222 Laws 8 | feasts, and they should have tournaments, imitating in as lively
6223 Phaedr Text | roundness, and finish, and tournure of the language? As to the
6224 Apol Intro| ouch os authadizomenos touto lego). Neither is he desirous
6225 Laws 1 | neither in the country nor in towns which are under the control
6226 Timae Intro| which enters through the trachea.~The part of the soul which
6227 1Alci Intro| knows the body, and the tradesman knows his own business,
6228 Repub 8 | callings-they are husbandmen, tradesmen, warriors, all in one. Does
6229 7Lett Text | words. Well, after this the trading-ships took their departure, and
6230 States Text | record, the portent which is traditionally said to have occurred in
6231 Lache Text | and he will be greatly traduced; for there is a jealousy
6232 Craty Intro| longius ex altoque sinum trahit,’ can produce a far finer
6233 Meno Intro| into the world, if not ‘trailing clouds of glory,’ at any
6234 Repub 8 | gymnastics and military training-in all these respects this
6235 Laws 9 | law for all three, for the traitor, and the robber of temples,
6236 Laws 9 | the Gods, and concerning traitors, and also concerning those
6237 Protag Text | must suppose him to make a trajection of the word ‘truly’ (Greek),
6238 Phaedr Intro| he has escaped from the trammels of rhetoric), seems to be
6239 Gorg Intro| reassert his original rights, trampling under foot all our formularies,
6240 Repub 2 | when they have sinned and trangressed." ~And they produce a host
6241 Crito Text | anything like the easy, tranquil manner in which you bear
6242 1Alci Intro| Alcibiades replies—‘Good in transacting business.’ But what business? ‘
6243 Laws 12 | acknowledging the whole transaction in a written document, and
6244 Sophis Intro| truths which are supposed to transcend experience. But the common
6245 Parme Intro| external objects as well as transcending them. The anamnesis of the
6246 Charm PreS | also be the most faithful transcript which can be made of the
6247 Thaeet Intro| not be ‘heterodoxy,’ or transference of opinion;—I mean, may
6248 Craty Intro| nature, and of nations, the transfiguration of the world in thought,
6249 Phileb Intro| doctrine of utility must be so transfigured that it becomes altogether
6250 Timae Text | ignorant of all, whom the transformers did not think any longer
6251 Ion Intro| argument; like Proteus, he transforms himself into a variety of
6252 Repub 1 | finds that the sum of his transgressions is great he will many a
6253 Timae Intro| into kinds; all of them are transitional, and arise out of the decomposition
6254 Timae Intro| which he uses as symbols or translates into figures of speech.
6255 Charm PreS | change of meaning occurs. If translations are intended not for the
6256 Thaeet Text | Yes.~SOCRATES: And when transmitting them he may be said to teach
6257 Craty Text | tradition, it has actually been transmuted. The name of Zeus, who is
6258 Timae Text | of gold and to be always transmuting one form into all the rest;—
6259 Thaeet Intro| them—on either supposition transplacement is inconceivable.~But perhaps
6260 Phaedo Intro| like stunted trees when transplanted to a better soil. The differences
6261 Phaedr Text | the beauty of earth, is transported with the recollection of
6262 Phaedr Text | loveliness would have been transporting if there had been a visible
6263 Sympo Intro| but a lame ending.’~Plato transposes the two next speeches, as
6264 Laws 10 | author of their changes and transpositions. And if this is true, and
6265 Sophis Text | and difference or other, traverse all things and mutually
6266 Phaedr Text | inanimate being everywhere, and traverses the whole heaven in divers
6267 Craty Text | But now the name is so travestied that you cannot tell the
6268 7Lett Text | appropriate it for himself and treacherously depose Dionysios. These
6269 Laws 9 | have thoughts of unholy and treasonable actions, and to him who
6270 Laws 6 | times the sum, which the treasurer of the goddess shall exact;
6271 Criti Text | receiving it into herself and treasuring it up in the close clay
6272 Repub 2 | the violation of oaths and treaties, which was really the work
6273 Repub 8 | foreign enemies by conquest or treaty, and there is nothing to
6274 Craty Intro| suggesting that the double or treble forms of Perfects, Aorists,
6275 Repub 1 | name I bear, doubled and trebled the value of his patrimony,
6276 Repub 8 | constraining them, and because he trembles for his possessions. ~To
6277 Repub 10 | the rest of the imitative tribe-but I do not mind saying to
6278 Laws 12 | property valued: and the tribesmen should likewise bring a
6279 Laws 6 | And let there be two other tribunals: one for private causes,
6280 Thaeet Text | off and underground in a trice. But as he is not within
6281 Laws 2 | sort of irregularity and trickery. This is all rational enough.
6282 Craty Intro| containing within them a trickling stream which deposits debris
6283 Timae Intro| of them, besides the two ‘Trilogies’ which he has expressly
6284 Laws 7 | poets writing in hexameter, trimeter, and all sorts of measures—
6285 Phaedr Intro| are we to attribute his tripartite division of the soul to
6286 Sophis Intro| ideas may be connected. The triplets of Hegel, the division into
6287 Laws 4 | when he sits down on the tripod of the muse, is not in his
6288 Gorg Text | brothers, who gave the row of tripods which stand in the precincts
6289 Thaeet Text | err, and if my mind never trips in the conception of being
6290 Lysis Intro| explanation has been received with triumphant accord, a fresh dissatisfaction
6291 Timae Text | danger, she defeated and triumphed over the invaders, and preserved
6292 Repub 5 | have one-half of the world triumphing and the other plunged in
6293 Gorg Intro| others, and which at last triumphs, if not here, at any rate
6294 Sophis Intro| the human mind above the trivialities of the common logic and
6295 Repub 3 | an iambic as well as of a trochaic rhythm, and assigned to
6296 Menex Text | she could not forget the trophies of Marathon and Salamis
6297 Criti Text | heart never yet raised a trophy; and therefore you must
6298 Phaedo Text | which is a sort of broad trough. Any power which in arranging
6299 Laws 11 | let us speak of treasure trove:—May I never pray the Gods
6300 7Lett Text | would I flatter them or truckle to them, providing them
6301 Protag Text | same time he felt for the truckle-bed, and sat down at my feet,
6302 Repub 3 | sounds of flutes, pipes, trumpets, and all sorts of instruments:
6303 7Lett Text | himself was legally the trustee. These were the actual facts
6304 Repub 2 | attained knowledge of the truth-but no other man. He only blames
6305 Repub 10 | have an inferior degree of truth-in this, I say, he is like
6306 Euthyd Text | he said—all gentlemen and truth-speaking persons.~And are not good
6307 Laws 2 | whether the resemblance is truthfully executed? I mean, for example,
6308 Phaedr Text | Do not let us exchange ‘tu quoque’ as in a farce, or
6309 Gorg Intro| suit of clothes, Tale of a Tub). The fiction seems to have
6310 Laws 7 | this, they carry them about tucked beneath their armpits, holding
6311 Laws 12 | underground, constructed of tufa, which will last for ever,
6312 Lache Text | and stuck fast; and he tugged, but was unable to get his
6313 Timae Text | order then that it might not tumble about among the high and
6314 Phaedr Text | once written down they are tumbled about anywhere among those
6315 Sympo Text | feet, eight in all, like tumblers going over and over with
6316 Timae Text | sends forth all sorts of tumours; but when imprisoned within,
6317 Thaeet Text | and he said that they were tuned alike, should we at once
6318 Repub 3 | far higher sense than the tuner of the strings. ~You are
6319 Laws 12 | or wearing only a short tunic and without a girdle, having
6320 Craty Intro| will show that the omega of tupto or the mu of tithemi, though
6321 Timae Text | by the help of reason the turbulent and irrational mob of later
6322 Phileb Text | are formed out of them by turning-lathes and rulers and measurers
6323 Phaedr Text | follows:-~(Translated by Cic. Tus. Quaest.) The soul through
6324 Charm Intro| Moderation (Compare Cic. Tusc. ‘(Greek), quam soleo equidem
6325 Lysis Text | repeats. And there is greater twaddle still. Only the day before
6326 Gorg Text | and has to my ears the twang of slavery. So when I hear
6327 Laws 6 | composed of the fives and twelves, shall determine any charges
6328 Thaeet Text | on having a pedigree of twenty-five ancestors, which goes back
6329 Timae Text | a seventh part which was twenty-seven times the first (27). After
6330 Sophis Text | STRANGER: For which reason twig baskets, casting-nets, nooses,
6331 Protag Text | certainly his meaning; and he is twitting Pittacus with ignorance
6332 States Intro| animal, who has a power of two-feet—both which are suggested
6333 Parme Intro| essence, derived from the two-fold translation of the Greek
6334 Craty Text | goat-herd), he being the two-formed son of Hermes, smooth in
6335 Phaedo Intro| represented them in a fable as a two-headed creature of the gods.’ The
6336 Sympo Intro| taking out the wrinkles and tying the skin in a knot about
6337 Timae Intro| of the Fates and Furies, typifying the fixed order or the extraordinary
6338 2Alci Text | of Archelaus for him. The tyrannicide expected by his crime to
6339 Laws 9 | jealousies and desires, tyrannize over the soul, whether they
6340 Repub 9 | miserable? and he who has tyrannized longest and most, most continually
6341 Repub 2 | philosophers prove, appearance tyrannizes over truth and is lord of
6342 Repub 9 | feel any compunction at tyrannizing over them? ~Nay, he said,
6343 Repub 9 | these dire magicians and tyrantmakers find that they are losing
6344 Phileb Intro| own language, of being a ‘tyro in dialectics,’ when he
6345 Thaeet Intro| some men, ‘quod semper quod ubique’ or individual private judgment.
6346 Gorg Text | seeing that the swollen and ulcerated condition of the State is
6347 Timae Intro| Megarianism by a sort of ultra-Megarianism, which discovers contradictions
6348 Craty Intro| noun in ‘us’ should end in ‘um;’ nor (b) from any necessity
6349 Thaeet Text | pride, more than cutting the umbilical cord. And if you reflect,
6350 Laws 12 | the superintendents and umpires of gymnastic and equestrian
6351 Gorg Intro| certain extent they are un-Greek; at any rate there is hardly
6352 Euthyd Intro| But,’ says Euthydemus, unabashed, ‘nobody wants much good.’
6353 Euthyp Text | acceptable to Hephaestus but unacceptable to Here, and there may be
6354 Lysis Text | his prey. But then a most unaccountable suspicion came across me,
6355 Meno Text | were as yet unexplained or unadmitted?~MENO: Yes, Socrates; and
6356 Craty Text | unprofitable), alusiteles (unadvantageous), akerdes (ungainful).~HERMOGENES:
6357 Laws 11 | We forbid earnest—that is unalterably fixed; but we have still
6358 Apol Intro| pursuit, ‘which was not unamusing.’ And hence bitter enmities
6359 Thaeet Intro| and sensations were still unanalyzed. At last we return to the
6360 Repub 8 | yet the true virtue of a unanimous and harmonious soul will
6361 Protag Text | matters?~To this also they unanimously assented.~Then, I said,
6362 Phileb Intro| the gods, which may be not unaptly compared with the importance
6363 States Text | say, that they are wholly unaquainted with politics, of which,
6364 Sympo Text | say you to going with me unasked?~I will do as you bid me,
6365 Thaeet Text | about them; for they may be unassailable, and those who say that
6366 Sympo Text | I must beg you to leave unassailed by the shafts of your ridicule,
6367 Gorg Intro| is generally regarded as unattainable, and that mankind will by
6368 Repub 3 | they are unpoetical, or unattractive to the popular ear, but
6369 Laws 11 | pick up a livelihood by unavailing prayers, let the wardens
6370 Laws 5 | will certainly not suffer unavenged.~Thus we have fairly described
6371 Phaedr Intro| belief and deploring our unbelief, seeming to prefer popular
6372 Protag Text | the Lacedaemonians want to unbend and hold free conversation
6373 Laws 7 | lamentations, then on some unblest and inauspicious day let
6374 Laws 7 | bodies of infants still unborn.~Cleinias. What do you mean,
6375 Phaedr Text | stir not until you have unbosomed yourself of the speech;
6376 Repub 5 | a bastard to the State, uncertified and unconsecrated. ~Very
6377 Laws 9 | sons of men, there is no uncharitableness in apprehending that some
6378 Phaedo Text | Comus:—~‘But when lust, By unchaste looks, loose gestures, and
6379 7Lett Text | into a world of discord and uncomeliness. For he wrote it, not as
6380 Laws 7 | also to consider and know uncomely persons and thoughts, and
6381 2Alci Pre | reserved disposition, is uncommonly difficult to understand,
6382 Phaedr Text | losing temper and applying uncomplimentary epithets, as you and I have
6383 Phileb Intro| he remains to the end the uncompromising advocate. On the other hand,
6384 Laws 12 | who meet one another quite unconcernedly at the public meals and
6385 Repub 2 | observed how invincible and unconquerable is spirit and how the presence
6386 Menex Text | to this day we are still unconquered by them; but we were our
6387 Menex Text | but we are pure Hellenes, uncontaminated by any foreign element,
6388 Phaedo Text | he said.~Again, if the uncooling or warm principle were imperishable,
6389 Thaeet Text | may appear a strange and uncouth term to you, and that you
6390 Phaedr Intro| and they spring from an uncritical philosophy after all. ‘The
6391 Charm Ded | depositing a perfect and undamaged copy of the first or second
6392 Repub 10 | that there too he may be undazzled by the desire of wealth
6393 Sophis Intro| hieroglyphic, would have remained undeciphered, unless two thousand years
6394 Repub 5 | adversary's position will not be undefended. ~Why not? he said. ~Then
6395 Repub 10 | of the universe, like the under-girders of a trireme. From these
6396 Ion Text | dancers and masters and under-masters of choruses, who are suspended,
6397 Phaedo Intro| filled with notions of an under-world.~16. Yet after all the belief
6398 Phileb Text | in a man, and the slight undercurrent of pain makes him tingle,
6399 States Intro| power which he exercises is underived and uncontrolled,—a characteristic
6400 Parme Intro| we say?) or error, which underlay the early Greek philosophy. ‘
6401 Protag Text | of the names a separate underlying essence and corresponding
6402 Protag Intro| rest. Socrates proceeds to undermine the last stronghold of the
6403 Sophis Intro| sophisms of the day were undermining philosophy; the denial of
6404 Repub 10 | the rescue of the human understanding-there is the beauty of them-and
6405 Sophis Text | Parmenides, and all ever yet undertook to determine the number
6406 Laws 5 | which he has, is not to be undervalued by us because it is possessed
6407 Laws 5 | has no idea how greatly he undervalues this wonderful possession;
6408 Laws 12 | appertaining to the Gods of the underworld or of this, shall be decided
6409 Euthyd Text | others, appears to me to be undeserved; but as to the impropriety
6410 Repub 7 | when I saw philosophy so undeservedly trampled under foot of men
6411 Sophis Intro| recollections of a first love, not undeserving of his admiration still.
6412 Sympo Text | Harmodius had a strength which undid their power. And, therefore,
6413 Parme Intro| Parmenides, the condemner of the ‘undiscerning tribe who say that things
6414 Sympo Text | vast theatre altogether undismayed, if I thought that your
6415 Protag Text | up to be distinguished or undistinguished according to their own natural
6416 Timae Text | evil being would wish to undo that which is harmonious
6417 Thaeet Text | obliged to me if I help you to unearth the hidden ‘truth’ of a
6418 Gorg Intro| history. Mankind have an uneasy feeling that they ought
6419 Sophis Intro| instruments and methods hitherto unemployed. We may not be able to agree
6420 States Text | would then become utterly unendurable.~STRANGER: But what, if
6421 Laws 5 | there be no envy. For the unenvious nature increases the greatness
6422 Gorg Text | different?~CALLICLES: I say unequivocally that they are the same.~
6423 Phaedo Text | triad or number three is uneven?~Very true.~To return then
6424 Timae Text | of equipoise, but swaying unevenly hither and thither, was
6425 Laws 6 | like manner; in cases of unexampled fatality, the next of kin
6426 Phileb Text | SOCRATES: A better and more unexceptionable way of speaking will be—~
6427 Laws 9 | in a man from ancient and unexpiated crimes of his race, an ever–
6428 Timae Intro| which has been hitherto unexplored by him. But he has not as
6429 Gorg Intro| death? The first question is unfamiliar to us, and therefore seems
6430 Sophis Text | appear such owing to the unfavourable position of the spectator,
6431 Phaedr Intro| lover; the germ of the wing unfolds, and stings, and pangs of
6432 Sophis Intro| Eleatic circle. And now an unforeseen consequence began to arise.
6433 Phaedo Intro| religious duty is still unfulfilled, just as above he desires
6434 Craty Text | unadvantageous), akerdes (ungainful).~HERMOGENES: True.~SOCRATES:
6435 Thaeet Intro| of the fair soul and the ungainly face and frame, the Silenus
6436 Repub 5 | nature from the one who is ungifted? ~No one will deny that. ~
6437 Sympo Text | manner the attribute of Love; ungrace and love are always at war
6438 Repub 3 | him who is ill-educated ungraceful; and also because he who
6439 Timae Intro| suddenly clipped, he walks ungracefully and with difficulty upon
6440 Laws 12 | of virtue, the city being unguarded should experience the common
6441 Repub 7 | raise up that which is now unhappily allowed to fall down. ~Nothing
6442 Repub 5 | of making our guardians unhappy-they had nothing and might have
6443 Protag Text | holiness, but of the nature of unholiness; and holiness is of the
6444 Repub 1 | to say, while perfect and unimpaired. Take the words in your
6445 Sympo Intro| represented as originally unimpassioned, but as one who has overcome
6446 Gorg Text | glorious and his character unimpeached by any verdict of the Athenians—
6447 Craty Text | stream of the good soul is unimpeded, and has therefore the attribute
6448 Laws 6 | city being new and hitherto uninhabited, care ought to be taken
6449 Protag Text | originate in ignorance and uninstructedness?~True, he said.~Then as
6450 Phaedo Text | the human, and mortal, and unintellectual, and multiform, and dissoluble,
6451 Meno Intro| part of it which has had an uninterrupted hold on the mind of Europe.
6452 Repub 7 | meaning? ~When speaking of uninviting objects, I mean those which
6453 Apol Intro| show that Meletus (rather unjustifiably) has been compounding a
6454 Sympo Text | kindness ever and never gives unkindness; the friend of the good,
6455 Phileb Intro| limit; the unthinkable, the unknowable; of which nothing can be
6456 Thaeet Intro| are unknown to us? Can two unknowns make a known? Can a whole
6457 Gorg Intro| all good things, may be unlawfully used. Neither is the teacher
6458 Thaeet Intro| is the secret power which unlocks their thoughts. The hit
6459 Timae Intro| become undone, they in turn unloose the bonds of the soul; and
6460 Laws 7 | animals the boy is the most unmanageable, inasmuch as he has the
6461 Phaedr Intro| can prevent it becoming unmanned and enfeebled?~First there
6462 Sympo Text | attendants and other profane and unmannered persons close up the doors
6463 2Alci Text | word)—~‘Has brought these unmeasured woes upon them.’ (Homer.
6464 Laws 9 | found guilty of any great or unmentionable wrong, either in relation
6465 Laws 7 | laws, nor yet leave them unmentioned, is justified; for they
6466 Repub 10 | encamped by the river of Unmindfulness, whose water no vessel can
6467 States Text | Yes.~STRANGER: Which was, unmistakeably, one of the arts of knowledge?~
6468 Craty Text | precisian, or ‘you will unnerve me of my strength (Iliad.).’
6469 Laws 2 | theatre, nor ought he to be unnerved by the clamour of the many
6470 Thaeet Intro| unconscious and may pass away unnoted; they may also leave an
6471 Phaedo Intro| crimes, great indeed, but not unpardonable, are thrust into Tartarus,
6472 Laws 3 | state is doing an unholy and unpatriotic thing?~Megillus. Yes; let
6473 Laws 10 | and hence a feeling of unpleasantness and unsuitableness might
6474 Gorg Intro| sails gallantly along. But unpopularity soon follows him. For men
6475 Gorg Text | Yet his art is modest and unpresuming: it has no airs or pretences
6476 Thaeet Intro| himself. When simple and unpretentious, it is least obscured by
6477 Repub 4 | called the slave of self and unprincipled. ~Yes, there is reason in
6478 Repub 2 | pig, but some huge and unprocurable victim; and then the number
6479 Timae Intro| which have been barren and unproductive? We might as well maintain
6480 Repub 7 | for sleep and exercise are unpropitious to learning; and the trial
6481 Timae Text | of a mighty power which unprovoked made an expedition against
6482 Laws 9 | the temples and sacrifice unpurified, or will not continue in
6483 Protag Text | venture to assert in that unqualified manner that the pleasant
6484 Thaeet Intro| his intention is not to unravel the whole subject of knowledge,
6485 Gorg Intro| and evil can no longer be unravelled; and although they know
6486 Phaedr Intro| pots and dishes, but of unreadable books, he might have something
6487 States Text | excess and defect, not as unrealities, but as real evils, which
6488 Sophis Text | appear in various forms unrecognized by the ignorance of men,
6489 Phileb Intro| these two statements are unreconciled. In like manner, the table
6490 Repub 4 | if only unpunished and unreformed? ~In my judgment, Socrates,
6491 Laws 3 | when they are brought up unreproved. And so, after the death
6492 Lysis Intro| there not be a one-sided and unrequited friendship? This question,
6493 Laws 10 | and without hurry, let us unreservedly consider the whole matter,
6494 Crito Text | in such great trouble and unrest as you are—indeed I should
6495 Phileb Intro| best, whether rewarded or unrewarded. And this applies to others
6496 Laws 7 | inharmonical, or for a rhythm to be unrhythmical, and this will happen when
6497 Repub 5 | is plucking ~"A fruit of unripe wisdom," ~and he himself
6498 Phaedr Text | to see by reason of the unruliness of the steeds. The rest
6499 Sophis Intro| that mere division is an unsafe and uncertain weapon, first,
6500 Phaedo Text | long ago that he who passes unsanctified and uninitiated into the
6501 Timae Intro| light. When this desire is unsatisfied the man is over-mastered
6502 Sympo Text | Aristophanes, laughing. I will unsay my words; but do you please