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Alphabetical [« »] person 29 personal 11 personally 1 persons 53 persuade 3 persuaded 2 persuades 1 | Frequency [« »] 54 towards 54 why 53 actions 53 persons 53 see 52 having 51 enthymeme | Aristotle Rethoric IntraText - Concordances persons |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 1 | few men, who are sensible persons and capable of legislating 2 I, 2 | guide us, in the hearing of persons who cannot take in at a 3 I, 5 | that many distinguished persons belong to the family, men 4 I, 5 | as well as money-loving persons desire it. The present brings 5 I, 10| wrongdoers; third, the kind of persons who are wronged, and their 6 I, 10| since even licentious persons perform a certain number 7 I, 11| of a future one, just as persons down with fever, during 8 I, 11| than posterity; sensible persons better than foolish ones; 9 I, 12| which they do it, and the persons to whom they do it.~They 10 I, 12| what appeals to weak-willed persons—and weakness of will may 11 I, 12| pleasant in wronging such persons, it seems as though almost 12 I, 12| they do, of the sort of persons to whom they do them, and 13 I, 13| relatively to two classes of persons. By the two kinds of law 14 I, 13| affecting one or more other persons. We will next, before going 15 I, 13| actions, and what sort of persons, are equitable or the reverse. 16 I, 15| poets and all other notable persons whose judgements are known 17 I, 15| the opinion of detached persons is highly trustworthy. Most 18 II, 2 | frame of mind, (2) with what persons, and (3) on what grounds 19 II, 2 | easily stirred to anger. The persons with whom we get angry are 20 II, 2 | inferiors: for all such persons seem to feel contempt for 21 II, 2 | one slights us before such persons, we feel particularly angry. 22 II, 2 | us is to slight us.~The persons with whom we feel anger, 23 II, 4 | we dislike. For all such persons think the things good which 24 II, 5 | follows will show things and persons of which, and the states 25 II, 5 | something to us, since such persons are sure to be ready to 26 II, 5 | the hands of particular persons, in a particular form, and 27 II, 6 | these feelings, and the persons before whom, and the states 28 II, 6 | intercourse with forbidden persons, at wrong times, or in wrong 29 II, 6 | ways, or out of helpless persons, e.g. the poor, or the dead-whence 30 II, 6 | as when we surrender our persons, or lend ourselves to vile 31 II, 6 | of us matters to us. Such persons are: those who admire us, 32 II, 6 | merely in presence of the persons mentioned but also of those 33 II, 6 | These are, as was stated, persons whom we admire, or who admire 34 II, 6 | their good opinion. These persons may be actually looking 35 II, 6 | ancestors, or those of other persons with whom they have some 36 II, 7 | arguments. We must show that the persons helped are, or have been, 37 II, 8 | excite pity, and for what persons, and in what states of our 38 II, 8 | of trial, the victims are persons of noble character: whenever 39 II, 9 | grounds on which, and the persons against whom, Indignation 40 II, 9 | worthless, unambitious persons are not inclined to Indignation, 41 II, 10| what grounds, against what persons, and in what states of mind 42 II, 10| see what things and what persons give pleasure to envious 43 II, 11| seeing the presence, in persons whose nature is like our 44 II, 11| good feeling felt by good persons, whereas envy is a bad feeling 45 II, 11| bad feeling felt by bad persons. Emulation makes us take 46 II, 11| therefore tend to be felt by persons who believe themselves to 47 II, 11| felt by the young and by persons of lofty disposition. Also 48 II, 11| health. We can see, too, what persons are the objects of the feeling. 49 II, 11| poets or prose-writers. Persons of the contrary sort are 50 II, 11| contemptuous of all such persons as are subject to those 51 II, 23| requite injuries". All the persons mentioned define their term 52 III, 2 | there they are fitting: the persons and things there spoken 53 III, 4 | verses, which are likened to persons who lack beauty but possess