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Alphabetical    [«  »]
favour 12
favourable 2
favourably 1
fear 34
feared 2
fearful 2
fears 1
Frequency    [«  »]
35 various
34 1
34 effect
34 fear
34 follows
34 let
34 might
Aristotle
Rethoric

IntraText - Concordances

fear

   Book, Paragraph
1 I, 9 | anxiously, without feeling fear; for they feel thus about 2 I, 15| their birth.)~Not I would fear the wrath of any man~(And 3 I, 15| to high principle, not to fear of perjury: and you may 4 II, 1 | pleasure. Such are anger, pity, fear and the like, with their 5 II, 3 | inferiors, and inferiors feel fear, and nobody can slight any 6 II, 3 | not angry with people we fear or respect, as long as we 7 II, 3 | or respect, as long as we fear or respect them; you cannot 8 II, 5 | 5~To turn next to Fear, what follows will show 9 II, 5 | in which, we feel afraid. Fear may be defined as a pain 10 II, 5 | to be imminent: we do not fear things that are a very long 11 II, 5 | definition it will follow that fear is caused by whatever we 12 II, 5 | the power to do so. Also fear felt by those who have the 13 II, 5 | power, since they stand in fear of retaliation: we have 14 II, 5 | rivals for a thing cause us fear when we cannot both have 15 II, 5 | war with such men. We also fear those who are to be feared 16 II, 5 | for the same reason, we fear those whom those stronger 17 II, 5 | outspoken whom we have to fear, but the quiet, dissembling, 18 II, 5 | anything causes us to feel fear that when it happens to, 19 II, 5 | which we ourselves feel fear. If fear is associated with 20 II, 5 | ourselves feel fear. If fear is associated with the expectation 21 II, 5 | happen to him; we shall not fear things that we believe cannot 22 II, 5 | It follows therefore that fear is felt by those who believe 23 II, 5 | appears from the fact that fear sets us thinking what can 24 II, 5 | Having now seen the nature of fear, and of the things that 25 II, 5 | conditions. It is the opposite of fear, and what causes it is the 26 II, 5 | opposite of what causes fear; it is, therefore, the expectation 27 II, 5 | So much for the causes of fear and confidence.~ 28 II, 8 | them), nor yet by great fear (panic-stricken people do 29 II, 8 | general principle that what we fear for ourselves excites our 30 II, 9 | in the other, and becomes fear, if the pain and disturbance 31 II, 12| the hot temper prevents fear, and the hopeful disposition 32 II, 12| confidence; we cannot feel fear so long as we are feeling 33 II, 13| paved the way for cowardice; fear is, in fact, a form of chill. 34 III, 15| worthless that Diomedes need not fear his rivalry.~


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