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 1    Abbr         |                In Catilinam.~Plat. = Plato: Rep. = Republic; Tim. =
 2     Int,       I|              professedly modelled on Plato and the older philosophers
 3     Int,       I|            when he thinks of Caesar, Plato's description of the tyrant
 4     Int,      II|             a study of Aristotle and Plato. For a thorough understanding
 5     Int,      II|              physics, the Timaeus of Plato, which he knew well and
 6     Int,      IV|            philosophers who preceded Plato. Lucullus, therefore, reproves
 7     Int,      IV|              Parmenides, Xenophanes, Plato, and Socrates264. But Cicero
 8       I,      IV|          Speusippum, sororis filium, Plato philosophiae quasi heredem
 9       I,      IX|          labefactavit: quas mirifice Plato erat amplexatus, ut in iis
10      II,       V|              numero tollendus est et Plato et Socrates: alter, quia
11      II,  XXXVII|            et fuisse semper et fore. Plato ex materia in se omnia recipiente
12      II,    XLVI|             in voluptate constituit. Plato autem omne iudicium veritatis
13     Not,       1|       exhortation was his task (16). Plato added to and enriched the
14     Not,       1|              relates to Socrates and Plato. Nihil tamen ad bene vivendum
15     Not,       1|            Aristotle often speaks of Plato's dialogues as though they
16     Not,       1|               this is evidently from Plato Apol. p. 21, as to the proper
17     Not,       1|              on II. 74. Ab Apolline, Plato Apol. 21 A, Omnium: Dav.
18     Not,       1|           for the branching off from Plato of the later schools. For
19     Not,       1|         Aristotle did away with what Plato would have considered most
20     Not,       1|             23).~§19. Ratio triplex: Plato has not this division, either
21     Not,       1|             could have found this in Plato and Aristotle is difficult
22     Not,       1|             Aug. XIX. 3. The root of Plato's system is the ιδεα of
23     Not,       1|             shape is foreign both to Plato and Arist, though Stobaeus,
24     Not,       1|              hard to point it out in Plato; Varro seems to merge the
25     Not,       1|              form. (Cf. τοδε, τουτο, Plato Tim. 49 E, 50 A, also Arist.
26     Not,       1|              belief of Aristotle and Plato. The ιδεαι for instance,
27     Not,       1|              for instance, though to Plato in the highest sense existent,
28     Not,       1|            Phaedr. 238 A, and often. Plato uses also μονοειδης for
29     Not,       1|           out the difference between Plato'sυλη and that of Aristotle.
30     Not,       1|        student should at least learn Plato's opinions from Tim. 35
31     Not,       1|              N.D. I. 30 remarks that Plato in his Timaeus had already
32     Not,       1|             also ch. 89 for αναγκη. Plato's doctrine of αναγκη, which
33     Not,       1|           Timaeus p. 47, 48, Grote's Plato, III. 24959.~§§3032. Part
34     Not,       1|           quale esset: probably from Plato's Tim. 35 A thus translated
35     Not,       1|              ita nom seem to exclude Plato from the supposed old Academico-Peripatetic
36     Not,       1|          that the difference between Plato's ιδεαι and Aristotle's
37     Not,       1|              his own dialectics with Plato's must have been driven
38     Not,       1|           Cicero's very knowledge of Plato has, however, probably led
39     Not,       1|           who would have glided over Plato's opinions with a much more
40     Not,       1|            defend his agreement with Plato by asserting that though
41     Not,       1|         Simplicius quoted in Grote's Plato, I. p. 37, about Heraclitus,
42     Not,       1|           made both by Aristotle and Plato, though each would put a
43     Not,       1|              word notio. Επιστημη in Plato is of the ιδεαι only, while
44     Not,       1|             whole of philosophy with Plato and Aristotle (one might
45     Not,       1|              too). Its importance to Plato may be seen from the Politicus
46     Not,       1|     rhetorical use of etymology, and Plato also incidentally adopts
47     Not,       1|          Arist. crushed the ιδεαι of Plato, Theophrastus weakened the
48     Not,       1|             of the relation in which Plato's ιδεαι stand to his notion
49     Not,       1|           believe that he is right). Plato uses νευρα εκτεμνειν metaphorically.
50     Not,       1|             Ea genera virtutum: both Plato and Arist. roughly divided
51     Not,       1|           two separate powers, as in Plato and Aristotle, but a civil
52     Not,       1|              the mere possession. So Plato, Theaetet. 197 B, uses the
53     Not,       1|             39. Aliaque in parte: so Plato, Tim. 69 C, Rep. 436, 441,
54     Not,       1|          fostered by the language of Plato. He had spoken of the soul
55     Not,       1|          that the αεικινητος ψυχη of Plato came from the αεικινητος
56     Not,       1|             Stob. I. 41, 36). Again, Plato had often spoken of souls
57     Not,       1|            with the stars which both Plato and Arist. looked on as
58     Not,       1|             Heraclitus," and Grote's Plato I. 34 sq. Expers corporis:
59     Not,       1|             μεν γαιαν οπωπαμεν, etc. Plato in the Timaeus fosters the
60     Not,       1|             in harmony with those of Plato, and were carried on by
61     Not,       2|           difficulty is discussed in Plato Sophist. 238—239. Ex multis
62     Not,       2|             distinction is as old as Plato and Arist., and is of constant
63     Not,       2|          description of the σοφος in Plato's Gorgias. Potius quam aut:
64     Not,       2|           You said that Socrates and Plato must not be classed with
65     Not,       2|             his own ignorance, while Plato pursued the same theme in
66     Not,       2|            by the reason. Cf. Grote, Plato I. 54, Zeller 501, R. and
67     Not,       2|             absurd one to foist upon Plato. The dialogues of search
68     Not,       2|            inquiry about Rhetoric in Plato Gorg. 453 D, 454 C. Sol
69     Not,       2|           presented to it. He quotes Plato's remarks (in Rep. II.)
70     Not,       2|           the present difficulty; in Plato the confusion is frequent,
71     Not,       2|    Empedocles, Heraclitus, Melissus, Plato and Pythagoras. The remaining
72     Not,       2|           122). Xenophanes, Hicetas, Plato and Epicurus tell strange
73     Not,       2|             do those of Dicaearchus, Plato and Xenocrates. Our sapiens
74     Not,       2|               Schwegler, and Grote's Plato Vol. I. A more complete
75     Not,       2|            αιει αρα ην τε και εσται. Plato: n. on I. 27. Discedent:
76     Not,       2|          passage (III. 24) says that Plato first invented the name.
77     Not,       2|               Platonem: the words of Plato (Tim. 40 B) are γην δε τροφον
78     Not,       2|               I. 21. Tres partis: in Plato's Republic. Ignis: Zeno'
79     Not,       2|             Cyrenaics, Epicurus, and Plato disagree (142). Does Antiochus
80     Not,       2|             For maiorum cf. 80. Here Plato is almost excluded from
81     Not,       2| καταλαμβανειν however is frequent in Plato in the sense "to seize firmly
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