The Works of Plato, Volume 2Henry G. Bohn, 1861 |
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... existence ; -and great pains have been taken throughout , not only to make it a literally correct ex- ponent of the original , but also to transfuse into it that easy flow of language which constitutes the peculiar charm . of Plato's ...
... existence ; -and great pains have been taken throughout , not only to make it a literally correct ex- ponent of the original , but also to transfuse into it that easy flow of language which constitutes the peculiar charm . of Plato's ...
Page xii
... existence of the sensible world , by the ideas alone , without recourse to any other nature , alien and foreign to them ; and in this attempt to make the transition from the ideal to the sensible , there is much that is vague and ...
... existence of the sensible world , by the ideas alone , without recourse to any other nature , alien and foreign to them ; and in this attempt to make the transition from the ideal to the sensible , there is much that is vague and ...
Page xiii
... existence . Finally , Plato was forced to have recourse to the notion , that there is an impelling necessity in the secondary causes , the ground of which was the supposition , that there must be a something opposite to good . In this ...
... existence . Finally , Plato was forced to have recourse to the notion , that there is an impelling necessity in the secondary causes , the ground of which was the supposition , that there must be a something opposite to good . In this ...
Page xiv
... existence , and as the standard by which the true therein is to be measured . A multiplicity of ends having been admitted , it followed that there must also be a last end , - —an ultimatum in the realm of ideas , -therefore a supreme ...
... existence , and as the standard by which the true therein is to be measured . A multiplicity of ends having been admitted , it followed that there must also be a last end , - —an ultimatum in the realm of ideas , -therefore a supreme ...
Page xxvi
... existence , or their own gratifications , as their inseparable connection and membership with the whole State , to the welfare of which the individual man is ever subordi- nate ; —on this principle must be explained those strange views ...
... existence , or their own gratifications , as their inseparable connection and membership with the whole State , to the welfare of which the individual man is ever subordi- nate ; —on this principle must be explained those strange views ...
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according Adimantus animal appear Aristotle beautiful become body cause Cephalus Certainly CHAP colour Comp conceive consider contrary course Critias dæmon deem desires discourse disease divine earth Edition Engravings Euripides evil existence fire Glaucon gods governors Greek guardians gymnastics harmony hear hence Hermocrates Hesiod honour ideas imitation injustice inquire intellect justice kind laws least likewise manner matter means methinks mortal motion nature necessarily observed oligarchic oligarchy opinion orichalcum pain perceive person Phædo philosophers Pindar Plato pleasure poets Polemarchus Portrait Poseidon possess principle Proclus produced Protagoras reason reference regards replied Republic resemble respects rest seems Socrates Solon soul speak Stallbaum STANDARD LIBRARY tell temperance things Thrasymachus Timæus tion Translated true truly truth tyrant unjust virtue vols whole WILLIAM HAZLITT wise Zeus δὲ ἐν τὰ τε καὶ τὴν τῆς τὸ