The Works of Plato, Volume 2Henry G. Bohn, 1861 |
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Page v
... original mode of acquisition . Hence , on that account alone , the dialogistic form , necessary as an imitation of that original and that reciprocal communication , would be as indispensable and natura to VIEW OF THE PLATONIC SYSTEM .
... original mode of acquisition . Hence , on that account alone , the dialogistic form , necessary as an imitation of that original and that reciprocal communication , would be as indispensable and natura to VIEW OF THE PLATONIC SYSTEM .
Page ix
... hence it was , that the popular opponents of this method decried it , as one pro- ducing doubt , and therefore of dangerous tendency . With Plato , however , as with Socrates , the awakening of doubt was not merely a vain display of ...
... hence it was , that the popular opponents of this method decried it , as one pro- ducing doubt , and therefore of dangerous tendency . With Plato , however , as with Socrates , the awakening of doubt was not merely a vain display of ...
Page x
... hence Plato had to seek some criterion of Truth apart from mere opinion . Denying the sufficiency of subjective truth ( i . e . the assumption that the mental perceptions are true simply because they take place ) , he set himself to ...
... hence Plato had to seek some criterion of Truth apart from mere opinion . Denying the sufficiency of subjective truth ( i . e . the assumption that the mental perceptions are true simply because they take place ) , he set himself to ...
Page xi
... Hence sensation is clearly regarded as an effect produced by the union of the soul with the body ; and Plato did not fail to observe that al- though sensation , strictly speaking , has cognisance only of corporeal qualities , there are ...
... Hence sensation is clearly regarded as an effect produced by the union of the soul with the body ; and Plato did not fail to observe that al- though sensation , strictly speaking , has cognisance only of corporeal qualities , there are ...
Page xix
... hence is it , that ( as Aristotle observes in the second Book of his Politics , ch . 2 , ) Plato overlooks impossibilities in his arrange- ments , and sacrifices all to the one great object of sketching the idea of good as a social ...
... hence is it , that ( as Aristotle observes in the second Book of his Politics , ch . 2 , ) Plato overlooks impossibilities in his arrange- ments , and sacrifices all to the one great object of sketching the idea of good as a social ...
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