Schleiermacher's Introductions to the Dialogues of Plato |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 76
Page
... circumstance which I consider it necessary to mention , as the reader of these introductions will find in them occa- sional allusions to those notes . Such as referred immediately to passages in the Introductions themselves will be ...
... circumstance which I consider it necessary to mention , as the reader of these introductions will find in them occa- sional allusions to those notes . Such as referred immediately to passages in the Introductions themselves will be ...
Page 2
... circumstances of his life , those more accurate relations , from a knowledge of which , probably , a more thorough understanding of many details in his writings might be developed , seem to be for ever so far withdrawn without the range ...
... circumstances of his life , those more accurate relations , from a knowledge of which , probably , a more thorough understanding of many details in his writings might be developed , seem to be for ever so far withdrawn without the range ...
Page 21
... circumstance , leaving all the rest sub- ordinate to that arrangement . Meanwhile both attempts may only serve to show how soon the true arrangement of the Platonic works was lost , excepting very few traces of it , and how ill suited ...
... circumstance , leaving all the rest sub- ordinate to that arrangement . Meanwhile both attempts may only serve to show how soon the true arrangement of the Platonic works was lost , excepting very few traces of it , and how ill suited ...
Page 26
... circumstances . Now , if the natural order of the Platonic works is to be restored out of the disarrangement in which they at present are , it would seem necessary to determine first what pieces are really Plato's and what are not . For ...
... circumstances . Now , if the natural order of the Platonic works is to be restored out of the disarrangement in which they at present are , it would seem necessary to determine first what pieces are really Plato's and what are not . For ...
Page 28
... circumstance comes in , the importance of which does not seeem in this respect to have been sufficiently considered , that those critics have already rejected a considerable number of small dialogues out of the collection which they ...
... circumstance comes in , the importance of which does not seeem in this respect to have been sufficiently considered , that those critics have already rejected a considerable number of small dialogues out of the collection which they ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
according accurately Alcibiades allusions already Antisthenes Anytus appears Aristophanes Aristotle beautiful brought forward Callicles Cephalus certainly character Charmides circumstance conceived conception connection consequently considered contradiction contrary Cratylus Critias dialectic discovered distinction doctrine earlier easily Eleatic endeavour especially ethical Euthydemus Euthyphro exhibited existence explained exposition further genuine Glaucon Gorgias ground Hence Heraclitus Hipparchus Hippias idea imitation immediately important inasmuch introduced investigation justice knowledge language logue look Lysias Lysis manifestly manner matter means Menexenus Menon method mind moreover nature notion object once opinion opposition Parmenides particular partly passage peculiar perfect perfectly persons Phædon Phædrus Philebus Philolaus philosophical Plato point of view Polemarchus polemics possible present dialogue principle Protagoras question reader reference regard relation Republic scarcely Socrates Sophist soul speech statesman subject-matter suppose supposition taken Theætetus theory thing Thrasymachus Timæus tion treated true unity virtue whole wisdom writings Xenophon καὶ
Popular passages
Page 429 - CV. *HISTORY OF THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH ; from the Ascension of Jesus Christ to the Conversion of Constantine. By the late EDWARD BURTON, DD, Regius Professor of Divinity at Oxford.
Page 429 - HISTORY OF THE ENGLISH EPISCOPACY, FROM THE PERIOD OF THE LONG PARLIAMENT, TO THE ACT OF UNIFORMITY; 'With Sketches of the Religious Parties of the time ; and a Review of Ecclesiastical Affairs in England from the Reformation.
Page 432 - MUSICAL HISTORY, BIOGRAPHY, AND CRITICISM; being a General Survey of Music from the earliest Period to the Present Time.
Page 431 - PSALMS and HYMNS, for PUBLIC WORSHIP; Selected and Revised by the Rev. JE RIDDLE, MA, Assistant Minister of Brunswick Chapel. Complete in Two Handsome Folio
Page 429 - TURTON, DD, Regius Professor of Divinity in the University of Cambridge, and Dean of Peterborough.