Plato's GorgiasBell, 1864 - 146 pages |
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Page xl
... greatest happiness , that is splendour and prosperity , c . 26. Upon this case issue is now joined , Polus asserting that happiness is compatible with injustice and wrong , Socrates on the other hand maintaining that the wrongdoer and ...
... greatest happiness , that is splendour and prosperity , c . 26. Upon this case issue is now joined , Polus asserting that happiness is compatible with injustice and wrong , Socrates on the other hand maintaining that the wrongdoer and ...
Page xliii
... greatest of all evils , greater than suffering punishment , or being chastised and corrected ( koλáčeσbai ) , for one's offences . It is first shown by induction , c . 32 , that when any act is per- formed it is performed upon some ...
... greatest of all evils , greater than suffering punishment , or being chastised and corrected ( koλáčeσbai ) , for one's offences . It is first shown by induction , c . 32 , that when any act is per- formed it is performed upon some ...
Page xliv
... greatest of all ills , " and by this we may estimate the amount of real happiness enjoyed by Archelaus and those who like him have committed the most enormous crimes without repentance and atonement , and the value of the maxims and ...
... greatest of all ills , " and by this we may estimate the amount of real happiness enjoyed by Archelaus and those who like him have committed the most enormous crimes without repentance and atonement , and the value of the maxims and ...
Page lxvii
... greatest importance to education in the formation of cha- racter . In the Timæus , p . 86 D , he says dià πovηpàv ëşiv tivà τοῦ σώματος καὶ ἀπαίδευτον τροφὴν ὁ κακὸς γίγνεται κακός , and again 87 B , ὧν ( i.e. τῆς κακίας ) αἰτιατέον μὲν ...
... greatest importance to education in the formation of cha- racter . In the Timæus , p . 86 D , he says dià πovηpàv ëşiv tivà τοῦ σώματος καὶ ἀπαίδευτον τροφὴν ὁ κακὸς γίγνεται κακός , and again 87 B , ὧν ( i.e. τῆς κακίας ) αἰτιατέον μὲν ...
Page 9
... greatest good , but mine . If then I were to ask him , And who are you that say this ? he would reply probably , A physician . What say you then ? Is it your art that has the greatest good for its object ? How can health , Socrates , he ...
... greatest good , but mine . If then I were to ask him , And who are you that say this ? he would reply probably , A physician . What say you then ? Is it your art that has the greatest good for its object ? How can health , Socrates , he ...
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admit answer appears Archelaus argument Aristotle assert Athenian authority better body Callicles Cambridge Chærephon Cinesias College Conic Sections cookery course death desire dialogue disease doubt Euripides evil express fact flattery foll follows fouler Gorgias Greek gymnastics happy injustice J. R. SEELEY justice kind knowledge likewise man's master mean medicine ment miserable moral nature never object one's opinion orator pain passage Pericles persuasion Phædo Philebus Philolaus philosophy physician Plato pleasure Polus principles profession Protagoras punishment Pyrilampes question racter refute render Republic rhetoric rhetorician Schleiermacher seems sense Socrates Sophists sort soul speak Stallbaum suffering wrong superior suppose sure tell theory thing Third Edition Thrasymachus tion translation Treatise Trinity College true truth vice virtue words worse γὰρ δὲ ἐν καὶ μὲν οὐ πάνυ τὰ τὸ τοὺς τῶν
Popular passages
Page xix - Self-reverence, self-knowledge, self-control, These three alone lead life to sovereign power. Yet not for power (power of herself Would come uncall'd for) but to live by law, Acting the law we live by without fear ; And, because right is right, to follow right Were wisdom in the scorn of consequence.