Foundations of Western Thought: Six Major Philosophers. [Selection of Readings]James Gordon Clapp |
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Page 18
... Suppose , he says , O Socrates , you take all those glowing terms of yours , which you have applied to the soul - the " invisible , " the " incor- poreal , " the " perfect , " the " divine , " all those metaphors of power and persuasion ...
... Suppose , he says , O Socrates , you take all those glowing terms of yours , which you have applied to the soul - the " invisible , " the " incor- poreal , " the " perfect , " the " divine , " all those metaphors of power and persuasion ...
Page 175
... Suppose that you take all these hypotheses in turn , and see what are the consequences which follow from each of them . Stranger . Very good , and first let us assume them to say that noth- ing is capable of participating in anything ...
... Suppose that you take all these hypotheses in turn , and see what are the consequences which follow from each of them . Stranger . Very good , and first let us assume them to say that noth- ing is capable of participating in anything ...
Page 350
... suppose that the triangle is immutable , we shall not suppose that it sometimes contains two right angles and sometimes does not , for this would imply that it changes ; but we may suppose that one thing has a certain property and ...
... suppose that the triangle is immutable , we shall not suppose that it sometimes contains two right angles and sometimes does not , for this would imply that it changes ; but we may suppose that one thing has a certain property and ...
Common terms and phrases
absolute action actually admit Agathon Alcibiades Anaxagoras animal appear argument Aristodemus Aristophanes Aristotle attributes body called categorical imperative cause Cebes certainly Cleanthes clearly colour conceive concept concerned consider contrary Crito David Hume definition Descartes desire distinct divine doubt earth Echecrates effect Eryximachus essence eternal exist experience fact faculty false feel formula happiness Hence honour human Hume Hylas ideas imagine impossible intellect intelligible judgment Kant kind knowledge mathematics matter mean merely metaphysics mind moral motion nature never not-being object opinion ousia pain particular perceive perception perfect Phaedo Phaedrus Philonous philosophers Plato pleasure possess possible potentially present principle priori pure reason qualities question rational regard replied scepticism sensation sense sensible things Simmias Socrates sort soul speak species Stranger substance suppose synthetic proposition term Theaetetus thought tion true truth understand universe virtue whole words