Schleiermacher's Introductions to the Dialogues of Plato |
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Sivu 122
means of which, as it recurs in the different parts of the investigation, Plato
intends, in his own peculiar manner, to draw attention to the nature of certain
ideas of relation. It is very profitable to follow this collateral object through all the
turnings ...
means of which, as it recurs in the different parts of the investigation, Plato
intends, in his own peculiar manner, to draw attention to the nature of certain
ideas of relation. It is very profitable to follow this collateral object through all the
turnings ...
Sivu 235
... every language, beginning with the first elements of speech, is something
essentially peculiar, but that each appears in the same from a comparison of the
variations which take place within the substance of every one, and consequently
with ...
... every language, beginning with the first elements of speech, is something
essentially peculiar, but that each appears in the same from a comparison of the
variations which take place within the substance of every one, and consequently
with ...
Sivu 249
And thus, even here in the middle point of the second part of the Platonic works,
we find a confirmation of what we said at the beginning of that part upon the
peculiar form of the works belonging to it. The more closely, then, we consider
this ...
And thus, even here in the middle point of the second part of the Platonic works,
we find a confirmation of what we said at the beginning of that part upon the
peculiar form of the works belonging to it. The more closely, then, we consider
this ...
Sivu 285
... to the beloved object is spoken of, to render it unnecessary expressly to bring
them forward. But several of these speeches have, more especially, a peculiar
reference to the Lysis, as they respectively take up respective points of what was
285.
... to the beloved object is spoken of, to render it unnecessary expressly to bring
them forward. But several of these speeches have, more especially, a peculiar
reference to the Lysis, as they respectively take up respective points of what was
285.
Sivu 369
In this manner, then, the four virtues separate into two classes, for these two
orders have each of them, by reason of its own peculiar function, a virtue also
peculiar to itself. For be a state ever so wise, it is so only by the wisdom of its
guardians, ...
In this manner, then, the four virtues separate into two classes, for these two
orders have each of them, by reason of its own peculiar function, a virtue also
peculiar to itself. For be a state ever so wise, it is so only by the wisdom of its
guardians, ...
Mitä ihmiset sanovat - Kirjoita arvostelu
Yhtään arvostelua ei löytynyt.
Muita painoksia - Näytä kaikki
Yleiset termit ja lausekkeet
according accurately Alcibiades allusions already Antisthenes Anytus appears Aristotle Athenaeus beautiful brought forward Callicles Cephalus certainly character Charmides circumstance conceived conception connection consequently considered contradiction contrary Cratylus Critias degree 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 intended introduced investigation justice knowledge language logue look Lysias Lysis manifestly manner matter means Menon method mind moreover nature notion object once opinion opposition Parmenides particular partly passage peculiar perfect perfectly persons Phaedon Phaedrus 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 Theaetetus theory thing Thrasymachus Timaeus tion treated true unity virtue whole wisdom writings Xenophon
Suositut otteet
Sivu 13 - ... and those who already share in his knowledge, than for what it can do for those who as yet know nothing. Whoever then will consider what that so exalted preference for oral instruction means and upon what it rests, will find no other ground but this, that in this case the teacher, standing as he does in the presence of the learner, and in living communication with him, can tell every moment what he understands and what not, and thus assist the activity of his understanding when it fails; but...
Sivu 16 - I mean, as indicating only a state of the reader's mind, according as he elevates himself or not to the condition of one truly sensible of the inward spirit; or if it is still to be referred to Plato himself, it can only be said that immediate instruction was his only esoteric process, while writing was only his exoteric. For in that certainly, after he was first sufficiently assured that his hearers had followed him as he desired, he could express his thoughts purely and perfectly, and perhaps even...
Sivu 15 - ... the feeling of not having discovered or understood anything. To this end, then, it is requisite that the final object of the investigation be not directly enunciated and laid down in words, a process which might very easily serve to entangle many persons who are glad to rest content, provided only they are in possession of the final result, but that the mind be reduced to the necessity of seeking, and put into the way by which it may find it. The first is done by the mind's being brought to so...
Sivu 42 - Moreover by the circumstance, that as by the former all the rest are presupposed, so, conversely, many references are to be found throughout to these latter as previously existing; and even looking only to the particular thoughts, they appear in these dialogues still as it were in the first glitter and awkwardness of early youth. And further, these three dialogues are not indeed like those three last, worked up into one whole with a definite purpose and with much art, but notwithstanding, mutually...
Sivu 403 - qui imprimis de justitia ocere voluisse Platonem, . object, still the form and the manner in which this is done would then be perfectly unmeaning and absurd. It would have been much more natural to introduce the main subject at once, and then, after the internal existence of the state had been described, to say in what the justice and discretion of such a whole consist ; and then the application to the individual mind, and the ethical problems, still unsolved in this point of view, would have resulted...
Sivu 43 - ... the relation of ideas to actual things. The Phaedrus, Protagoras and Parmenides, have a character of youthfulness quite peculiar. They appear in the first glitter and awkwardness of early youth. They are not worked up into one whole, with a definite purpose, and with much art. In them also are shown the first breathings of what is the basis of all that follows, of logic as the instrument of philosophy, of ideas as its proper object, consequently of the possibility and of the conditions of knowledge....
Sivu 289 - ... in the same manner with that essential existence. Thus, then, the immortality of the soul is the condition of all true knowledge, as regards men ; and conversely, the reality of knowledge is the ground upon which the immortality of the soul is most certainly and easily understood. Hence, in the former dialogues also, in which knowledge was investigated, immortality was always...
Sivu 44 - ... not worked up into one whole, with a definite purpose, and with much art. In them also are shown the first breathings of what is the basis of all that follows, of logic as the instrument of philosophy, of ideas as its proper object, consequently of the possibility and of the conditions of knowledge. In the second part, the explanation of knowledge, and of the process of acquiring knowledge, is the predominant subject. At the head of this part stands the Theaetetus beyond the possibility of a...
Sivu 7 - ... only in secret allusions, and those very difficult to discover. This notion, in itself utterly vague, has shaped itself into the most multifarious forms, and the writings of Plato have been robbed- of sometimes more and sometimes less of their subject-matter, and his genuine wisdom, on the contrary, sought for in secret doctrines which he as good as not at all confided to these writings...
Sivu 403 - we are to start upon the supposition that the representation of the state is the proper grand object, it would be hardly possible to conceive why the appearance of the contrary is pointedly produced. 2 And even if it could be explained why Plato combined the investigation concerning justice with this grand In his countryman Buhle's " History of Modern Philosophy,