Schleiermacher's Introductions to the Dialogues of PlatoJ. & J.J. Deighton, 1836 - 432 sivua |
Kirjan sisältä
Tulokset 6 - 10 kokonaismäärästä 64
Sivu 22
... perfectly useless for the ar- rangement of Plato , and at the most can only serve as a register to any one wishing to inform himself of the opinion of Plato upon particular subjects , where he has to look for the decisive passages ...
... perfectly useless for the ar- rangement of Plato , and at the most can only serve as a register to any one wishing to inform himself of the opinion of Plato upon particular subjects , where he has to look for the decisive passages ...
Sivu 24
... is internal . It may not indeed be necessary on that ac count that the results of the two should perfectly coincide , for the reason that the external production of a work is subjected to other external and accidental conditions than its ...
... is internal . It may not indeed be necessary on that ac count that the results of the two should perfectly coincide , for the reason that the external production of a work is subjected to other external and accidental conditions than its ...
Sivu 27
... perfectly entire , but regard it as one long since decided , with the exception of unimportant doubts touching only a few trifles , the adoption or rejection of which may be a matter of great indifference . Such , for instance , will be ...
... perfectly entire , but regard it as one long since decided , with the exception of unimportant doubts touching only a few trifles , the adoption or rejection of which may be a matter of great indifference . Such , for instance , will be ...
Sivu 38
... perfectly this form is stamped upon it , we may not only pronounce it genuine with so much the more certainty , but since all those arts point back to what has gone before and forward to what is to come , it will necessarily be so much ...
... perfectly this form is stamped upon it , we may not only pronounce it genuine with so much the more certainty , but since all those arts point back to what has gone before and forward to what is to come , it will necessarily be so much ...
Sivu 46
... perfectly decisive , and is never contravened by a characteristic of the second kind . Thus , in the first part , the development of the dialo- gistic method is the predominant object , and hence , manifestly , the Phædrus is the first ...
... perfectly decisive , and is never contravened by a characteristic of the second kind . Thus , in the first part , the development of the dialo- gistic method is the predominant object , and hence , manifestly , the Phædrus is the first ...
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Muita painoksia - Näytä kaikki
Yleiset termit ja lausekkeet
according accurately Alcibiades allusions already Antisthenes Anytus Apology of Socrates appears 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 introduction investigation justice knowledge Laches language logue look Lysias Lysis manifestly manner matter means Menexenus Menon method mind moreover nature notion notwithstanding 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 Theætetus theory thing Thrasymachus Timæus tion true unity virtue whole wisdom writings Xenophon
Suositut otteet
Sivu 26 - 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 387 - 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 27 - ... 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 273 - ... 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 28 - ... 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 387 - 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,