The Dialogues of Plato: Translated Into English with Analyses and Introductions, Količina 4Bigelow, Smith, 1900 |
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Zadetki 1–3 od 28
Stran 62
... lover of friends as that . And when I see you and Lysis , at your early age , so easily possessed of his treasure , and so soon , he of you , and you of him , I am amazed and delighted , see- ing that I myself , although I am now ...
... lover of friends as that . And when I see you and Lysis , at your early age , so easily possessed of his treasure , and so soon , he of you , and you of him , I am amazed and delighted , see- ing that I myself , although I am now ...
Stran 63
... lover , but the beloved , is the friend or dear one ; and the hated one , and not the hater , is the enemy ? That is ... lover : but this , my dear friend , is an absurdity , or , I should rather say , an impossibility . That , Socrates ...
... lover , but the beloved , is the friend or dear one ; and the hated one , and not the hater , is the enemy ? That is ... lover : but this , my dear friend , is an absurdity , or , I should rather say , an impossibility . That , Socrates ...
Stran 64
... lover will be the friend , of that which is loved ? True . And the hater will be the enemy of that which is hated ? Certainly . Yet there is no avoiding the admission in this , as in the preceding instance , that a man may love one who ...
... lover will be the friend , of that which is loved ? True . And the hater will be the enemy of that which is hated ? Certainly . Yet there is no avoiding the admission in this , as in the preceding instance , that a man may love one who ...
Vsebina
CRITIAS OR THE ISLAND OF ATLANTIS | 5 |
The Unity of Virtue | 130 |
THE LAWS | 158 |
5 preostalih delov ni prikazanih
Druge izdaje - Prikaži vse
The Dialogues of Plato: Tr. Into English, with Analyses and ..., Količina 4 Plato Celotni ogled - 1874 |
The Dialogues of Plato: Tr. Into English, with Analyses and ..., Količina 4 Plato Prikaz kratkega opisa - 1871 |
Pogosti izrazi in povedi
able admit agree Alcibiades allow answer appears argument assented Athenians Athens beauty become better Callias Certainly charm Charmides Cleinias consider courage Critias Crito Ctesippus dear desire Dialogue difficulty Dionysodorus Dorian mode Epimetheus Euthydemus evil father fear friendship give happy hear heard Heracles Hesiod Hippias Hippocrates Hippothales holiness Homer honorable ideas ignorance imagine Iolaus justice know all things knowl knowledge Lacedaemonians Laches laugh lover Lysimachus Lysis manner matter mean medicine Melesias Menexenus mind nature never Nicias Nicias and Laches noble notion opinion opposite pain Parmenides person philosophy physician Pittacus Plato pleasure poem poets praise Prodicus Protagoras question reason replied rhapsode Simonides Socrates Sophist sort soul speak speech suppose sure talking taught teach teachers tell Theaet thought Thurii tion true truth virtue wisdom or temperance wise words young youth Zeus