The Dialogues of Plato, Bind 1Scribner, 1908 |
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Side 8
... imagine that he must be almost a young man . You will see , he said , in a moment what progress he has made and what he is like . He had scarcely said the word , when Charmides entered . Now you know , my friend , that I cannot measure ...
... imagine that he must be almost a young man . You will see , he said , in a moment what progress he has made and what he is like . He had scarcely said the word , when Charmides entered . Now you know , my friend , that I cannot measure ...
Side 14
... imagine , and he who with difficulty deliberates and discovers , is thought worthy of praise , but he who does this most easily and quickly ? That is true , he said . And in all that concerns either body or soul , swiftness and activity ...
... imagine , and he who with difficulty deliberates and discovers , is thought worthy of praise , but he who does this most easily and quickly ? That is true , he said . And in all that concerns either body or soul , swiftness and activity ...
Side 17
... imagine , Charmides , that the author of the definition of temperance did not understand the meaning of his own words , because you don't understand them ? Why , at his age , I said , most excellent Critias , he can hardly be expected ...
... imagine , Charmides , that the author of the definition of temperance did not understand the meaning of his own words , because you don't understand them ? Why , at his age , I said , most excellent Critias , he can hardly be expected ...
Side 18
... imagine that if he had meant by work- ing such things as you were describing , he would have said that there was no disgrace in them ? in making shoes , for ex- ample , or in selling pickles , or sitting for hire in a house of ill fame ...
... imagine that if he had meant by work- ing such things as you were describing , he would have said that there was no disgrace in them ? in making shoes , for ex- ample , or in selling pickles , or sitting for hire in a house of ill fame ...
Side 19
... imagine that temperate men are ignorant of their own temperance ? I do not imagine that , he said . 164 And yet were you not saying , not so very long ago , that craftsmen might be temperate in doing another's work , as well as their ...
... imagine that temperate men are ignorant of their own temperance ? I do not imagine that , he said . 164 And yet were you not saying , not so very long ago , that craftsmen might be temperate in doing another's work , as well as their ...
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admit Agathon agree Alcibiades answer Anytus appear argument Aristophanes assented Athenians Athens beauty believe beloved better body called Cebes Certainly Charmides Cleinias courage Crat Cratylus Critias Crito Ctesippus dear death desire Dialogue Dionysodorus discourse divine earth Eryximachus Euth Euthydemus Euthyphro evil existence fancy father fear give gods harmony hear heard Hermogenes Hesiod holy Homer honor human ideas ignorance imagine immortal inquiry justice knowledge Laches language lover Lysias Lysimachus Lysis manner matter mean Meletus Menexenus mind nature never Nicias notion opinion opposite pain person Phaedr philosophy physician piety Plato pleasure poets praise principle Prodicus Protagoras question reason replied rhetoric sense Simmias Socrates Sophists sort soul speak speech suppose surely taught teach teachers tell temperance things thought tion true truth virtue wisdom wise words youth Zeus ἀπὸ τὸ τοῦ