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Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | If you think that what I say is true, agree with me; if not, oppose it with every argument and take care that in my eagerness I do not deceive myself and you and, like a bee, leave my sting in you when I go. | If you think that what I say is true, agree with me; if not, oppose it with every argument and take care that in my eagerness I do not deceive myself and you and, like a bee, leave my sting in you when I go. | -350 | 1,997 | 207 | if you think that what i say is true, agree with me; if not, oppose it with every argument and take care that in my eagerness i do not deceive myself and you and, like a bee, leave my sting in you when i go. | ['if', 'you', 'think', 'that', 'what', 'say', 'is', 'true', 'agree', 'with', 'me', 'if', 'not', 'oppose', 'it', 'with', 'every', 'argument', 'and', 'take', 'care', 'that', 'in', 'my', 'eagerness', 'do', 'not', 'deceive', 'myself', 'and', 'you', 'and', 'like', 'bee', 'leave', 'my', 'sting', 'in', 'you', 'when', 'go'] | if -PRON- think that what -PRON- say be true , agree with -PRON- ; if not , oppose -PRON- with every argument and take care that in -PRON- eagerness -PRON- do not deceive -PRON- and -PRON- and , like a bee , leave -PRON- sting in -PRON- when -PRON- go . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | We must proceed, he said, and first remind me of what you said if I do not appear to remember it. | We must proceed, he said, and first remind me of what you said if I do not appear to remember it. | -350 | 1,997 | 97 | we must proceed, he said, and first remind me of what you said if i do not appear to remember it. | ['we', 'must', 'proceed', 'he', 'said', 'and', 'first', 'remind', 'me', 'of', 'what', 'you', 'said', 'if', 'do', 'not', 'appear', 'to', 'remember', 'it'] | -PRON- must proceed , -PRON- say , and first remind -PRON- of what -PRON- say if -PRON- do not appear to remember -PRON- . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Simmias, as I believe, is in doubt and fear that the soul, though it is more divine and beautiful than the body, yet predeceases it, being a kind of harmony. | Simmias, as I believe, is in doubt and fear that the soul, though it is more divine and beautiful than the body, yet predeceases it, being a kind of harmony. | -350 | 1,997 | 157 | simmias, as i believe, is in doubt and fear that the soul, though it is more divine and beautiful than the body, yet predeceases it, being a kind of harmony. | ['simmias', 'as', 'believe', 'is', 'in', 'doubt', 'and', 'fear', 'that', 'the', 'soul', 'though', 'it', 'is', 'more', 'divine', 'and', 'beautiful', 'than', 'the', 'body', 'yet', 'predeceases', 'it', 'being', 'kind', 'of', 'harmony'] | Simmias , as -PRON- believe , be in doubt and fear that the soul , though -PRON- be more divine and beautiful than the body , yet predecease -PRON- , be a kind of harmony . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Cebes, I thought, agrees with me that the soul lasts much longer than the body, but that no one knows whether the soul often wears out many bodies and then, on leaving its last body, is now itself destroyed. | Cebes, I thought, agrees with me that the soul lasts much longer than the body, but that no one knows whether the soul often wears out many bodies and then, on leaving its last body, is now itself destroyed. | -350 | 1,997 | 207 | cebes, i thought, agrees with me that the soul lasts much longer than the body, but that no one knows whether the soul often wears out many bodies and then, on leaving its last body, is now itself destroyed. | ['cebes', 'thought', 'agrees', 'with', 'me', 'that', 'the', 'soul', 'lasts', 'much', 'longer', 'than', 'the', 'body', 'but', 'that', 'no', 'one', 'knows', 'whether', 'the', 'soul', 'often', 'wears', 'out', 'many', 'bodies', 'and', 'then', 'on', 'leaving', 'its', 'last', 'body', 'is', 'now', 'itself', 'destroyed'] | Cebes , -PRON- think , agree with -PRON- that the soul last much long than the body , but that no one know whether the soul often wear out many body and then , on leave -PRON- last body , be now -PRON- destroy . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | This then is death, the destruction of the soul, since the body is always being destroyed. | This then is death, the destruction of the soul, since the body is always being destroyed. | -350 | 1,997 | 90 | this then is death, the destruction of the soul, since the body is always being destroyed. | ['this', 'then', 'is', 'death', 'the', 'destruction', 'of', 'the', 'soul', 'since', 'the', 'body', 'is', 'always', 'being', 'destroyed'] | this then be death , the destruction of the soul , since the body be always be destroy . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Are these the questions, Simmias and Cebes, which we must investigate? | Are these the questions, Simmias and Cebes, which we must investigate? | -350 | 1,997 | 70 | are these the questions, simmias and cebes, which we must investigate? | ['are', 'these', 'the', 'questions', 'simmias', 'and', 'cebes', 'which', 'we', 'must', 'investigate'] | be these the question , Simmias and Cebes , which -PRON- must investigate ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | They both agreed that they were. | They both agreed that they were. | -350 | 1,997 | 32 | they both agreed that they were. | ['they', 'both', 'agreed', 'that', 'they', 'were'] | -PRON- both agree that -PRON- be . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Do you then, he asked, reject all our previous statements, or some but not others? | Do you then, he asked, reject all our previous statements, or some but not others? | -350 | 1,997 | 82 | do you then, he asked, reject all our previous statements, or some but not others? | ['do', 'you', 'then', 'he', 'asked', 'reject', 'all', 'our', 'previous', 'statements', 'or', 'some', 'but', 'not', 'others'] | do -PRON- then , -PRON- ask , reject all -PRON- previous statement , or some but not other ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Some, they both said, but not others. | Some, they both said, but not others. | -350 | 1,997 | 37 | some, they both said, but not others. | ['some', 'they', 'both', 'said', 'but', 'not', 'others'] | some , -PRON- both say , but not other . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | What, he said, about the statements we made that learning is recollection and that, if this was so, our soul must of necessity exist elsewhere before us, before it was imprisoned in the body? | What, he said, about the statements we made that learning is recollection and that, if this was so, our soul must of necessity exist elsewhere before us, before it was imprisoned in the body? | -350 | 1,997 | 191 | what, he said, about the statements we made that learning is recollection and that, if this was so, our soul must of necessity exist elsewhere before us, before it was imprisoned in the body? | ['what', 'he', 'said', 'about', 'the', 'statements', 'we', 'made', 'that', 'learning', 'is', 'recollection', 'and', 'that', 'if', 'this', 'was', 'so', 'our', 'soul', 'must', 'of', 'necessity', 'exist', 'elsewhere', 'before', 'us', 'before', 'it', 'was', 'imprisoned', 'in', 'the', 'body'] | what , -PRON- say , about the statement -PRON- make that learning be recollection and that , if this be so , -PRON- soul must of necessity exist elsewhere before -PRON- , before -PRON- be imprison in the body ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | For myself, said Cebes, I was wonderfully convinced by it at the time | For myself, said Cebes, I was wonderfully convinced by it at the time | -350 | 1,997 | 69 | for myself, said cebes, i was wonderfully convinced by it at the time | ['for', 'myself', 'said', 'cebes', 'was', 'wonderfully', 'convinced', 'by', 'it', 'at', 'the', 'time'] | for -PRON- , say Cebes , -PRON- be wonderfully convinced by -PRON- at the time |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | and I stand by it now also, more than by any other statement. | and I stand by it now also, more than by any other statement. | -350 | 1,997 | 61 | and i stand by it now also, more than by any other statement. | ['and', 'stand', 'by', 'it', 'now', 'also', 'more', 'than', 'by', 'any', 'other', 'statement'] | and -PRON- stand by -PRON- now also , more than by any other statement . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | That, said Simmias, is also my position, and I should be very surprised if I ever changed my opinion about this. | That, said Simmias, is also my position, and I should be very surprised if I ever changed my opinion about this. | -350 | 1,997 | 112 | that, said simmias, is also my position, and i should be very surprised if i ever changed my opinion about this. | ['that', 'said', 'simmias', 'is', 'also', 'my', 'position', 'and', 'should', 'be', 'very', 'surprised', 'if', 'ever', 'changed', 'my', 'opinion', 'about', 'this'] | that , say Simmias , be also -PRON- position , and -PRON- should be very surprised if -PRON- ever change -PRON- opinion about this . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | But you must change your opinion, my Theban friend, said Socrates, if you still believe that a harmony is a composite thing, and that the soul is a kind of harmony of the elements of the body in a state of tension, for surely you will not allow yourself to maintain that a composite harmony existed before those elements from which it had to be composed, or would you? | But you must change your opinion, my Theban friend, said Socrates, if you still believe that a harmony is a composite thing, and that the soul is a kind of harmony of the elements of the body in a state of tension, for surely you will not allow yourself to maintain that a composite harmony existed before those elements from which it had to be composed, or would you? | -350 | 1,997 | 368 | but you must change your opinion, my theban friend, said socrates, if you still believe that a harmony is a composite thing, and that the soul is a kind of harmony of the elements of the body in a state of tension, for surely you will not allow yourself to maintain that a composite harmony existed before those elements from which it had to be composed, or would you? | ['but', 'you', 'must', 'change', 'your', 'opinion', 'my', 'theban', 'friend', 'said', 'socrates', 'if', 'you', 'still', 'believe', 'that', 'harmony', 'is', 'composite', 'thing', 'and', 'that', 'the', 'soul', 'is', 'kind', 'of', 'harmony', 'of', 'the', 'elements', 'of', 'the', 'body', 'in', 'state', 'of', 'tension', 'for', 'surely', 'you', 'will', 'not', 'allow', 'yourself', 'to', 'maintain', 'that', 'composite', 'harmony', 'existed', 'before', 'those', 'elements', 'from', 'which', 'it', 'had', 'to', 'be', 'composed', 'or', 'would', 'you'] | but -PRON- must change -PRON- opinion , -PRON- Theban friend , say Socrates , if -PRON- still believe that a harmony be a composite thing , and that the soul be a kind of harmony of the element of the body in a state of tension , for surely -PRON- will not allow -PRON- to maintain that a composite harmony exist before those element from which -PRON- have to be compose , or would -PRON- ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Never, Socrates, he said. | Never, Socrates, he said. | -350 | 1,997 | 25 | never, socrates, he said. | ['never', 'socrates', 'he', 'said'] | never , Socrates , -PRON- say . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Do you realize, he said, that this is what you are in fact saying when you state that the soul exists before it takes on the form and body of a Phaedo man and that it is composed of elements which do not yet exist? | Do you realize, he said, that this is what you are in fact saying when you state that the soul exists before it takes on the form and body of a Phaedo man and that it is composed of elements which do not yet exist? | -350 | 1,997 | 214 | do you realize, he said, that this is what you are in fact saying when you state that the soul exists before it takes on the form and body of a phaedo man and that it is composed of elements which do not yet exist? | ['do', 'you', 'realize', 'he', 'said', 'that', 'this', 'is', 'what', 'you', 'are', 'in', 'fact', 'saying', 'when', 'you', 'state', 'that', 'the', 'soul', 'exists', 'before', 'it', 'takes', 'on', 'the', 'form', 'and', 'body', 'of', 'phaedo', 'man', 'and', 'that', 'it', 'is', 'composed', 'of', 'elements', 'which', 'do', 'not', 'yet', 'exist'] | do -PRON- realize , -PRON- say , that this be what -PRON- be in fact say when -PRON- state that the soul exist before -PRON- take on the form and body of a Phaedo man and that -PRON- be compose of element which do not yet exist ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | A harmony is not like that to which you compare it; the lyre and the strings and the notes, though still unharmonized, exist; the harmony is composed last of all, and is the first to be destroyed. | A harmony is not like that to which you compare it; the lyre and the strings and the notes, though still unharmonized, exist; the harmony is composed last of all, and is the first to be destroyed. | -350 | 1,997 | 196 | a harmony is not like that to which you compare it; the lyre and the strings and the notes, though still unharmonized, exist; the harmony is composed last of all, and is the first to be destroyed. | ['harmony', 'is', 'not', 'like', 'that', 'to', 'which', 'you', 'compare', 'it', 'the', 'lyre', 'and', 'the', 'strings', 'and', 'the', 'notes', 'though', 'still', 'unharmonized', 'exist', 'the', 'harmony', 'is', 'composed', 'last', 'of', 'all', 'and', 'is', 'the', 'first', 'to', 'be', 'destroyed'] | a harmony be not like that to which -PRON- compare -PRON- ; the lyre and the string and the note , though still unharmonized , exist ; the harmony be compose last of all , and be the first to be destroy . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | How will you harmonize this statement with your former one? | How will you harmonize this statement with your former one? | -350 | 1,997 | 59 | how will you harmonize this statement with your former one? | ['how', 'will', 'you', 'harmonize', 'this', 'statement', 'with', 'your', 'former', 'one'] | how will -PRON- harmonize this statement with -PRON- former one ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | In no way, said Simmias. | In no way, said Simmias. | -350 | 1,997 | 24 | in no way, said simmias. | ['in', 'no', 'way', 'said', 'simmias'] | in no way , say Simmias . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | And surely, he said, a statement about harmony should do so more than any other. | And surely, he said, a statement about harmony should do so more than any other. | -350 | 1,997 | 80 | and surely, he said, a statement about harmony should do so more than any other. | ['and', 'surely', 'he', 'said', 'statement', 'about', 'harmony', 'should', 'do', 'so', 'more', 'than', 'any', 'other'] | and surely , -PRON- say , a statement about harmony should do so more than any other . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | It should, said Simmias. | It should, said Simmias. | -350 | 1,997 | 24 | it should, said simmias. | ['it', 'should', 'said', 'simmias'] | -PRON- should , say Simmias . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | So your statement is inconsistent? | So your statement is inconsistent? | -350 | 1,997 | 34 | so your statement is inconsistent? | ['so', 'your', 'statement', 'is', 'inconsistent'] | so -PRON- statement be inconsistent ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Consider which of your statements you prefer, that learning is recollection or that the soul is a harmony. | Consider which of your statements you prefer, that learning is recollection or that the soul is a harmony. | -350 | 1,997 | 106 | consider which of your statements you prefer, that learning is recollection or that the soul is a harmony. | ['consider', 'which', 'of', 'your', 'statements', 'you', 'prefer', 'that', 'learning', 'is', 'recollection', 'or', 'that', 'the', 'soul', 'is', 'harmony'] | consider which of -PRON- statement -PRON- prefer , that learning be recollection or that the soul be a harmony . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | I much prefer the former, Socrates. | I much prefer the former, Socrates. | -350 | 1,997 | 35 | i much prefer the former, socrates. | ['much', 'prefer', 'the', 'former', 'socrates'] | -PRON- much prefer the former , Socrates . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | I adopted the latter without proof, because of a certain probability and plausibility, which is why it appeals to most men. | I adopted the latter without proof, because of a certain probability and plausibility, which is why it appeals to most men. | -350 | 1,997 | 123 | i adopted the latter without proof, because of a certain probability and plausibility, which is why it appeals to most men. | ['adopted', 'the', 'latter', 'without', 'proof', 'because', 'of', 'certain', 'probability', 'and', 'plausibility', 'which', 'is', 'why', 'it', 'appeals', 'to', 'most', 'men'] | -PRON- adopt the latter without proof , because of a certain probability and plausibility , which be why -PRON- appeal to most man . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | I know that arguments of which the proof is based on probability are pretentious and, if one does not guard against them, they certainly deceive one, in geometry and everything else. | I know that arguments of which the proof is based on probability are pretentious and, if one does not guard against them, they certainly deceive one, in geometry and everything else. | -350 | 1,997 | 182 | i know that arguments of which the proof is based on probability are pretentious and, if one does not guard against them, they certainly deceive one, in geometry and everything else. | ['know', 'that', 'arguments', 'of', 'which', 'the', 'proof', 'is', 'based', 'on', 'probability', 'are', 'pretentious', 'and', 'if', 'one', 'does', 'not', 'guard', 'against', 'them', 'they', 'certainly', 'deceive', 'one', 'in', 'geometry', 'and', 'everything', 'else'] | -PRON- know that argument of which the proof be base on probability be pretentious and , if one do not guard against -PRON- , -PRON- certainly deceive one , in geometry and everything else . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | The theory of recollection and learning, however, was based on an assumption worthy of acceptance, for our soul was said to exist also before it came into the body, just as the reality does that is of the kind that we qualify by the words 'what it is,' and I convinced myself that I was quite correct to accept it. | The theory of recollection and learning, however, was based on an assumption worthy of acceptance, for our soul was said to exist also before it came into the body, just as the reality does that is of the kind that we qualify by the words 'what it is,' and I convinced myself that I was quite correct to accept it. | -350 | 1,997 | 314 | the theory of recollection and learning, however, was based on an assumption worthy of acceptance, for our soul was said to exist also before it came into the body, just as the reality does that is of the kind that we qualify by the words 'what it is,' and i convinced myself that i was quite correct to accept it. | ['the', 'theory', 'of', 'recollection', 'and', 'learning', 'however', 'was', 'based', 'on', 'an', 'assumption', 'worthy', 'of', 'acceptance', 'for', 'our', 'soul', 'was', 'said', 'to', 'exist', 'also', 'before', 'it', 'came', 'into', 'the', 'body', 'just', 'as', 'the', 'reality', 'does', 'that', 'is', 'of', 'the', 'kind', 'that', 'we', 'qualify', 'by', 'the', 'words', 'what', 'it', 'is', 'and', 'convinced', 'myself', 'that', 'was', 'quite', 'correct', 'to', 'accept', 'it'] | the theory of recollection and learning , however , be base on an assumption worthy of acceptance , for -PRON- soul be say to exist also before -PRON- come into the body , just as the reality do that be of the kind that -PRON- qualify by the word ' what -PRON- be , ' and -PRON- convince -PRON- that -PRON- be quite correct to accept -PRON- . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Therefore, I cannot accept the theory that the soul is a harmony either from myself or anyone else. | Therefore, I cannot accept the theory that the soul is a harmony either from myself or anyone else. | -350 | 1,997 | 99 | therefore, i cannot accept the theory that the soul is a harmony either from myself or anyone else. | ['therefore', 'cannot', 'accept', 'the', 'theory', 'that', 'the', 'soul', 'is', 'harmony', 'either', 'from', 'myself', 'or', 'anyone', 'else'] | therefore , -PRON- can not accept the theory that the soul be a harmony either from -PRON- or anyone else . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | What of this, Simmias? | What of this, Simmias? | -350 | 1,997 | 22 | what of this, simmias? | ['what', 'of', 'this', 'simmias'] | what of this , Simmias ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Do you think it natural for a harmony, or any other composite, to be in a different state from that of the elements of which it is composed? | Do you think it natural for a harmony, or any other composite, to be in a different state from that of the elements of which it is composed? | -350 | 1,997 | 140 | do you think it natural for a harmony, or any other composite, to be in a different state from that of the elements of which it is composed? | ['do', 'you', 'think', 'it', 'natural', 'for', 'harmony', 'or', 'any', 'other', 'composite', 'to', 'be', 'in', 'different', 'state', 'from', 'that', 'of', 'the', 'elements', 'of', 'which', 'it', 'is', 'composed'] | do -PRON- think -PRON- natural for a harmony , or any other composite , to be in a different state from that of the element of which -PRON- be compose ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Not at all, said Simmias. | Not at all, said Simmias. | -350 | 1,997 | 25 | not at all, said simmias. | ['not', 'at', 'all', 'said', 'simmias'] | not at all , say Simmias . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Nor, as I think, can it act or be acted upon in a different way than its elements? | Nor, as I think, can it act or be acted upon in a different way than its elements? | -350 | 1,997 | 82 | nor, as i think, can it act or be acted upon in a different way than its elements? | ['nor', 'as', 'think', 'can', 'it', 'act', 'or', 'be', 'acted', 'upon', 'in', 'different', 'way', 'than', 'its', 'elements'] | nor , as -PRON- think , can -PRON- act or be act upon in a different way than -PRON- element ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | One must therefore suppose that a harmony does not direct its components, but is directed by them. | One must therefore suppose that a harmony does not direct its components, but is directed by them. | -350 | 1,997 | 98 | one must therefore suppose that a harmony does not direct its components, but is directed by them. | ['one', 'must', 'therefore', 'suppose', 'that', 'harmony', 'does', 'not', 'direct', 'its', 'components', 'but', 'is', 'directed', 'by', 'them'] | one must therefore suppose that a harmony do not direct -PRON- component , but be direct by -PRON- . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | A harmony is therefore far from making a movement, or uttering a sound, or doing anything else, in a manner contrary to that of its parts. | A harmony is therefore far from making a movement, or uttering a sound, or doing anything else, in a manner contrary to that of its parts. | -350 | 1,997 | 138 | a harmony is therefore far from making a movement, or uttering a sound, or doing anything else, in a manner contrary to that of its parts. | ['harmony', 'is', 'therefore', 'far', 'from', 'making', 'movement', 'or', 'uttering', 'sound', 'or', 'doing', 'anything', 'else', 'in', 'manner', 'contrary', 'to', 'that', 'of', 'its', 'parts'] | a harmony be therefore far from make a movement , or utter a sound , or do anything else , in a manner contrary to that of -PRON- part . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Far from it indeed, he said. | Far from it indeed, he said. | -350 | 1,997 | 28 | far from it indeed, he said. | ['far', 'from', 'it', 'indeed', 'he', 'said'] | far from -PRON- indeed , -PRON- say . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Does not the nature of each harmony depend on the way it has been harmonized? | Does not the nature of each harmony depend on the way it has been harmonized? | -350 | 1,997 | 77 | does not the nature of each harmony depend on the way it has been harmonized? | ['does', 'not', 'the', 'nature', 'of', 'each', 'harmony', 'depend', 'on', 'the', 'way', 'it', 'has', 'been', 'harmonized'] | do not the nature of each harmony depend on the way -PRON- have be harmonize ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | I do not understand, he said. | I do not understand, he said. | -350 | 1,997 | 29 | i do not understand, he said. | ['do', 'not', 'understand', 'he', 'said'] | -PRON- do not understand , -PRON- say . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Will it not, if it is more and more fully harmonized, be more and more fully a harmony, and if it is less and less fully harmonized, it will be less and less fully a harmony? | Will it not, if it is more and more fully harmonized, be more and more fully a harmony, and if it is less and less fully harmonized, it will be less and less fully a harmony? | -350 | 1,997 | 174 | will it not, if it is more and more fully harmonized, be more and more fully a harmony, and if it is less and less fully harmonized, it will be less and less fully a harmony? | ['will', 'it', 'not', 'if', 'it', 'is', 'more', 'and', 'more', 'fully', 'harmonized', 'be', 'more', 'and', 'more', 'fully', 'harmony', 'and', 'if', 'it', 'is', 'less', 'and', 'less', 'fully', 'harmonized', 'it', 'will', 'be', 'less', 'and', 'less', 'fully', 'harmony'] | Will -PRON- not , if -PRON- be more and more fully harmonize , be more and more fully a harmony , and if -PRON- be less and less fully harmonize , -PRON- will be less and less fully a harmony ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Can this be true about the soul, that one soul is more and more fully a soul than another, or is less and less fully a soul, even to the smallest extent? | Can this be true about the soul, that one soul is more and more fully a soul than another, or is less and less fully a soul, even to the smallest extent? | -350 | 1,997 | 153 | can this be true about the soul, that one soul is more and more fully a soul than another, or is less and less fully a soul, even to the smallest extent? | ['can', 'this', 'be', 'true', 'about', 'the', 'soul', 'that', 'one', 'soul', 'is', 'more', 'and', 'more', 'fully', 'soul', 'than', 'another', 'or', 'is', 'less', 'and', 'less', 'fully', 'soul', 'even', 'to', 'the', 'smallest', 'extent'] | Can this be true about the soul , that one soul be more and more fully a soul than another , or be less and less fully a soul , even to the small extent ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Phaedo Come now, by Zeus, he said. | Phaedo Come now, by Zeus, he said. | -350 | 1,997 | 34 | phaedo come now, by zeus, he said. | ['phaedo', 'come', 'now', 'by', 'zeus', 'he', 'said'] | Phaedo come now , by Zeus , -PRON- say . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | One soul is said to have intelligence and virtue and to be good, another to have folly and wickedness and to be bad. | One soul is said to have intelligence and virtue and to be good, another to have folly and wickedness and to be bad. | -350 | 1,997 | 116 | one soul is said to have intelligence and virtue and to be good, another to have folly and wickedness and to be bad. | ['one', 'soul', 'is', 'said', 'to', 'have', 'intelligence', 'and', 'virtue', 'and', 'to', 'be', 'good', 'another', 'to', 'have', 'folly', 'and', 'wickedness', 'and', 'to', 'be', 'bad'] | one soul be say to have intelligence and virtue and to be good , another to have folly and wickedness and to be bad . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Are those things truly said? | Are those things truly said? | -350 | 1,997 | 28 | are those things truly said? | ['are', 'those', 'things', 'truly', 'said'] | be those thing truly say ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | What will someone who holds the theory that the soul is a harmony say that those things are which reside in the soul, that is, virtue and wickedness? | What will someone who holds the theory that the soul is a harmony say that those things are which reside in the soul, that is, virtue and wickedness? | -350 | 1,997 | 149 | what will someone who holds the theory that the soul is a harmony say that those things are which reside in the soul, that is, virtue and wickedness? | ['what', 'will', 'someone', 'who', 'holds', 'the', 'theory', 'that', 'the', 'soul', 'is', 'harmony', 'say', 'that', 'those', 'things', 'are', 'which', 'reside', 'in', 'the', 'soul', 'that', 'is', 'virtue', 'and', 'wickedness'] | what will someone who hold the theory that the soul be a harmony say that those thing be which reside in the soul , that is , virtue and wickedness ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Are these some other harmony and disharmony? | Are these some other harmony and disharmony? | -350 | 1,997 | 44 | are these some other harmony and disharmony? | ['are', 'these', 'some', 'other', 'harmony', 'and', 'disharmony'] | be these some other harmony and disharmony ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | That the good soul is harmonized and, being a harmony, has within itself another harmony, whereas the evil soul is both itself a lack of harmony and has no other within itself? | That the good soul is harmonized and, being a harmony, has within itself another harmony, whereas the evil soul is both itself a lack of harmony and has no other within itself? | -350 | 1,997 | 176 | that the good soul is harmonized and, being a harmony, has within itself another harmony, whereas the evil soul is both itself a lack of harmony and has no other within itself? | ['that', 'the', 'good', 'soul', 'is', 'harmonized', 'and', 'being', 'harmony', 'has', 'within', 'itself', 'another', 'harmony', 'whereas', 'the', 'evil', 'soul', 'is', 'both', 'itself', 'lack', 'of', 'harmony', 'and', 'has', 'no', 'other', 'within', 'itself'] | that the good soul be harmonize and , be a harmony , have within -PRON- another harmony , whereas the evil soul be both -PRON- a lack of harmony and have no other within -PRON- ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | I don't know what to say, said Simmias, but one who holds that assumption must obviously say something of that kind. | I don't know what to say, said Simmias, but one who holds that assumption must obviously say something of that kind. | -350 | 1,997 | 116 | i don't know what to say, said simmias, but one who holds that assumption must obviously say something of that kind. | ['don', 'know', 'what', 'to', 'say', 'said', 'simmias', 'but', 'one', 'who', 'holds', 'that', 'assumption', 'must', 'obviously', 'say', 'something', 'of', 'that', 'kind'] | -PRON- do not know what to say , say Simmias , but one who hold that assumption must obviously say something of that kind . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | We have previously agreed, he said, that one soul is not more and not less a soul than another, and this means that one harmony is not more and more fully, or less and less fully, a harmony than another. | We have previously agreed, he said, that one soul is not more and not less a soul than another, and this means that one harmony is not more and more fully, or less and less fully, a harmony than another. | -350 | 1,997 | 203 | we have previously agreed, he said, that one soul is not more and not less a soul than another, and this means that one harmony is not more and more fully, or less and less fully, a harmony than another. | ['we', 'have', 'previously', 'agreed', 'he', 'said', 'that', 'one', 'soul', 'is', 'not', 'more', 'and', 'not', 'less', 'soul', 'than', 'another', 'and', 'this', 'means', 'that', 'one', 'harmony', 'is', 'not', 'more', 'and', 'more', 'fully', 'or', 'less', 'and', 'less', 'fully', 'harmony', 'than', 'another'] | -PRON- have previously agree , -PRON- say , that one soul be not more and not less a soul than another , and this mean that one harmony be not more and more fully , or less and less fully , a harmony than another . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Now that which is no more and no less a harmony is not more or less harmonized. | Now that which is no more and no less a harmony is not more or less harmonized. | -350 | 1,997 | 79 | now that which is no more and no less a harmony is not more or less harmonized. | ['now', 'that', 'which', 'is', 'no', 'more', 'and', 'no', 'less', 'harmony', 'is', 'not', 'more', 'or', 'less', 'harmonized'] | now that which be no more and no less a harmony be not more or less harmonized . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Can that which is neither more nor less harmonized partake more or less of harmony, or does it do so equally? | Can that which is neither more nor less harmonized partake more or less of harmony, or does it do so equally? | -350 | 1,997 | 109 | can that which is neither more nor less harmonized partake more or less of harmony, or does it do so equally? | ['can', 'that', 'which', 'is', 'neither', 'more', 'nor', 'less', 'harmonized', 'partake', 'more', 'or', 'less', 'of', 'harmony', 'or', 'does', 'it', 'do', 'so', 'equally'] | Can that which be neither more nor less harmonize partake more or less of harmony , or do -PRON- do so equally ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Then if a soul is neither more nor less a soul than another, it has been harmonized to the same extent? | Then if a soul is neither more nor less a soul than another, it has been harmonized to the same extent? | -350 | 1,997 | 103 | then if a soul is neither more nor less a soul than another, it has been harmonized to the same extent? | ['then', 'if', 'soul', 'is', 'neither', 'more', 'nor', 'less', 'soul', 'than', 'another', 'it', 'has', 'been', 'harmonized', 'to', 'the', 'same', 'extent'] | then if a soul be neither more nor less a soul than another , -PRON- have be harmonize to the same extent ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | If that is so, it would have no greater share of disharmony or of harmony? | If that is so, it would have no greater share of disharmony or of harmony? | -350 | 1,997 | 74 | if that is so, it would have no greater share of disharmony or of harmony? | ['if', 'that', 'is', 'so', 'it', 'would', 'have', 'no', 'greater', 'share', 'of', 'disharmony', 'or', 'of', 'harmony'] | if that be so , -PRON- would have no great share of disharmony or of harmony ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | That being the case, could one soul have more wickedness or virtue than another, if wickedness is disharmony and virtue harmony? | That being the case, could one soul have more wickedness or virtue than another, if wickedness is disharmony and virtue harmony? | -350 | 1,997 | 128 | that being the case, could one soul have more wickedness or virtue than another, if wickedness is disharmony and virtue harmony? | ['that', 'being', 'the', 'case', 'could', 'one', 'soul', 'have', 'more', 'wickedness', 'or', 'virtue', 'than', 'another', 'if', 'wickedness', 'is', 'disharmony', 'and', 'virtue', 'harmony'] | that be the case , could one soul have more wickedness or virtue than another , if wickedness be disharmony and virtue harmony ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | But rather, Simmias, according to correct reasoning, no soul, if it is a harmony, will have any share of wickedness, for harmony is surely altogether this very thing, harmony, and would never share in disharmony. | But rather, Simmias, according to correct reasoning, no soul, if it is a harmony, will have any share of wickedness, for harmony is surely altogether this very thing, harmony, and would never share in disharmony. | -350 | 1,997 | 212 | but rather, simmias, according to correct reasoning, no soul, if it is a harmony, will have any share of wickedness, for harmony is surely altogether this very thing, harmony, and would never share in disharmony. | ['but', 'rather', 'simmias', 'according', 'to', 'correct', 'reasoning', 'no', 'soul', 'if', 'it', 'is', 'harmony', 'will', 'have', 'any', 'share', 'of', 'wickedness', 'for', 'harmony', 'is', 'surely', 'altogether', 'this', 'very', 'thing', 'harmony', 'and', 'would', 'never', 'share', 'in', 'disharmony'] | but rather , Simmias , accord to correct reasoning , no soul , if -PRON- be a harmony , will have any share of wickedness , for harmony be surely altogether this very thing , harmony , and would never share in disharmony . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | It certainly would not. | It certainly would not. | -350 | 1,997 | 23 | it certainly would not. | ['it', 'certainly', 'would', 'not'] | -PRON- certainly would not . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Nor would a soul, being altogether this very thing, a soul, share in wickedness? | Nor would a soul, being altogether this very thing, a soul, share in wickedness? | -350 | 1,997 | 80 | nor would a soul, being altogether this very thing, a soul, share in wickedness? | ['nor', 'would', 'soul', 'being', 'altogether', 'this', 'very', 'thing', 'soul', 'share', 'in', 'wickedness'] | nor would a soul , be altogether this very thing , a soul , share in wickedness ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | How could it, in view of what has been said? | How could it, in view of what has been said? | -350 | 1,997 | 44 | how could it, in view of what has been said? | ['how', 'could', 'it', 'in', 'view', 'of', 'what', 'has', 'been', 'said'] | how could -PRON- , in view of what have be say ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | So it follows from this argument that all the souls of all living creatures will be equally good, if souls are by nature equally this very thing, souls. | So it follows from this argument that all the souls of all living creatures will be equally good, if souls are by nature equally this very thing, souls. | -350 | 1,997 | 152 | so it follows from this argument that all the souls of all living creatures will be equally good, if souls are by nature equally this very thing, souls. | ['so', 'it', 'follows', 'from', 'this', 'argument', 'that', 'all', 'the', 'souls', 'of', 'all', 'living', 'creatures', 'will', 'be', 'equally', 'good', 'if', 'souls', 'are', 'by', 'nature', 'equally', 'this', 'very', 'thing', 'souls'] | so -PRON- follow from this argument that all the soul of all living creature will be equally good , if soul be by nature equally this very thing , soul . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Does our argument seem right, he said, and does it seem that it should have come to this, if the hypothesis that the soul is a harmony was correct? | Does our argument seem right, he said, and does it seem that it should have come to this, if the hypothesis that the soul is a harmony was correct? | -350 | 1,997 | 147 | does our argument seem right, he said, and does it seem that it should have come to this, if the hypothesis that the soul is a harmony was correct? | ['does', 'our', 'argument', 'seem', 'right', 'he', 'said', 'and', 'does', 'it', 'seem', 'that', 'it', 'should', 'have', 'come', 'to', 'this', 'if', 'the', 'hypothesis', 'that', 'the', 'soul', 'is', 'harmony', 'was', 'correct'] | do -PRON- argument seem right , -PRON- say , and do -PRON- seem that -PRON- should have come to this , if the hypothesis that the soul be a harmony be correct ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Not in any way, he said. | Not in any way, he said. | -350 | 1,997 | 24 | not in any way, he said. | ['not', 'in', 'any', 'way', 'he', 'said'] | not in any way , -PRON- say . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Further, of all the parts of a man, can you mention any other part that rules him than his soul, especially if it is a wise soul? | Further, of all the parts of a man, can you mention any other part that rules him than his soul, especially if it is a wise soul? | -350 | 1,997 | 129 | further, of all the parts of a man, can you mention any other part that rules him than his soul, especially if it is a wise soul? | ['further', 'of', 'all', 'the', 'parts', 'of', 'man', 'can', 'you', 'mention', 'any', 'other', 'part', 'that', 'rules', 'him', 'than', 'his', 'soul', 'especially', 'if', 'it', 'is', 'wise', 'soul'] | further , of all the part of a man , can -PRON- mention any other part that rule -PRON- than -PRON- soul , especially if -PRON- be a wise soul ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Does it do so by following the affections of the body or by opposing them? | Does it do so by following the affections of the body or by opposing them? | -350 | 1,997 | 74 | does it do so by following the affections of the body or by opposing them? | ['does', 'it', 'do', 'so', 'by', 'following', 'the', 'affections', 'of', 'the', 'body', 'or', 'by', 'opposing', 'them'] | do -PRON- do so by follow the affection of the body or by oppose -PRON- ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | I mean, for example, that when the body is hot and thirsty the soul draws him to the opposite, to not drinking; when the body is hungry, to not eating, and we see a thousand other examples of the soul opposing the affections of the body. | I mean, for example, that when the body is hot and thirsty the soul draws him to the opposite, to not drinking; when the body is hungry, to not eating, and we see a thousand other examples of the soul opposing the affections of the body. | -350 | 1,997 | 237 | i mean, for example, that when the body is hot and thirsty the soul draws him to the opposite, to not drinking; when the body is hungry, to not eating, and we see a thousand other examples of the soul opposing the affections of the body. | ['mean', 'for', 'example', 'that', 'when', 'the', 'body', 'is', 'hot', 'and', 'thirsty', 'the', 'soul', 'draws', 'him', 'to', 'the', 'opposite', 'to', 'not', 'drinking', 'when', 'the', 'body', 'is', 'hungry', 'to', 'not', 'eating', 'and', 'we', 'see', 'thousand', 'other', 'examples', 'of', 'the', 'soul', 'opposing', 'the', 'affections', 'of', 'the', 'body'] | -PRON- mean , for example , that when the body be hot and thirsty the soul draw -PRON- to the opposite , to not drink ; when the body be hungry , to not eat , and -PRON- see a thousand other example of the soul oppose the affection of the body . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | On the other hand we previously agreed that if the soul were a harmony, it would never be out of tune with the stress and relaxation and the striking of the strings or anything else done to its composing elements, but that it would follow and never direct them? | On the other hand we previously agreed that if the soul were a harmony, it would never be out of tune with the stress and relaxation and the striking of the strings or anything else done to its composing elements, but that it would follow and never direct them? | -350 | 1,997 | 261 | on the other hand we previously agreed that if the soul were a harmony, it would never be out of tune with the stress and relaxation and the striking of the strings or anything else done to its composing elements, but that it would follow and never direct them? | ['on', 'the', 'other', 'hand', 'we', 'previously', 'agreed', 'that', 'if', 'the', 'soul', 'were', 'harmony', 'it', 'would', 'never', 'be', 'out', 'of', 'tune', 'with', 'the', 'stress', 'and', 'relaxation', 'and', 'the', 'striking', 'of', 'the', 'strings', 'or', 'anything', 'else', 'done', 'to', 'its', 'composing', 'elements', 'but', 'that', 'it', 'would', 'follow', 'and', 'never', 'direct', 'them'] | on the other hand -PRON- previously agree that if the soul be a harmony , -PRON- would never be out of tune with the stress and relaxation and the striking of the string or anything else do to -PRON- compose element , but that -PRON- would follow and never direct -PRON- ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | We did so agree, of course. | We did so agree, of course. | -350 | 1,997 | 27 | we did so agree, of course. | ['we', 'did', 'so', 'agree', 'of', 'course'] | -PRON- do so agree , of course . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Well, does it now appear to do quite the opposite, ruling over all the elements of which one says it is composed, opposing nearly all of them throughout life, directing all their ways, inflicting harsh and painful punishment on them, at times in physical culture and medicine, at other times more gently by threats and exhortations, holding converse with desires and passions and fears as if it were one thing talking to a different one, as Homer wrote somewhere in the Odyssey where he says that Odysseus 'struck his breast and rebuked his heart saying, 'Endure, my heart, you have endured worse than this' '? | Well, does it now appear to do quite the opposite, ruling over all the elements of which one says it is composed, opposing nearly all of them throughout life, directing all their ways, inflicting harsh and painful punishment on them, at times in physical culture and medicine, at other times more gently by threats and exhortations, holding converse with desires and passions and fears as if it were one thing talking to a different one, as Homer wrote somewhere in the Odyssey where he says that Odysseus 'struck his breast and rebuked his heart saying, 'Endure, my heart, you have endured worse than this' '? | -350 | 1,997 | 610 | well, does it now appear to do quite the opposite, ruling over all the elements of which one says it is composed, opposing nearly all of them throughout life, directing all their ways, inflicting harsh and painful punishment on them, at times in physical culture and medicine, at other times more gently by threats and exhortations, holding converse with desires and passions and fears as if it were one thing talking to a different one, as homer wrote somewhere in the odyssey where he says that odysseus 'struck his breast and rebuked his heart saying, 'endure, my heart, you have endured worse than this' '? | ['well', 'does', 'it', 'now', 'appear', 'to', 'do', 'quite', 'the', 'opposite', 'ruling', 'over', 'all', 'the', 'elements', 'of', 'which', 'one', 'says', 'it', 'is', 'composed', 'opposing', 'nearly', 'all', 'of', 'them', 'throughout', 'life', 'directing', 'all', 'their', 'ways', 'inflicting', 'harsh', 'and', 'painful', 'punishment', 'on', 'them', 'at', 'times', 'in', 'physical', 'culture', 'and', 'medicine', 'at', 'other', 'times', 'more', 'gently', 'by', 'threats', 'and', 'exhortations', 'holding', 'converse', 'with', 'desires', 'and', 'passions', 'and', 'fears', 'as', 'if', 'it', 'were', 'one', 'thing', 'talking', 'to', 'different', 'one', 'as', 'homer', 'wrote', 'somewhere', 'in', 'the', 'odyssey', 'where', 'he', 'says', 'that', 'odysseus', 'struck', 'his', 'breast', 'and', 'rebuked', 'his', 'heart', 'saying', 'endure', 'my', 'heart', 'you', 'have', 'endured', 'worse', 'than', 'this'] | well , do -PRON- now appear to do quite the opposite , rule over all the element of which one say -PRON- be compose , oppose nearly all of -PRON- throughout life , direct all -PRON- way , inflict harsh and painful punishment on -PRON- , at time in physical culture and medicine , at other time more gently by threat and exhortation , hold converse with desire and passion and fear as if -PRON- be one thing talk to a different one , as Homer write somewhere in the Odyssey where -PRON- say that Odysseus ' strike -PRON- breast and rebuke -PRON- heart say , ' endure , -PRON- heart , -PRON- have endure bad than this ' ' ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Do you think that when he composed this the poet thought that his soul was a harmony, a thing to be directed by the affections of the body? | Do you think that when he composed this the poet thought that his soul was a harmony, a thing to be directed by the affections of the body? | -350 | 1,997 | 139 | do you think that when he composed this the poet thought that his soul was a harmony, a thing to be directed by the affections of the body? | ['do', 'you', 'think', 'that', 'when', 'he', 'composed', 'this', 'the', 'poet', 'thought', 'that', 'his', 'soul', 'was', 'harmony', 'thing', 'to', 'be', 'directed', 'by', 'the', 'affections', 'of', 'the', 'body'] | do -PRON- think that when -PRON- compose this the poet think that -PRON- soul be a harmony , a thing to be direct by the affection of the body ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Did he not rather regard it as ruling over them and mastering them, itself a much more divine thing than a harmony? | Did he not rather regard it as ruling over them and mastering them, itself a much more divine thing than a harmony? | -350 | 1,997 | 115 | did he not rather regard it as ruling over them and mastering them, itself a much more divine thing than a harmony? | ['did', 'he', 'not', 'rather', 'regard', 'it', 'as', 'ruling', 'over', 'them', 'and', 'mastering', 'them', 'itself', 'much', 'more', 'divine', 'thing', 'than', 'harmony'] | do -PRON- not rather regard -PRON- as rule over -PRON- and master -PRON- , -PRON- a much more divine thing than a harmony ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Yes, by Zeus, I think so, Socrates. | Yes, by Zeus, I think so, Socrates. | -350 | 1,997 | 35 | yes, by zeus, i think so, socrates. | ['yes', 'by', 'zeus', 'think', 'so', 'socrates'] | yes , by Zeus , -PRON- think so , Socrates . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Therefore, my good friend, it is quite wrong for us to say that the soul is a harmony, and in saying so we would disagree both with the divine poet Homer and with ourselves. | Therefore, my good friend, it is quite wrong for us to say that the soul is a harmony, and in saying so we would disagree both with the divine poet Homer and with ourselves. | -350 | 1,997 | 173 | therefore, my good friend, it is quite wrong for us to say that the soul is a harmony, and in saying so we would disagree both with the divine poet homer and with ourselves. | ['therefore', 'my', 'good', 'friend', 'it', 'is', 'quite', 'wrong', 'for', 'us', 'to', 'say', 'that', 'the', 'soul', 'is', 'harmony', 'and', 'in', 'saying', 'so', 'we', 'would', 'disagree', 'both', 'with', 'the', 'divine', 'poet', 'homer', 'and', 'with', 'ourselves'] | therefore , -PRON- good friend , -PRON- be quite wrong for -PRON- to say that the soul be a harmony , and in say so -PRON- would disagree both with the divine poet Homer and with -PRON- . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Very well, said Socrates. | Very well, said Socrates. | -350 | 1,997 | 25 | very well, said socrates. | ['very', 'well', 'said', 'socrates'] | very well , say Socrates . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Harmonia of Thebes seems somehow reasonably propitious to us. | Harmonia of Thebes seems somehow reasonably propitious to us. | -350 | 1,997 | 61 | harmonia of thebes seems somehow reasonably propitious to us. | ['harmonia', 'of', 'thebes', 'seems', 'somehow', 'reasonably', 'propitious', 'to', 'us'] | Harmonia of Thebes seem somehow reasonably propitious to -PRON- . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | How and by what argument, my dear Cebes, can we propitiate Cadmus? | How and by what argument, my dear Cebes, can we propitiate Cadmus? | -350 | 1,997 | 66 | how and by what argument, my dear cebes, can we propitiate cadmus? | ['how', 'and', 'by', 'what', 'argument', 'my', 'dear', 'cebes', 'can', 'we', 'propitiate', 'cadmus'] | how and by what argument , -PRON- dear Cebes , can -PRON- propitiate Cadmus ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | I think, Cebes said, that you will find a way. | I think, Cebes said, that you will find a way. | -350 | 1,997 | 46 | i think, cebes said, that you will find a way. | ['think', 'cebes', 'said', 'that', 'you', 'will', 'find', 'way'] | -PRON- think , Cebes say , that -PRON- will find a way . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | You dealt with the argument about harmony in a manner that was quite astonishing to me. | You dealt with the argument about harmony in a manner that was quite astonishing to me. | -350 | 1,997 | 87 | you dealt with the argument about harmony in a manner that was quite astonishing to me. | ['you', 'dealt', 'with', 'the', 'argument', 'about', 'harmony', 'in', 'manner', 'that', 'was', 'quite', 'astonishing', 'to', 'me'] | -PRON- deal with the argument about harmony in a manner that be quite astonishing to -PRON- . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | When Simmias was speaking of his difficulties I was very much wondering whether anyone would be able to deal with his argument, and I was quite dumbfounded when right away he could not resist your argument's first onslaught. | When Simmias was speaking of his difficulties I was very much wondering whether anyone would be able to deal with his argument, and I was quite dumbfounded when right away he could not resist your argument's first onslaught. | -350 | 1,997 | 224 | when simmias was speaking of his difficulties i was very much wondering whether anyone would be able to deal with his argument, and i was quite dumbfounded when right away he could not resist your argument's first onslaught. | ['when', 'simmias', 'was', 'speaking', 'of', 'his', 'difficulties', 'was', 'very', 'much', 'wondering', 'whether', 'anyone', 'would', 'be', 'able', 'to', 'deal', 'with', 'his', 'argument', 'and', 'was', 'quite', 'dumbfounded', 'when', 'right', 'away', 'he', 'could', 'not', 'resist', 'your', 'argument', 'first', 'onslaught'] | when Simmias be speak of -PRON- difficulty -PRON- be very much wonder whether anyone would be able to deal with -PRON- argument , and -PRON- be quite dumbfounded when right away -PRON- could not resist -PRON- argument 's first onslaught . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | I should not wonder therefore if that of Cadmus suffered the same fate. | I should not wonder therefore if that of Cadmus suffered the same fate. | -350 | 1,997 | 71 | i should not wonder therefore if that of cadmus suffered the same fate. | ['should', 'not', 'wonder', 'therefore', 'if', 'that', 'of', 'cadmus', 'suffered', 'the', 'same', 'fate'] | -PRON- should not wonder therefore if that of Cadmus suffer the same fate . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Harmonia was in legend the wife of Cadmus, the founder of Thebes. | Harmonia was in legend the wife of Cadmus, the founder of Thebes. | -350 | 1,997 | 65 | harmonia was in legend the wife of cadmus, the founder of thebes. | ['harmonia', 'was', 'in', 'legend', 'the', 'wife', 'of', 'cadmus', 'the', 'founder', 'of', 'thebes'] | Harmonia be in legend the wife of Cadmus , the founder of Thebes . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Socrates' punning joke is simply that, having dealt with Harmonia (harmony), we must now deal with Cadmus (i.e., Cebes, the other Theban). | Socrates' punning joke is simply that, having dealt with Harmonia (harmony), we must now deal with Cadmus (i.e., Cebes, the other Theban). | -350 | 1,997 | 138 | socrates' punning joke is simply that, having dealt with harmonia (harmony), we must now deal with cadmus (i.e., cebes, the other theban). | ['socrates', 'punning', 'joke', 'is', 'simply', 'that', 'having', 'dealt', 'with', 'harmonia', 'harmony', 'we', 'must', 'now', 'deal', 'with', 'cadmus', 'cebes', 'the', 'other', 'theban'] | Socrates ' punning joke be simply that , have deal with Harmonia ( harmony ) , -PRON- must now deal with Cadmus ( i.e. , Cebes , the other Theban ) . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | My good sir, said Socrates, do not boast, lest some malign influence upset the argument we are about to make. | My good sir, said Socrates, do not boast, lest some malign influence upset the argument we are about to make. | -350 | 1,997 | 109 | my good sir, said socrates, do not boast, lest some malign influence upset the argument we are about to make. | ['my', 'good', 'sir', 'said', 'socrates', 'do', 'not', 'boast', 'lest', 'some', 'malign', 'influence', 'upset', 'the', 'argument', 'we', 'are', 'about', 'to', 'make'] | -PRON- good sir , say Socrates , do not boast , lest some malign influence upset the argument -PRON- be about to make . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | However, we leave that to the care of the god, but let us come to grips with it in the Homeric fashion, to see if there is anything in what you say. | However, we leave that to the care of the god, but let us come to grips with it in the Homeric fashion, to see if there is anything in what you say. | -350 | 1,997 | 148 | however, we leave that to the care of the god, but let us come to grips with it in the homeric fashion, to see if there is anything in what you say. | ['however', 'we', 'leave', 'that', 'to', 'the', 'care', 'of', 'the', 'god', 'but', 'let', 'us', 'come', 'to', 'grips', 'with', 'it', 'in', 'the', 'homeric', 'fashion', 'to', 'see', 'if', 'there', 'is', 'anything', 'in', 'what', 'you', 'say'] | however , -PRON- leave that to the care of the god , but let -PRON- come to grip with -PRON- in the homeric fashion , to see if there be anything in what -PRON- say . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | The sum of your problem is this: you consider that the soul must be proved to be immortal and indestructible before a philosopher on the point of death, who is confident that he will fare much better in the underworld than if he had led any other kind of life, can avoid being foolish and simple minded in this confidence. | The sum of your problem is this: you consider that the soul must be proved to be immortal and indestructible before a philosopher on the point of death, who is confident that he will fare much better in the underworld than if he had led any other kind of life, can avoid being foolish and simple minded in this confidence. | -350 | 1,997 | 322 | the sum of your problem is this: you consider that the soul must be proved to be immortal and indestructible before a philosopher on the point of death, who is confident that he will fare much better in the underworld than if he had led any other kind of life, can avoid being foolish and simple minded in this confidence. | ['the', 'sum', 'of', 'your', 'problem', 'is', 'this', 'you', 'consider', 'that', 'the', 'soul', 'must', 'be', 'proved', 'to', 'be', 'immortal', 'and', 'indestructible', 'before', 'philosopher', 'on', 'the', 'point', 'of', 'death', 'who', 'is', 'confident', 'that', 'he', 'will', 'fare', 'much', 'better', 'in', 'the', 'underworld', 'than', 'if', 'he', 'had', 'led', 'any', 'other', 'kind', 'of', 'life', 'can', 'avoid', 'being', 'foolish', 'and', 'simple', 'minded', 'in', 'this', 'confidence'] | the sum of -PRON- problem be this : -PRON- consider that the soul must be prove to be immortal and indestructible before a philosopher on the point of death , who be confident that -PRON- will fare much better in the underworld than if -PRON- have lead any other kind of life , can avoid be foolish and simple minded in this confidence . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | To prove that the soul is strong, that it is divine, that it existed before we were born as men, all this, you say, does not show the soul to be immortal but only long lasting. | To prove that the soul is strong, that it is divine, that it existed before we were born as men, all this, you say, does not show the soul to be immortal but only long lasting. | -350 | 1,997 | 176 | to prove that the soul is strong, that it is divine, that it existed before we were born as men, all this, you say, does not show the soul to be immortal but only long lasting. | ['to', 'prove', 'that', 'the', 'soul', 'is', 'strong', 'that', 'it', 'is', 'divine', 'that', 'it', 'existed', 'before', 'we', 'were', 'born', 'as', 'men', 'all', 'this', 'you', 'say', 'does', 'not', 'show', 'the', 'soul', 'to', 'be', 'immortal', 'but', 'only', 'long', 'lasting'] | to prove that the soul be strong , that -PRON- be divine , that -PRON- exist before -PRON- be bear as man , all this , -PRON- say , do not show the soul to be immortal but only long last . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | That it existed for a very long time before, that it knew much and acted much, makes it no more immortal because of that; indeed, its very entering into a human body was the beginning of its destruction, like a disease; it would live that life in distress and would in the end be destroyed in what we call death. | That it existed for a very long time before, that it knew much and acted much, makes it no more immortal because of that; indeed, its very entering into a human body was the beginning of its destruction, like a disease; it would live that life in distress and would in the end be destroyed in what we call death. | -350 | 1,997 | 312 | that it existed for a very long time before, that it knew much and acted much, makes it no more immortal because of that; indeed, its very entering into a human body was the beginning of its destruction, like a disease; it would live that life in distress and would in the end be destroyed in what we call death. | ['that', 'it', 'existed', 'for', 'very', 'long', 'time', 'before', 'that', 'it', 'knew', 'much', 'and', 'acted', 'much', 'makes', 'it', 'no', 'more', 'immortal', 'because', 'of', 'that', 'indeed', 'its', 'very', 'entering', 'into', 'human', 'body', 'was', 'the', 'beginning', 'of', 'its', 'destruction', 'like', 'disease', 'it', 'would', 'live', 'that', 'life', 'in', 'distress', 'and', 'would', 'in', 'the', 'end', 'be', 'destroyed', 'in', 'what', 'we', 'call', 'death'] | that -PRON- exist for a very long time before , that -PRON- know much and act much , make -PRON- no more immortal because of that ; indeed , -PRON- very enter into a human body be the beginning of -PRON- destruction , like a disease ; -PRON- would live that life in distress and would in the end be destroy in what -PRON- call death . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | You say it makes no difference whether it enters a body once or many times as far as the fear of each of us is concerned, for it is natural for a man who is no fool to be afraid, if he does not know and cannot prove that the soul is immortal. | You say it makes no difference whether it enters a body once or many times as far as the fear of each of us is concerned, for it is natural for a man who is no fool to be afraid, if he does not know and cannot prove that the soul is immortal. | -350 | 1,997 | 242 | you say it makes no difference whether it enters a body once or many times as far as the fear of each of us is concerned, for it is natural for a man who is no fool to be afraid, if he does not know and cannot prove that the soul is immortal. | ['you', 'say', 'it', 'makes', 'no', 'difference', 'whether', 'it', 'enters', 'body', 'once', 'or', 'many', 'times', 'as', 'far', 'as', 'the', 'fear', 'of', 'each', 'of', 'us', 'is', 'concerned', 'for', 'it', 'is', 'natural', 'for', 'man', 'who', 'is', 'no', 'fool', 'to', 'be', 'afraid', 'if', 'he', 'does', 'not', 'know', 'and', 'cannot', 'prove', 'that', 'the', 'soul', 'is', 'immortal'] | -PRON- say -PRON- make no difference whether -PRON- enter a body once or many time as far as the fear of each of -PRON- be concern , for -PRON- be natural for a man who be no fool to be afraid , if -PRON- do not know and can not prove that the soul be immortal . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | This, I think, is what you maintain, Cebes; I deliberately repeat it often, in order that no point may escape us, and that you may add or subtract something if you wish. | This, I think, is what you maintain, Cebes; I deliberately repeat it often, in order that no point may escape us, and that you may add or subtract something if you wish. | -350 | 1,997 | 169 | this, i think, is what you maintain, cebes; i deliberately repeat it often, in order that no point may escape us, and that you may add or subtract something if you wish. | ['this', 'think', 'is', 'what', 'you', 'maintain', 'cebes', 'deliberately', 'repeat', 'it', 'often', 'in', 'order', 'that', 'no', 'point', 'may', 'escape', 'us', 'and', 'that', 'you', 'may', 'add', 'or', 'subtract', 'something', 'if', 'you', 'wish'] | this , -PRON- think , be what -PRON- maintain , Cebes ; -PRON- deliberately repeat -PRON- often , in order that no point may escape -PRON- , and that -PRON- may add or subtract something if -PRON- wish . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | And Cebes said: 'There is nothing that I want to add or subtract at the moment. | And Cebes said: 'There is nothing that I want to add or subtract at the moment. | -350 | 1,997 | 79 | and cebes said: 'there is nothing that i want to add or subtract at the moment. | ['and', 'cebes', 'said', 'there', 'is', 'nothing', 'that', 'want', 'to', 'add', 'or', 'subtract', 'at', 'the', 'moment'] | and Cebes say : ' there be nothing that -PRON- want to add or subtract at the moment . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | That is what I say.' | That is what I say.' | -350 | 1,997 | 20 | that is what i say.' | ['that', 'is', 'what', 'say'] | that be what -PRON- say . ' |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Socrates paused for a long time, deep in thought. | Socrates paused for a long time, deep in thought. | -350 | 1,997 | 49 | socrates paused for a long time, deep in thought. | ['socrates', 'paused', 'for', 'long', 'time', 'deep', 'in', 'thought'] | Socrates pause for a long time , deep in thought . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | He then said: 'This is no unimportant problem that you raise, Cebes, for it requires a thorough investigation of the cause of generation and destruction. | He then said: 'This is no unimportant problem that you raise, Cebes, for it requires a thorough investigation of the cause of generation and destruction. | -350 | 1,997 | 153 | he then said: 'this is no unimportant problem that you raise, cebes, for it requires a thorough investigation of the cause of generation and destruction. | ['he', 'then', 'said', 'this', 'is', 'no', 'unimportant', 'problem', 'that', 'you', 'raise', 'cebes', 'for', 'it', 'requires', 'thorough', 'investigation', 'of', 'the', 'cause', 'of', 'generation', 'and', 'destruction'] | -PRON- then say : ' this be no unimportant problem that -PRON- raise , Cebes , for -PRON- require a thorough investigation of the cause of generation and destruction . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | I will, if you wish, give you an account of my experience in these matters. | I will, if you wish, give you an account of my experience in these matters. | -350 | 1,997 | 75 | i will, if you wish, give you an account of my experience in these matters. | ['will', 'if', 'you', 'wish', 'give', 'you', 'an', 'account', 'of', 'my', 'experience', 'in', 'these', 'matters'] | -PRON- will , if -PRON- wish , give -PRON- an account of -PRON- experience in these matter . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Then if something I say seems useful to you, make use of it to persuade us of your position.' | Then if something I say seems useful to you, make use of it to persuade us of your position.' | -350 | 1,997 | 93 | then if something i say seems useful to you, make use of it to persuade us of your position.' | ['then', 'if', 'something', 'say', 'seems', 'useful', 'to', 'you', 'make', 'use', 'of', 'it', 'to', 'persuade', 'us', 'of', 'your', 'position'] | then if something -PRON- say seem useful to -PRON- , make use of -PRON- to persuade -PRON- of -PRON- position . ' |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | I surely do wish that, said Cebes. | I surely do wish that, said Cebes. | -350 | 1,997 | 34 | i surely do wish that, said cebes. | ['surely', 'do', 'wish', 'that', 'said', 'cebes'] | -PRON- surely do wish that , say Cebes . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Listen then, and I will, Cebes, he said. | Listen then, and I will, Cebes, he said. | -350 | 1,997 | 40 | listen then, and i will, cebes, he said. | ['listen', 'then', 'and', 'will', 'cebes', 'he', 'said'] | listen then , and -PRON- will , Cebes , -PRON- say . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | When I was a young man I was wonderfully keen on that wisdom which they call natural science, for I thought it splendid to know the causes of everything, why it comes to be, why it perishes and why it exists. | When I was a young man I was wonderfully keen on that wisdom which they call natural science, for I thought it splendid to know the causes of everything, why it comes to be, why it perishes and why it exists. | -350 | 1,997 | 208 | when i was a young man i was wonderfully keen on that wisdom which they call natural science, for i thought it splendid to know the causes of everything, why it comes to be, why it perishes and why it exists. | ['when', 'was', 'young', 'man', 'was', 'wonderfully', 'keen', 'on', 'that', 'wisdom', 'which', 'they', 'call', 'natural', 'science', 'for', 'thought', 'it', 'splendid', 'to', 'know', 'the', 'causes', 'of', 'everything', 'why', 'it', 'comes', 'to', 'be', 'why', 'it', 'perishes', 'and', 'why', 'it', 'exists'] | when -PRON- be a young man -PRON- be wonderfully keen on that wisdom which -PRON- call natural science , for -PRON- think -PRON- splendid to know the cause of everything , why -PRON- come to be , why -PRON- perish and why -PRON- exist . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | I was often changing my mind in the investigation, in the first instance, of questions such as these: Are living creatures nurtured when heat and cold produce a kind of putrefaction, as some say? | I was often changing my mind in the investigation, in the first instance, of questions such as these: Are living creatures nurtured when heat and cold produce a kind of putrefaction, as some say? | -350 | 1,997 | 195 | i was often changing my mind in the investigation, in the first instance, of questions such as these: are living creatures nurtured when heat and cold produce a kind of putrefaction, as some say? | ['was', 'often', 'changing', 'my', 'mind', 'in', 'the', 'investigation', 'in', 'the', 'first', 'instance', 'of', 'questions', 'such', 'as', 'these', 'are', 'living', 'creatures', 'nurtured', 'when', 'heat', 'and', 'cold', 'produce', 'kind', 'of', 'putrefaction', 'as', 'some', 'say'] | -PRON- be often change -PRON- mind in the investigation , in the first instance , of question such as these : be live creature nurture when heat and cold produce a kind of putrefaction , as some say ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Do we think with our blood, or air, or fire, or none of these, and does the brain provide our senses of hearing and sight and smell, from which come memory and opinion, and from memory and opinion which has become stable, comes knowledge? | Do we think with our blood, or air, or fire, or none of these, and does the brain provide our senses of hearing and sight and smell, from which come memory and opinion, and from memory and opinion which has become stable, comes knowledge? | -350 | 1,997 | 238 | do we think with our blood, or air, or fire, or none of these, and does the brain provide our senses of hearing and sight and smell, from which come memory and opinion, and from memory and opinion which has become stable, comes knowledge? | ['do', 'we', 'think', 'with', 'our', 'blood', 'or', 'air', 'or', 'fire', 'or', 'none', 'of', 'these', 'and', 'does', 'the', 'brain', 'provide', 'our', 'senses', 'of', 'hearing', 'and', 'sight', 'and', 'smell', 'from', 'which', 'come', 'memory', 'and', 'opinion', 'and', 'from', 'memory', 'and', 'opinion', 'which', 'has', 'become', 'stable', 'comes', 'knowledge'] | do -PRON- think with -PRON- blood , or air , or fire , or none of these , and do the brain provide -PRON- sense of hearing and sight and smell , from which come memory and opinion , and from memory and opinion which have become stable , come knowledge ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Then again, as I investigated how these things perish and what happens to things in the sky and on the earth, finally I became convinced that I have no natural aptitude at all for that kind of investigation, and of this I will give you sufficient proof. | Then again, as I investigated how these things perish and what happens to things in the sky and on the earth, finally I became convinced that I have no natural aptitude at all for that kind of investigation, and of this I will give you sufficient proof. | -350 | 1,997 | 253 | then again, as i investigated how these things perish and what happens to things in the sky and on the earth, finally i became convinced that i have no natural aptitude at all for that kind of investigation, and of this i will give you sufficient proof. | ['then', 'again', 'as', 'investigated', 'how', 'these', 'things', 'perish', 'and', 'what', 'happens', 'to', 'things', 'in', 'the', 'sky', 'and', 'on', 'the', 'earth', 'finally', 'became', 'convinced', 'that', 'have', 'no', 'natural', 'aptitude', 'at', 'all', 'for', 'that', 'kind', 'of', 'investigation', 'and', 'of', 'this', 'will', 'give', 'you', 'sufficient', 'proof'] | then again , as -PRON- investigate how these thing perish and what happen to thing in the sky and on the earth , finally -PRON- become convinced that -PRON- have no natural aptitude at all for that kind of investigation , and of this -PRON- will give -PRON- sufficient proof . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | This investigation made me quite blind even to those things which I and others thought that I clearly knew before, so that I unlearned what I thought I knew before, about many other things and specifically about how men grew. | This investigation made me quite blind even to those things which I and others thought that I clearly knew before, so that I unlearned what I thought I knew before, about many other things and specifically about how men grew. | -350 | 1,997 | 225 | this investigation made me quite blind even to those things which i and others thought that i clearly knew before, so that i unlearned what i thought i knew before, about many other things and specifically about how men grew. | ['this', 'investigation', 'made', 'me', 'quite', 'blind', 'even', 'to', 'those', 'things', 'which', 'and', 'others', 'thought', 'that', 'clearly', 'knew', 'before', 'so', 'that', 'unlearned', 'what', 'thought', 'knew', 'before', 'about', 'many', 'other', 'things', 'and', 'specifically', 'about', 'how', 'men', 'grew'] | this investigation make -PRON- quite blind even to those thing which -PRON- and other think that -PRON- clearly know before , so that -PRON- unlearn what -PRON- think -PRON- know before , about many other thing and specifically about how man grow . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | I thought before that it was obvious to anybody that men grew Phaedo through eating and drinking, for food adds flesh to flesh and bones to bones, and in the same way appropriate parts were added to all other parts of the body, so that the man grew from an earlier small bulk to a large bulk later, and so a small man became big. | I thought before that it was obvious to anybody that men grew Phaedo through eating and drinking, for food adds flesh to flesh and bones to bones, and in the same way appropriate parts were added to all other parts of the body, so that the man grew from an earlier small bulk to a large bulk later, and so a small man became big. | -350 | 1,997 | 329 | i thought before that it was obvious to anybody that men grew phaedo through eating and drinking, for food adds flesh to flesh and bones to bones, and in the same way appropriate parts were added to all other parts of the body, so that the man grew from an earlier small bulk to a large bulk later, and so a small man became big. | ['thought', 'before', 'that', 'it', 'was', 'obvious', 'to', 'anybody', 'that', 'men', 'grew', 'phaedo', 'through', 'eating', 'and', 'drinking', 'for', 'food', 'adds', 'flesh', 'to', 'flesh', 'and', 'bones', 'to', 'bones', 'and', 'in', 'the', 'same', 'way', 'appropriate', 'parts', 'were', 'added', 'to', 'all', 'other', 'parts', 'of', 'the', 'body', 'so', 'that', 'the', 'man', 'grew', 'from', 'an', 'earlier', 'small', 'bulk', 'to', 'large', 'bulk', 'later', 'and', 'so', 'small', 'man', 'became', 'big'] | -PRON- think before that -PRON- be obvious to anybody that man grow Phaedo through eat and drink , for food add flesh to flesh and bone to bone , and in the same way appropriate part be add to all other part of the body , so that the man grow from an early small bulk to a large bulk later , and so a small man become big . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | That is what I thought then. | That is what I thought then. | -350 | 1,997 | 28 | that is what i thought then. | ['that', 'is', 'what', 'thought', 'then'] | that be what -PRON- think then . |
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