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Passages similar to: The Republic — Book IV
Source passage
Greek
The Republic
Book IV (437)
Well, I said, would you not allow that assent and dissent, desire and aversion, attraction and repulsion, are all of them opposites, whether they are regarded as active or passive (for that makes no difference in the fact of their opposition)? Yes, he said, they are opposites. Well, I said, and hunger and thirst, and the desires in general, and again willing and wishing,—all these you would refer to the classes already mentioned. You would say—would you not?—that the soul of him who desires is seeking after the object of his desire; or that he is drawing to himself the thing which he wishes to possess: or again, when a person wants anything to be given him, his mind, longing for the realization of his desire, intimates his wish to have it by a nod of assent, as if he had been asked a question? Very true. And what would you say of unwillingness and dislike and the absence of desire; should not these be referred to the opposite class of repulsion and rejection? Certainly. Admitting this to be true of desire generally, let us suppose a particular class of desires, and out of these we will select hunger and thirst, as they are termed, which are the most obvious of them? Let us take that class, he said. The object of one is food, and of the other drink? Yes. And here comes the point: is not thirst the desire which the soul has of drink, and of drink only; not of drink qualified by anything else; for example, warm or cold, or much or little, or, in a word, drink of any particular sort: but if the
Neoplatonic
CHAP. XXXI. (9)
With respect to what is called desire, these men are said to have asserted as follows: That desire indeed, itself, is a certain tendency, impulse,...
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Neoplatonic
Problems of the Soul (2) (20-21)
As with bodily pain and pleasure so with the bodily desires; their origin, also, must be attributed to what thus stands midway, to that Nature we...
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Neoplatonic
The Impassivity of the Unembodied (3)
Sorrow, too, and anger and pleasure, desire and fear- are these not changes, affectings, present and stirring within the Soul? This question cannot be...
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Neoplatonic
The Animate and the Man (5)
Now this Animate might be merely the body as having life: it might be the Couplement of Soul and body: it might be a third and different entity...
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Neoplatonic
PYTHAGORIC ETHICAL SENTENCES FROM STOBÆUS, Which are omitted in the Opuscula Mythologica, &c. of Gale. (14)
Of desire also, he [i. e. Pythagoras] said as follows: This passion is various, laborious, and very multiform. Of desires however, some are acquired...
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Neoplatonic
The Impassivity of the Unembodied (2)
Let us begin with virtue and vice in the Soul. What has really occurred when, as we say, vice is present? In speaking of extirpating evil and...
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Neoplatonic
The Animate and the Man (1-2)
Pleasure and distress, fear and courage, desire and aversion, where have these affections and experiences their seat? Clearly, either in the Soul...
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Neoplatonic
How the Multiplicity of the Ideal-forms Came Into Being: and Upon the Good (20)
Since we are not entitled to make desire the test by which to decide on the nature and quality of the good, we may perhaps have recourse to...
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Neoplatonic
The Animate and the Man (4)
Let us consider, then, the hypothesis of a coalescence. Now if there is a coalescence, the lower is ennobled, the nobler degraded; the body is raised...
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Neoplatonic
The Soul's Descent Into Body (8)
The object of the Intellectual Act comes within our ken only when it reaches downward to the level of sensation: for not all that occurs at any part o...
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Neoplatonic
Problems of the Soul (2) (28)
Thus much established, we may return on our path: we have to discuss the seat of the passionate element in the human being. Pleasures and pains- the...
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Neoplatonic
Problems of the Soul (2) (18)
There remains the question whether the body possesses any force of its own- so that, with the incoming of the soul, it lives in some individuality-...
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