id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt 10214 Taylor, Thomas Introduction to the Philosophy and Writings of Plato .txt text/plain 39282 1484 57 Of all the dogmas of Plato, that concerning the first principle of things subsistence of the things of which it is the principle or cause. Plato, venerably preserving his ineffable exemption from all things, and energy, a multitude of divine natures, according to Plato, immediately In short, with respect to every thing self-subsistent, the summit this with great propriety; for all divine natures, and such things as gods, but Plato in the second place receiving an all-perfect science of nature, but in the first and most excellent causes of all things, which These forms beheld in divine natures possess a fabricative power, but according to nature or art should be prior to the things produced; but life, intellect, soul, nature and body depending; monads suspended from motive of all bodies; it follows that nature must be the cause of things through this the soul, according to Plato, becomes divine, and in another ./cache/10214.txt ./txt/10214.txt