21819 | Plato says the Good produces the Intellectual-Principle, which in turn produces the Soul [Homer, by Plotinus] |
295 | The good is beautiful [Plato] |
391 | The good involves beauty, proportion and truth [Plato] |
392 | Neither intellect nor pleasure are the good, because they are not perfect and self-sufficient [Plato] |
2137 | The main aim is to understand goodness, which gives everything its value and advantage [Plato] |
2139 | Every person, and every activity, aims at the good [Plato] |
4007 | For Plato we abandon honour and pleasure once we see the Good [Plato, by Taylor,C] |
2143 | Good has the same role in the world of knowledge as the sun has in the physical world [Plato] |
2144 | Goodness makes truth and knowledge possible [Plato] |
2147 | The sight of goodness leads to all that is fine and true and right [Plato] |
2164 | Bad is always destructive, where good preserves and benefits [Plato] |
3032 | I can form no notion of what the good is [Amphis] |
20 | The good is 'that at which all things aim' [Aristotle] |
5128 | Each category of existence has its own good, so one Good cannot unite them [Aristotle] |
5129 | There should be one science of the one Good, but there are many overlapping sciences [Aristotle] |
629 | Is the good a purpose, a source of movement, or a pure form? [Aristotle] |
5999 | The good is what is perfect by nature [Diogenes of Babylon, by Blank] |
22754 | Saying the good is useful or choiceworth or happiness-creating is not the good, but a feature of it [Sext.Empiricus] |
11057 | It is always an open question whether anything that is natural is good [Moore,GE] |
5921 | We can ask of pleasure or beauty whether they are valuable, but not of goodness [Ross] |
23808 | There are two goods - the absolute good we want, and the reachable opposite of evil [Weil] |
23833 | The good is a nothingness, and yet real [Weil] |
22489 | 'Good' is an attributive adjective like 'large', not predicative like 'red' [Geach, by Foot] |
21891 | The good is implicitly violent (against evil), so there is no pure good [Derrida] |