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A New Wave (X)

       
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Phaedo

By: Plato

... Phaedo by Plato, Trans. Benjamin Jowett is a publication of the Pennsylvania State University. This Portable Documen... ...ronic Classics Series, Jim Manis, Faculty Editor, Hazleton, PA 18201 1291 is a Portable Document File produced as part of an ongoing student publicati... ...ett INTRODUCTION AFTER AN INTERVAL of some months or years, and at Phlius, a town of Peloponnesus, the tale of the last hours of Socrates is narrate... ...the cause of all things, surely mind must dispose them all for the best. The new teacher will show me this ‘order of the best’ in man and nature. How ... ...t had been his hopes and how great his disappointment! For he found that his new friend was anything but consis tent in his use of mind as a cause, a... ...and passes into and forms the lake Styx, from the wa ters of which it gains new and strange powers. This river, too, falls into Tartarus. The dead ar... ...ich they are compelled to undergo for a year, but at the end of the year the wave casts them forth—mere homicides by way of Cocytus, parricides and ma...

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Notes from the Underground

By: Fyodor Dostoyevsky

...tes from the Underground by Fyodor Dostoevsky, trans. Constance Garnett is a publication of the Pennsylvania State University. This Portable Documen... ...onic Classics Series , Jim Manis, Faculty Editor, Hazleton, PA 18201 1291 is a Portable Document File produced as part of an ongoing student publicati... ...ne of the characters of the recent past. He is one of the representatives of a generation still living. In this fragment, entitled “Underground,” this... ...des ache. Of course the only thing left for it is to dismiss all that with a wave of its paw, and, with a smile of assumed contempt in which it does n... ...again—that is, to beat the wall as hard as you can. So you give it up with a wave of the hand because you have not found a fundamental cause. And try ... ... no more incidents or adventures in the world. Then—this is all what you say—new economic relations will be established, all ready made and worked out... ...ject and to engage in engineering—that is, incessantly and eternally to make new roads, wherever they may lead. But the reason why he wants Notes from... ...y would be if they did not), while I should go barefoot and hungry preaching new ideas and fighting a victorious Austerlitz against the obscurantists....

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