My first thought, without actually knowing the answer to your question, is that maybe the Loeb Classical Library has their own numbering system, which would mean you would need their relevant volume of Plato.
But why don't you tell us what pages the references are on, and I will take a look in my Loeb Xenophon and see if I can figure out what they are? Unfortunately, though, I do not have Plato in the Loeb edition, so I expect I will not be able to help you test my initial idea. But I might be able to figure something out.
But why don't you tell us what pages the references are on, and I will take a look in my Loeb Xenophon and see if I can figure out what they are? Unfortunately, though, I do not have Plato in the Loeb edition, so I expect I will not be able to help you test my initial idea. But I might be able to figure something out.
"A wise man ... proportions his belief to the evidence."
— David Hume, An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding, Section X, Part I.