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  • '''Plato''' ('''Πλάτων''', c. 428/7-348/7 <span style= Plato was born, studied, taught, and died in Athens, albeit with some travelling
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  • 246 bytes (28 words) - 15:41, 28 December 2008
  • *Biffle, Christopher. A Guided Tour of Five Works By Plato. Mountain View, CA: Mayfield Publishing Co., 2001.ISBN 0-7674-1033-5 *Cairns, Huntington and Edith Hamilton, ed. The Collected Dialogues of Plato. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1961. Library of Congress Catal
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  • ...Diogenes Lærtius, who cited Plato himself for the arrangements.<ref>http://plato-dialogues.org/works.htm</ref> | title = Plato: Complete Works
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  • {{r|Alcibades (dialogue of Plato)}} {{r|Apology (dialogue of Plato)}}
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  • *[http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/plato-ethics-politics/ “Plato’s Ethics and Politics in the Republic.” Tue 1 Apr, 2003. Stanford Unive *[http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/plato/ “Plato.” 2004. Stanford University. Nov 14, 2007.]
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  • '''The Symposium''' is one of [[Plato]]'s middle dialogues, and is widely considered to be a masterpiece of the d ...logues.org/faq/faq007.htm Frequently Asked Questions about Plato - Quoting Plato: Stephanus references].</ref>). Eventually, Socrates arrives halfway throug
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  • A philosophical text by Plato dated circa 385 BC, which concerns itself at one level with the genesis, pu
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  • ...title. The ''Republic'' is one of a number of texts which allow us to see Plato's [[ethics|ethical]] and [[political philosophy|political]] positions, albe ...riticize Plato as anti-democratic. Others, such as [[Alan Bloom]], believe Plato did not think such an ideal city could exist in practice, and the city in s
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  • 12 bytes (1 word) - 16:38, 31 March 2008
  • {{r|Plato}}
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Page text matches

  • {{r|Alcibades (dialogue of Plato)}} {{r|Apology (dialogue of Plato)}}
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  • ...c.co.uk/history/ancient/greeks/atlantis_01.shtml BBC - History - Echoes of Plato's Atlantis] *[http://skeptically.org/skepticism/id3.html Atlantis: Plato's Mythic Tale]
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  • The Forms are Plato's explanation of the ultimate nature of reality.
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  • ...century) Little known Christian who translated the first part (to 53c) of Plato's ''Timaeus'' from Greek into Latin around the year 321 and provided with i
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  • *Biffle, Christopher. A Guided Tour of Five Works By Plato. Mountain View, CA: Mayfield Publishing Co., 2001.ISBN 0-7674-1033-5 *Cairns, Huntington and Edith Hamilton, ed. The Collected Dialogues of Plato. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1961. Library of Congress Catal
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  • The name traditionally associated with Plato's philosophy school just north of Athens; thought by some sources to have b
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  • ...a residential facility not unlike a present-day research institute. E.g., Plato's Academy and Aristotle's Lyceum.
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  • A dialogue of [[Plato]]
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  • A dialogue of [[Plato]].
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  • A dialogue of [[Plato]].
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  • A dialogue by [[Plato]].
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  • #REDIRECT [[The Republic (dialogue of Plato)]]
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  • #REDIRECT [[The Republic (dialogue of Plato)/Approval]]
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  • ...n [[Greece]] around 400 BC. The best known examples are the dialogues of [[Plato]] and the Socratic works of [[Xenophon]]. Typical of the genre are the dial ...ophical questioning is known as ''the Socratic method''. In some dialogues Plato's main character is not Socrates but someone from outside of [[Athens]]. In
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  • {{r|The Republic (dialogue of Plato)}} {{r|Plato}}
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  • * Apology of Socrates, by Plato. http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Apology * Bruell, Christopher (1994), “On Plato’s Political Philosophy.” [[Review of Politics]] 56: 261-82.
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  • ...lances (262b).<ref name=Phaedrus>{{cite book|author=Plato|title=Plato I of Plato|publisher=Harvard University Press |year=1914|id=ISBN 13: 978-0-674-99040-1 According to Plato, the difference between the philosopher who deals in such image-making in o
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  • According to Plato, an individual who does not love, or seek, wisdom because he already has wi
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  • As stated by [[Plato]], spiritual, as opposed to reasoning or desiring, part of the [[soul]]
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  • ...ment of political ideas over time since the discovery of [[politics]] in [[Plato]], [[Confucius]] and [[Mencius]].
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  • '''The Symposium''' is one of [[Plato]]'s middle dialogues, and is widely considered to be a masterpiece of the d ...logues.org/faq/faq007.htm Frequently Asked Questions about Plato - Quoting Plato: Stephanus references].</ref>). Eventually, Socrates arrives halfway throug
    2 KB (363 words) - 15:07, 7 December 2009
  • ...uated off the [[Straits of Gibraltar]], first mentioned in literature in [[Plato]]'s dialogues ''Timaeus'' and ''Critias''.
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  • ...Diogenes Lærtius, who cited Plato himself for the arrangements.<ref>http://plato-dialogues.org/works.htm</ref> | title = Plato: Complete Works
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  • ...nized as the equal of other people", or ''[[dignity]]''; a refinement of [[Plato]]'s definition of [[thymos]]
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  • A term coined by Francis Fukuyama, building on [[Plato]]'s concept of the spiritual part of the soul, which drives tyrannical ambi
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  • A philosophical text by Plato dated circa 385 BC, which concerns itself at one level with the genesis, pu
    212 bytes (33 words) - 07:40, 4 January 2010
  • ...Forms''' provides Plato's explanation of the nature of [[Reality]]. In it, Plato upholds the distinction between what is most Real and [[sensibility]], the ...on. As such, they do not exist 'in themselves' and are not self-moving, as Plato believes, in the case of the [[soul]]. The Forms exist in themselves, and n
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  • * [[Plato]] - ''Parmenides'' * [[Plato]] - ''Republic''
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  • ...is]] and [[Athens]] which according to legend took place 9000 years before Plato's time. ...saw it and punished Atlantis... The story ends abruptly here. According to Plato's [[Timaeus (dialogue)|Timaeus]] the island was swallowed by the sea, makin
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  • In [[Plato|Plato's]] early dialogues, the '''elenchus''' is the technique [[Socrates]] uses
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  • ...Ancient Philosophy]] series and author of numerous books and articles on [[Plato]], [[Aristotle]] and other topics in ancient philosophy.
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  • ...on) #2] [http://books.google.com/books?id=6x9HAAAAIAAJ&q=plato+republic&dq=plato+republic&hl=en&sa=X&ei=pU6FUf2fKcvC4AO0qYGABw&ved=0CDwQ6AEwAg| GoogleBooks]
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  • ...y corresponding to what we would call a property, like Goodness or Beauty. Plato believed that the only true knowledge was knowledge of these unchanging ide
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  • * 1976: [http://www.platopeople.com/emoticons.html PLATO emoticons] Character overstriking patterns
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  • {{r|Plato}}
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  • * [[Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy]], [http://plato.stanord.edu online] * Plato. ''[[The Apology of Socrates|Apology]]''
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  • {{r|Plato}}
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  • ...n aporia about the examined concept, that he does not know what it is. In Plato's ''[[Meno]]'' (84), Socrates describes the purgative effect of reducing so
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  • {{r|Plato}}
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  • ...title. The ''Republic'' is one of a number of texts which allow us to see Plato's [[ethics|ethical]] and [[political philosophy|political]] positions, albe ...riticize Plato as anti-democratic. Others, such as [[Alan Bloom]], believe Plato did not think such an ideal city could exist in practice, and the city in s
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  • ...figures of ancient philosophy are the [[Athens|Athenians]] [[Socrates]], [[Plato]] and [[Aristotle]]. But before Socrates, there were plenty of other philos ...bed the tradition of Western philosophy as being a "series of footnotes to Plato"<ref>Whitehead, ''Process and Reality'' (1929).</ref>. [[Bernard Williams]]
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  • ...to]], he said that Earth and Love were the first gods born of Chaos.<ref>[[Plato]], ''Symposium'' [http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?lookup=Plat.+S
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  • {{r|The Republic (dialogue of Plato)}}
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  • ...f [[Proclus]] and the teacher of [[Damascius]]. He wrote a commentary on [[Plato]]'s ''Timaeus'', now lost.<ref>''[[Suda]]'', [http://www.stoa.org/sol-bin/s
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  • {{r|Plato}}
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  • ...he Ship of Theseus: The Immortality of the Soul as a Political Teaching in Plato's P̲h̲a̲e̲d̲o̲
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  • {{r|Plato}}
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  • ...t have effects, the very concept of primary causes would be meaningless. [[Plato]], in the ''[[Phaedo]]'', drew a distinction between ''efficient causes'' a ...to God, or the [[Demiurge]] (the sense of divine creative purpose which [[Plato]] describes in the ''[[Timaeus]]'').
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  • ...nt of knowledge as being justified true belief. This account originated in Plato's ''[[Theaetetus]]'' and the ''[[Meno]]''; Gettier cited Roderick Chisholm'
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  • ...outside North America as ''Life's Grandeur: The Spread of Excellence From Plato to Darwin'' ISBN 0099893606) [http://www.simonyi.ox.ac.uk/dawkins/WorldOfDa
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  • {{r|Plato}}
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  • ...what things exist, and what existence implies.<ref name=Lawson/> [http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/quine/ Quine] has called the question ‘What is there ...my nose and the Eiffel tower'?<ref name=Putnam/> Another confusion called 'Plato's beard' considers whether a statement like 'Pegasus is a flying horse' imp
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  • Like more historical accounts by [[Herodotus]], [[Plato]], and [[Xenophon]], the playwright shows Socrates as a moral individual ch .... The presence or mention of Socrates' most well-known students such as [[Plato]], [[Antisthenes]], [[Zeno of Citium]], and others is replaced by unnamed d
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  • ...[Abdera]]. In the [[Protagoras (dialogue)|dialogue]] with the same name, [[Plato]] calls him the first of the Sophists, because Protagoras accepted payment ...ed from Athens, and on his way to [[Sicily]] was lost at sea. According to Plato (Prot., 318 E), he endeavoured to communicate "prudence" (6130vXia) to his
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  • {{r|Plato}}
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  • :Works (approximately 0 words): No extant writings, but the ''Apology'' of Plato is alleged to be a record of an actual speech of Socrates {{Plato}}
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  • {{r|The Republic (dialogue of Plato)}}
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  • {{rpl|Plato}}
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  • ...does not love, or seek, wisdom because he already has wisdom. According to Plato, there are two categories of beings who do not do philosophy ...ed an important part in [[Stoicism|Stoic]] philosophy that developed after Plato.<ref>[[Pierre Hadot]], ''What is Ancient Philosophy?'',p.39-45</ref>
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  • {{r|Plato}}
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  • ...orgias''' is an important [[Socratic dialogue]] of the Greek philosopher [[Plato]] in which Gorgias the [[Rhetorics|rhetorician]], specializing in persuasio
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  • ...ion of an account (''logos'')."<ref>Plato, ''Theatetus,'' 201d. Actually, Plato has Theatetus report something that he remembered: "I had forgotten but now * [[Plato]]. ''Meno''
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  • ...an also mean the body of published thoughts of a particular person, as in "Plato's thought."
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  • ...sible for someone who really knows doing something is wrong to still do it.Plato himself rejected this view, arguing that desires can sometimes overwhelm th
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  • ...[[Greece]], whose ''Republic'' greatly influenced later political thought. Plato's student, [[Aristotle]], further systematized the study of politics in phi ===Plato and Aristotle===
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  • ...ology|philologist]] [[Paul Friedlander]]. His dissertation was on "[[Plato|Plato's]] dialectical [[ethics]]", and was submitted in 1928. In the same year, h
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  • *Academic: Named after [[Plato]]'s Academy, it is the philosophy that nothing can be known for certain.
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  • ...noted during the [[Middle Ages]] for his annotated translation of [[Plato|Plato's]] [[Timaeus]] into Latin, a translation that he dedicated to [[Osius]], [ ...is translation became an important tool for understanding the doctrines of Plato. Calcidius's work seems not to have been much recognized in his own day, bu
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  • {{r|Plato}}
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  • ...ch]], throughout Europe. In his dialogue ''The Republic'', the philosopher Plato cites the aristocratic rule of Philosopher-kings as the most just form of g
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  • The '''Euthyphro dilemma''' is found in [[Plato]]'s dialogue ''[[Euthyphro]]'', in which [[Socrates]] asks Euthyphro: "is w == The dilemma in Plato ==
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  • ...ld eventually end back during Plato's lifetime or whenever Plato was named Plato. Kripke notes that sometimes things may be named in a [[contingency|conting
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  • ...as interested in the classics and literature and his dissertation was on [[Plato]]'s ''[[Philebus]]''. His move into analytic philosophy was under the direc
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  • {{r|Plato}}
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  • ..., 1860) was a German philosopher whose [[philosophy]] was influenced by [[Plato]], [[Immanuel Kant]] and the teachings of the [[Upanishads]]. He had an out ...itself,' a view that informs and directs the place Schopenhauer accords to Plato's Forms as well the ontological structure that Schopenhauer assigns to 'wor
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  • {{r|Plato}}
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  • ...y of scientific organizations and institutions#Aristotle's Lyceum|Academy (Plato)]]
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  • ...(beautiful and good) was the standard description of the Homeric heroes. [[Plato]] also linked beauty to truth, generating the historic philosophical trilog ...mirror of the object contemplated; or indeed even identical with it. Like, Plato, Schopenhauer believed that in art we see the universal in the particular:
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  • *Plato ''Euthyphro'', in ''Euthyphro, Apology of Socrates, Crito'', edited with no *Plato ''Euthyphro'', in ''The Last Days of Socrates'', translated and introduced
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  • ==Plato's Noble Lie== :(Plato: The Republic Book III, Project Gutenberg)
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  • ...notable classical western thinkers on the subject have been [[Socrates]]/[[Plato]], [[Aristotle]], [[Epictetus]], [[Augustine of Hippo]], [[Thomas Aquinas|A ...is seen in the argument of [[legal positivism]]<ref>{{cite web |url=http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/legal-positivism/ |title=Legal Positivism |last=Green
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  • '''Plato''' ('''Πλάτων''', c. 428/7-348/7 <span style= Plato was born, studied, taught, and died in Athens, albeit with some travelling
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  • ...ates]], as seen from the writings of [[Xenophon]], [[Aristophanes]], and [[Plato]].<ref>[[Julia Watkin]], ''Kierkegaard'', Outstanding Christian Thinkers Se ...' to be the most accurate representation of the man. Whereas Xenophon and Plato portrayed Socrates seriously, Kierkegaard felt that Aristophanes best under
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  • ...eprint 1959) [http://www.questia.com/library/book/the-political-thought-of-plato-and-aristotle-by-e-barker.jsp online at [[Questia]]] **[http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/aristotle-biology/ ''Aristotle's biology'' by James Le
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  • ...a long history of scholars and philosophers--since at least the time of [[Plato]]--who have worked to situate human behaviour in a social context. Thus whi
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  • ...t is only possible for the [[soul]] [Ψυχή]. In the myth of the charioteer, Plato argues, ''"For a human being must understand a general conception formed by ...lar biological traits. It is a trait of sensible reality to be changeable. Plato holds to the idea of an unchangeable reality that underlies the world of ex
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  • '''Protagoras''' is one of the early dialogues of [[Plato]], where the celebrated philosopher [[Socrates]] and the sophist Protagoras
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  • ...of [[Jesus Christ]] and responding to the [[heresy|heretical]] views of [[Plato|Platonists]], [[Gnosticism|gnostics]] and pagans. The writers of these work
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  • The ''Phaedrus'' is a dialogue written by Plato that recounts a conversation between Socrates and Phaedrus outside the city ...s, Phaedrus gives the speech about the non-lover. (See Phaedrus' speech in Plato's ''Symposium''.) Upon hearing it, Socrates has some objections to the arr
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  • *1996. Full House: The Spread of Excellence From Plato to Darwin. New York: Harmony Books.
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  • ...ato gravity]]: This scale was developed in 1918 by [[Fritz Plato|Dr. Fritz Plato]] , a German scientist. It is primarily used in the beer brewing industry a ...g and correcting Balling's original work. Basically, the Balling, Brix and Plato scales are identical up to the fifth and sixth decimal place.<ref>{{cite bo
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  • ...the Athenian philosophical school associated with the Greek philosopher [[Plato]]. The term is also variously applied to contemporary schools, colleges and Plato's dialogues, and to a lesser extent Aristotle's writings, have conveyed to
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  • ...y a [[natural disaster]] (probably an earthquake) about 9,000 years before Plato's own time. ...ossibly intended to illustrate Plato's philosophy on the ideal government. Plato's account purports to be based on a visit to [[Egypt]] by the Athenian lawg
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  • ...the "Greater Harmony"-- the synthesis and reconciliation of Aristotle and Plato.<ref>''Cambridge Companion to Arabic Philosophy'', p. 97.</ref>
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  • ...rts a long-standing view that Aristotle left Athens following the death of Plato after not being named to head the Academy, and opened his own philosophica ...s to open his own philosophical school, which we know as the Lyceum. Like Plato's Academy, the Lyceum was probably located outside Athens, a short distance
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  • ...the ''Ahlu l-Tawhīd'' or [[Druze]] religion along with his fellow Greek, [[Plato]]. == Influence on Plato ==
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  • ...niversal to exist even if no particulars hold that universal. According to Plato, the Forms have a non-physical existence - that even if we were to destroy ...that the argument in Plato that one needs uninstantiated universals (or in Plato's language "Forms") can be understood in a number of different ways. Firstl
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  • ...were familiar to a great part of the Athenian people." Hugh Tredennick, ''Plato: The Last Days of Socrates'', ...hers in general (the two are portrayed as friendly in Plato's [[Symposium (Plato)|''Symposium'']]), and does not purport to be a factual account of events i
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  • ...''Writing and Difference''), [[Rousseau]] (in ''Of Grammatology''), and [[Plato]] (in ''Dissemination''), Derrida does not attempt a comprehensive philosop
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  • # [[Plato, Magdalena|Plato]] The [[Zapatosa Marsh]], located in the municipality of [[El Plato]] in the southernmost part of the department, is shared with the [[Departme
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  • *[[Plato]]
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  • ...s the 4th and 5th centuries BC. This is the language of [[Demosthenes]], [[Plato]] and [[Thucydides]]. [[Ionic]] is a dialect that was most famously used by
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  • ...cepted this definition, although they by no means always valued leisure as Plato and Aristotle did (Sylvester, 1999). Thus, leisure was particularly scorned
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  • ...n Augustus Eberhard]], from whom he acquired a love of the philosophy of [[Plato]] and [[Aristotle]]. At the same time he studied the writings of [[Immanuel ...sis on human emotion and the imagination. Meanwhile he studied Spinoza and Plato, both of whom were important influences. He became more indebted to Kant, t
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  • ...but of those nothing remained except for short quotations in Aristotle, [[Plato]], [[Clement of Alexandria]], [[Philostratus]] and Pausanias.
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  • ...f Sinope]] (c. 412-323 BC) is the best known representative of cynicism. [[Plato]] called Diogenes, who came to Athens after being exiled from Sinope "Socra
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  • ...ypical of families, or even as a form of intense friendship described as [[Plato|platonic love]].<ref name="PlatonicSchool">{{cite book |last=Kristeller |fi ...nd the soul and directs ones attention to spiritual things. According to [[Plato]], [[Socrates]] claimed that the only thing he knew was "the art of love."<
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  • ...ientific research. Its three most famous philosophers were [[Socrates]], [[Plato]] and [[Aristotle]].
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  • ...h as the [[morpheme]], which remain highly relevant in modern research and Plato in ''Cratylus'' wonders whether language has a ''natural'' or ''conventiona
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  • (named after the Greek philosopher [[Plato]])
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  • * ''Plato, The Banquet (or Symposium)'' - translation from [[Plato]] (1818)
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  • ...r|philosopher]] of the fourth century BCE, was born just in time to know [[Plato]], another influential philosopher, and worked on many diverse subjects wit ===Plato's Academy===
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  • *Tredennick H. (1954). Plato, The last days of socrates. The apology, crito, and phaedo translated with *Smith CU. (2010). The triune brain in antiquity: Plato, Aristotle, Erasistratus. J Hist Neurosci 19: 1-14
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  • ...losophy" would be to explain that it is the main subject of the works of [[Plato]], [[Aristotle]], [[Confucius]], [[Lao Tse]], [[Augustine of Hippo|Augustin ...e can describe the distinctive techniques of philosophy: what is it that [[Plato]], [[René Descartes|Descartes]], ''et al.'' do in their discussions of met
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  • ...t the real Socrates was concerned with cosmology; the early dialogues of [[Plato]], which are usually held to be heavily influenced by Socrates himself, as
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  • ...onal and incapable of political participation (although some, most notably Plato, disagreed). Methods used to determine whether someone could be a citizen o
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  • ...istian dogma rather than the disinterested detachment of [[Socrates]] or [[Plato]].<ref> from the entry on Aquinas by Colin Kirk in 'Essentials of Philosoph Aquinas made common ground with St. Augustine and [[Plato]] to achieve the fundamental principle of his teaching, namely that faith a
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  • ...mes only when enough people put aside the illusions of opinion, (echoes of Plato) and confine themselves to logical deduction from observed phenomena. This
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  • }}</ref> It's a bunch of guys vying in a contest to win the [[Plato|Platonic]] affection of ''The Hills'' TV star Brody Jenner.<ref name=twsMAR ...e depicting students at the Academy.|Did Aristotle have a ''man crush'' on Plato?]]
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  • 428 [[Plato]] (428-347) Athenian philosopher, recorder of Socratic dialogue and critic 384 [[Aristotle]] (384-322) pupil of Plato, author of ''The Politics''
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  • ...that led to criticism of the model both from its contemporaries<ref>See [[Plato]]</ref> and revisionists in the present.
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  • *[http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1497/1497-h/1497-h.htm Plato: ''The Republic'', Project Gutenberg]
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  • ...opic. The historical usage of the word is also relevant. There are uses by Plato, Aristotle (who calls Hesiod & Homer theologians), other Greek philosophers
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  • ...tation was not uncontroversial among the classical Greeks: [[Plato]]<ref>[[Plato]], ''Symposium'' [http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?lookup=Plat.+S
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  • ...and Bill of Rights, the [[Magna Carta]] and in the philosophical work of [[Plato]], [[Aristotle]] and [[Thomas Aquinas]]. From the rule of law come other de
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  • ...ansport; some of the tools of science were already well established, and [[Plato]] (c. 427–347 BCE) mentions the teaching of arithmetic, astronomy and geo Plato's pupil, [[Aristotle]] (384–322 BCE) is regarded as the originator of man
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  • ...cally in the 6th century. The earliest list, accepted by the philosopher [[Plato]], did not satisfy later writers, who expanded it to ten and even 17 to acc
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  • * Press, G. A. (2000). Who speaks for Plato? : studies in Platonic anonymity. Lanham, Md.: Rowman & Littlefield. * Press, G. A. (2007). Plato : a guide for the perplexed. London ; New York: Continuum.
    12 KB (1,650 words) - 11:22, 9 March 2008
  • ...and space- ascend Jacob's ladder, enter the World of True Forms, of which Plato spoke. 'There we shall behold the archetypes, it is the Absolute Mind, the
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  • [[Plato]] (c.430-347 BCE), the chronicler of Socrates' discussions, described his o
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  • ...tion to the problem of universals was to posit a realm of ''forms'', which Plato was a realist about - he thought they existed outside of people's minds. Fo * [[Plato]]
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  • ...hilosophy, standing them on their heads. In his ''Symposium'', far from [[Plato]]'s original vision of philosophical discourse, the diners get drunk, tell
    8 KB (1,175 words) - 12:34, 11 June 2009
  • ...een divinely bestowed. Plato's pupil, [[Aristotle]] disagreed. He regarded Plato's Republic as the negation of politics, arguing that "man is by nature a po ...cepted Plato's authoritarianism, and its extension by Plotinus<ref>[http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/plotinus/ ''Plotinus'', Stanford Encyclopedia of Philo
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  • :: - the philosophy of [[Plato]] and [[Aristotle]] and the concept of [[democracy]] as a system of governm ...of [[Augustine of Hippo]] and the other patristic philosophers<ref>[http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/medieval-philosophy/ ''Medieval Philosophy'', Stanford
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  • ...t we are still at the very heart of today. Hegel, by this fact, is ''our'' Plato: the one who delimits - ideologically or scientifically, positively or nega
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  • ...l reach its destination – the good – is if the navigator takes charge.<ref>Plato, ''Republic'' trans. Robin Waterfield (Oxford: OUP, 1994).</ref> * [[Plato]], ''Republic'' trans. Robin Waterfield (Oxford: OUP, 1994).
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  • ...]], where he began teaching. Besides extensive classical studies including Plato and Aristotle, he studied Rudolph Agricola, William of Ockham, John Wessel,
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  • [[T. L. Heath]] had to explain: "By arithmetic Plato meant, not arithmetic ...nidis (ed.), Classics in the History of Greek Mathematics, Kluwer, 2004. [[Plato]] reports on further work by Theodorus on
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  • ...homeopathy, which lies on the law of similars. It should be reminded that Plato, when he conceived the notion of Ideas, was also referring to the notion of ...ersion of morphogenetic fields, called morphic fields, a notion not unlike Plato's Ideas.
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  • ...y to astrology as well as astronomy. Following the ideas developed by both Plato and Socrates, he believed that the cosmos was governed by the "anima," or s
    8 KB (1,261 words) - 18:46, 9 August 2010
  • ...arly Pythagoreans (pre-[[Theodorus of Cyrene|Theodorus]]).<ref name="Thea">Plato, ''Theaetetus'', p. 147 B, cited means, by and large, ''Plato'' and ''Euclid'', respectively.
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  • ...'Autobiography of a Yogi'', Yogananda mentions that the famous philosopher Plato had a whole essay about Atlantis and its advanced state of scientific knowl
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  • ...ible with office holders using public power for personal gain.<ref>[http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/humanism-civic/ Civic Humanism] Stanford Encyclopedia ...er when seen through the eyes of modern political science (see [[Republic (Plato)]]). Some scholars have translated the Greek concept of "[[politeia]]" as "
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  • ...ölderlin]] and [[Friedrich Schelling]], and read [[Immanuel Kant|Kant]], [[Plato]], [[Jean-Jacques Rousseau]] and many other philosophers of his own accord.
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  • ...ut, of course, illusion is not a trick of sight but question of belief and Plato condemned the Greek theatre saying it engender belief.
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  • ...of the [[civic friendship]]s of the citizen class. Plato's [[The Republic (Plato)|Republic]] and [[Politics (Aristotle)|Aristotle's Politics]], individually ...century BCE by [[Plato]] <ref>[http://classics.mit.edu/Plato/republic.html Plato ''The Republic'']</ref>, and it has since taken a variety of different form
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  • ...o bring gods onto the stage from above,<ref name="Greek mêchanê sources">[[Plato]], ''Cratylus'' 425d; ''Clitophon'' 407a</ref> hence the Latin term [[Deus
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  • ...representing his belief in knowledge through empirical observation, while Plato points to the heavens, showing his belief in the ultimate truth.]] ...operties' in the ''Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy'' online at [http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/properties-emergent/] for explicit discussion; See als
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  • ...s the 4th and 5th centuries BC. This is the language of [[Demosthenes]], [[Plato]] and [[Thucydides]]. [[Ionic]] is a dialect that was most famously used by
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  • <tr><th>Dimanche<th>28<td>[[Muhammad]]<td>[[Virgil]]<td>[[Plato]]<td>[[Pliny the Elder]]<td>[[Trajan]]
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  • ...turned to life and told them what he had seen in the other world."'' (from Plato, The Republic) ...of [[Plato]] who wrote about the ''Myth of Er''.<ref name="urlMyth of Er (Plato, Republic X)">{{cite web
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  • ...mental, and was how the founders of distinct traditions of logic, namely [[Plato]], [[Aristotle]], [[Mozi]] and [[Aksapada Gautama]], conceived of logic. M ...logic and philosophy goes back to the ancient Greeks such as [[Euclid]], [[Plato]], and [[Aristotle]]. Many other ancient and medieval philosophers applied
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  • ...ing that the sphere was the most perfect form. This idea was embraced by [[Plato]] and [[Aristotle]] who presented empirical evidence to verify this. He not
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  • ...www.gutenberg.org/etext/1591 The Project Gutenberg Etext of Protagoras, by Plato.]</ref> ...www.gutenberg.org/etext/1591 The Project Gutenberg Etext of Protagoras, by Plato.]'''</span></center>
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  • | [[Plato]], [[Aristotle]], [[Anselm of Canterbury|Anselm]], [[Thomas Aquinas|Aquinas
    17 KB (2,634 words) - 18:36, 19 March 2010
  • ...sics it attained some prominence when [[Christian von Wolffe]]<ref>[http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/wolff-christian/ Christian Wolff] Hettche, Matt (2006) ...l world (mathematics and subjects common to physics) up till the time of [[Plato]]. One of the earliest works, [[Hesiod]]'s ''Theogony'', written about 725
    46 KB (7,449 words) - 19:49, 26 October 2020
  • ...it to the earliest Western political philosophy.<ref>pp. xvi-xviii</ref> [[Plato]] wrote there were three parts to the soul:
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  • The Euthyphro dilemma is found in [[Plato]]'s dialogue ''[[Euthyphro]]'', in which [[Socrates]] asks Euthyphro: "Is t
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  • This image occurs from ancient to modern times, in [[Aristotle]] and [[Plato]]; in [[Virgil]] and [[Seneca]]; in [[Erasmus]] and [[Shakespeare]]; [[Tols
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  • ...cs of Reproduction. In: Engendering Origins: Critical Feminist Readings in Plato and Aristotle. Bat-Ami Bar On (editor). State University of New York Press. ...of the causes of complex natural things,<ref>Andrea Falcon (2006) [http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/aristotle-causality/ ''Aristotle on Causality'']</ref>
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  • ...an official representative of a city-state. The concept later became what Plato and Aristotle taught us to think of as "theory," but it had a very differen
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  • ...times translate ''atheos'' as "atheistic", such as in Plato's ''[[Apology (Plato)|Apology]]'' (26c). As an abstract noun, there was also ''{{polytonic|ἀθ ...[apologetics]]. A diversity of atheist opinion has been documented since [[Plato]], and common distinctions have been established between ''practical atheis
    85 KB (12,669 words) - 11:50, 2 February 2023
  • ...as a just ruler. In ''[[The Republic (dialogue of Plato)|The Republic]]'', Plato discusses the ideal form of government, which he says is rule by a perfect ...peaking descendants continued to study it. As a result books by Aristotle, Plato, and Plotinus were translated into Arabic, often by Jews or Christians, and
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  • '''[[Plato|Plâto]]
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  • ...in patients with a planned invasive strategy for acute coronary syndromes (PLATO): a randomised double-blind study]</ref>
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  • In the centuries before [[Socrates]], [[Plato]] and Aristotle, astronomy was concerned with keeping time. The ancient obs ...iography in Dictionary of Scientific Biography (New York 1970-1990) citing Plato’s Erastae in [http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Biographies/Oen
    51 KB (8,075 words) - 05:28, 17 October 2013
  • ...ren't all exactly the same--> is also present in [[Plato]]'s ''[[Republic (Plato)|Republic]]'', Wagner's Ring Cycle, and in the story of [[Ring of Gyges|Gyg
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  • * [[Plato]]
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  • ...stance of a [http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/duhem/ Duhem], or a [http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/popper/ Popper], or a [[Model-dependent realism|Hawkin ...ithout those examples the ideal circle simply would not exist. See [http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/universals-medieval/ this discussion] about "instantia
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  • ...one form of the dualism between spirit and flesh that has its origin in [[Plato|Platonic philosophy]] and that permeated Hellenistic Judaism.<ref>{{cite bo
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  • ...ref><ref>Haffner 2003, p. 19.</ref> reading a range of authors including [[Plato]], [[Edward Gibbon]], [[Charles Darwin]] and [[Thomas Babington Macaulay]].
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