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         Plato:     more books (98)
  1. Lesser Hippias (Dodo Press) by Plato, 2008-12-26
  2. Plato Complete Works by Plato, John M. Cooper, et all 1997-05-01
  3. The Republic Of Plato: Second Edition by Plato, 1991-10-03
  4. Ion by Plato, 2010-05-23
  5. Five Dialogues by Plato, G. M. A. Grube, 2002-10
  6. Alcibiades I by Plato, 2008-11-12
  7. Great Dialogues of Plato by Plato, 2008-03-04
  8. Critias by Plato, 2010-01-29
  9. Symposium by Plato, 1989-05
  10. Republic (Oxford World's Classics) by Plato, 2008-05-15
  11. The Symposium (Penguin Classics) by Plato, 2003-04-29
  12. The Collected Dialogues of Plato: Including the Letters (Bollingen Series LXXI) by Plato, 2005-09-15
  13. Plato, Not Prozac!: Applying Eternal Wisdom to Everyday Problems by Lou Marinoff, 2000-08-01
  14. The Last Days of Socrates by Plato, 2010-05-06

21. Plato
plato (b. 428 B.C.?, d. 347 B.C.?) was a student of Socrates, and wrote numerous philosophical works in the form of dialogues between Socrates and various
http://mally.stanford.edu/plato.html
Home Page
Plato
Plato (b. 428 B.C.?, d. 347 B.C.?) was a student of Socrates, and wrote numerous philosophical works in the form of dialogues between Socrates and various interlocutors representing different strata of Greek society. Major Works:
  • The Apology
  • The Phaedo
  • The Crito
  • The Meno
  • The Symposium
  • The Republic
  • Gorgias
  • Phaedrus
  • Philebus
  • Theaetetus
  • Protagoras
  • The Sophist
  • Timaeus
Plato's Life:
  • Born, 428 B.C.(?), in Athens or Aegina
  • prior to 399 B.C., studied with Socrates
  • 399 B.C., after the execution of Socrates, took refuge in Megara
  • 399 - 387 B.C., traveled extensively in Greece. Egypt, and Italy
  • 387 B.C., founded The Academy in Athens
  • 367 B.C., went to Syracuse to tutor Dionysius II at the suggestion of Dion
  • Died, 347 B.C.(?)
Plato's Contribution to Philosophy: Plato carved out a subject matter for philosophy by formulating and discussing a wide range of metaphysical and ethical questions. To explain the similarities and resemblances among objects of the physical world, he developed a metaphysics of Forms. His views about ethical questions could be grounded in his metaphysics of Forms via the contemplation of the Form of The Good. Plato therefore found an inherent connection between metaphysics and ethics. His greatest work, The Republic , developed an insightful analogy between harmony in the state and harmony in the individual, and it is often considered one of the greatest works ever written. Plato wrote dialogues that considered the nature of virtue itself, as well as the nature of particular virtues. He also considered epistemological questions, such as whether knowledge is justified true belief.

22. Redirecting To PLATO
www.platoweb01.com/ Similar pages Philosophers platoAfter living for a time at the Syracuse court, plato founded near Athens the most influential school of the ancient world, the Academy, where he taught
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23. Welcome To Christopher's Plato
Christopher Planeaux s Home Page. A Website devoted to Greek antiquity, especially plato.
http://php.iupui.edu/~cplaneau/plato_01.html
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24. Plato - MSN Encarta
plato (428?347 bc), Greek philosopher, one of the most creative and influential thinkers in Western philosophy.
http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761568769/plato.html
var s_account="msnportalencarta"; MSN home Mail My MSN Sign in ... more Hotmail Messenger My MSN MSN Directory Air Tickets/Travel Autos City Guides Election 2008 ... More Additional Reference Materials Thesaurus Translations Multimedia Other Resources Education Resources Math Help Foreign Language Help Project Planner ... Help Editors' Picks Great books about your topic, Plato , selected by Encarta editors Related Items more... Encarta Search Search Encarta about Plato Also on Encarta 7 tips for funding an online degree How to succeed in the fashion industry without being a top designer Presidential Myths Quiz
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Plato
Encyclopedia Article Find Print E-mail Blog It Multimedia 3 items Article Outline Introduction Life Works Theory of Forms ... Influence I
Introduction
Print this section Plato bc ), Greek philosopher, one of the most creative and influential thinkers in Western philosophy. II
Life
Print this section Plato was born to an aristocratic family in Athens. His father, Ariston, was believed to have descended from the early kings of Athens. Perictione, his mother, was distantly related to the 6th-century bc lawmaker Solon . When Plato was a child, his father died, and his mother married Pyrilampes, who was an associate of the statesman

25. Perseus Encyclopedia
At the heart of plato s philosophy is a vision of reality that sees the changing world As a young man plato encountered Socrates, whose life and death
http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus:text:1999.04.0004:id=plat

26. EpistemeLinks: Website Results For Philosopher Plato
General website search results for plato including brief biographies, link resources, and more. Provided by EpistemeLinks.
http://www.epistemelinks.com/Main/Philosophers.aspx?PhilCode=Plat

27. ILTweb - Publications
Nettleship The Theory of Education in the Republic of plato Teachers College Press Classics in From DIALOGUES OF plato, New York, P.F. Collier Son.
http://www.ilt.columbia.edu/publications/digitext.html
Digital Text Projects
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Rousseau, Jean Jacques Rousseau, Jean Jacques, 1712-78, Swiss-French philosopher and political theorist; b. Geneva. A member of DIDEROT's circle, he was one of the great figures of the French enlightenment and probably the most significant of those who shaped 19th-cent. ROMANTICISM, influencing such figures as Kant, GOETHE, ROBESPIERRE, TOLSTOY, and the French revolutionists. Aristotle: Nicomachean Ethics
Translated by W. D. Ross
Oxford, Clarendon Press.
Dante: The Divine Comedy
ILTweb Digital Dante Project

Original text in Italian. Written c. 1306-21.
English translation by H. W. Longfellow.
Multimedia translation begun 1994, ILT Digital Classics.
Dewey: Democracy and Education
Locke: Of the Conduct of the Understanding

Teachers College Press Classics in Education Series Foreword by Lawrence A. Cremin Edited, with an Introduction and Notes, by Francis W. Garforth

28. Brand Name Gently Used Clothing - Plato's Closet
plato s Closet buys and sells gently used clothing for children, teen and twentysomething boys and girls. Our used clothing stores offer a huge selection
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Other brand names are trademarked or registered by their respective companies. The trademarks and logos utilized in this advertisement are
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29. PLATO ® EduTest Assessment - Online Assessment, Student Achievement, Accountabi
Practice tests for statemandated K-12 assessment tests. Immediate scoring and feedback available.
http://www.edutest.com/
If you are a current PLATO eduTest Assessment subscriber, please log in here. Client ID: Home About Us PLATO Community Center PLATO Support ... International

30. Allegory Of The Cave
plato realizes that the general run of humankind can think, and speak, etc., without (so far as they acknowledge) any awareness of his realm of Forms.
http://faculty.washington.edu/smcohen/320/cave.htm
The Allegory of the Cave
  • Plato realizes that the general run of humankind can think, and speak, etc., without (so far as they acknowledge) any awareness of his realm of Forms.
  • The allegory of the cave is supposed to explain this.
  • From Great Dialogues of Plato: Complete Texts of the Republic, Apology, Crito Phaido, Ion, and Meno, Vol. 1 . (Warmington and Rouse, eds.) New York, Signet Classics: 1999. p. 316.
  • Such prisoners would mistake appearance for reality. They would think the things they see on the wall (the shadows) were real; they would know nothing of the real causes of the shadows.
  • Plato gives his answer at line (515b2). The text here has puzzled many editors, and it has been frequently emended. The translation in Grube/Reeve gets the point correctly:
  • shadows
  • When the prisoners are released, they can turn their heads and see the real objects. Then they realize their error. What can we do that is analogous to turning our heads and seeing the causes of the shadows? We can come to grasp the Forms with our minds.
  • Republic
  • The prisoners may learn what a book is by their experience with shadows Likewise, we may acquire concepts by our perceptual experience of physical objects. But we would be mistaken if we thought that the concepts that we grasp were on the same level as the things we perceive.
  • 31. PLATO People: A History Book Research Project
    plato PEOPLE is a website documenting the ongoing progress of research and oralhistory-gathering for a new book on the history of the first online
    http://www.platopeople.com/
    Home About What's New Research Questions People ... FAQ Before Microsoft. Apple. The Web. AOL. The Internet. Before everything, there was PLATO: the first online community. The network that time forgot. The birthplace of instant messaging, chat rooms, MUDs (multi-user dungeons), personal publishing, screen savers, flat-panel plasma displays, one of the first spell-checking/answer-judging mechanisms, and countless other innovations. This site offers information regarding a book being researched and written about the PLATO system and the user culture that it spawned in the 1970s. For more details, click the image above, or any of the links at the top. This site was last modified: 10 March 2008

    32. Plato Quotes
    plato quotes,plato, author, authors, writer, writers, people, famous people.
    http://thinkexist.com/quotes/plato/
    Advanced Search My Account Help Add the "Dynamic Daily Quotation" to Your Site or Blog - it's Easy!
    All Plato Quotations Authors Topics Keywords ... More... Famous people: Name Nationality Occupation Date ... Pif Pzz 1-10 Quotations of
    Plato quotes
    Ancient Greek Philosopher He was the world's most influential philosopher. 428 BC -348 BC
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    Similar Quotes . About: Wisdom quotes Purpose quotes Talking quotes Fool quotes . For: T-Shirt quotes Add to Chapter... Plato quote Similar Quotes . About: Love quotes Add to Chapter... Plato quote Similar Quotes Add to Chapter... lstyd Plato quote Similar Quotes . About: Friendship quotes Add to Chapter... show_bar(354832,'people-are-like-dirt-they-can-either-nourish-you') Plato quote Similar Quotes Add to Chapter... Plato quote Similar Quotes Add to Chapter... show_bar(294332,'no_one_ever_teaches_well_who_wants_to_teach-or') Plato quote Similar Quotes . About: Love quotes Add to Chapter... show_bar(9280,'every_heart_sings_a_song-incomplete-until_another') Plato quote Similar Quotes . About: Anger quotes Add to Chapter... Plato quote Similar Quotes Add to Chapter...

    33. Atlantis: Plato
    plato was a student of Socrates until the latter s death in 399 BC at the hands of the Athenian authorities. After his teacher s death, plato traveled
    http://www.activemind.com/Mysterious/Topics/Atlantis/plato.html

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    Atlantis: Plato
    Greek philosopher - 427-347 B.C.
    Note: Dates are approximate, there is some uncertainty as to his birth and death Plato was a student of Socrates until the latter's death in 399 BC at the hands of the Athenian authorities. After his teacher's death, Plato traveled extensively, including journeys in Egypt. In 387 BC he returned to Athens and founded the Academy, a school of science and philosophy, that became the model for the modern university. Perhaps the most famous student of the Academy was Aristotle whose teachings have had tremendous impact on philosophy through today. Due to the Academy's safekeeping, many of Plato's works have survived. His extant writings are in the form of letters and dialogues, the most famous of which is probably The Republic. His writings cover subjects ranging from knowledge to happiness to politics to nature. Two of his dialogues, Timeaus and Critias , hold the only known original references to the island of Atlantis. Click here for information about sites where you can find out more about Plato and where you can obtain copies of all of his works.

    34. GradeSaver: ClassicNote: Biography Of Plato
    plato s biography is drawn mainly from the work of other ancient writers and a few of plato s presumed letters. He was born in Athens around 428 BC to an
    http://www.gradesaver.com/classicnotes/authors/about_plato.html
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    Biography of Plato (428/7 BC-348/7 BC)
    Plato Plato's biography is drawn mainly from the work of other ancient writers and a few of Plato's presumed letters. He was born in Athens around 428 BC to an aristocratic family with a long and esteemed history of political leadership. According to an anecdote of dubious veracity told by the Greek biographer Diogenes Laertius, Plato was originally named Aristocles. His wrestling coach, however, dubbed him "Platon" (meaning "broad") on account of his broad shoulders—shoulders that would one day bear the foundational weight of much of Western thought. Plato's father Ariston descended from the early kings of Athens. His mother Perictione came from a similarly distinguished line that included the sixth-century legislator Solon. Plato's father appears to have died when Plato was still a young child. His mother remarried to Pyrilampes, an associate of the statesman Pericles, being otherwise unable to support Plato and his siblings. Plato had two brothers, Adeimantus and Glaucon, as well as a younger sister, Potone. Perictione later had a child with Pyrilampes named Antiphon. Plato had political ambitions as a young man and appeared destined to follow the family tradition. He became disillusioned with Athenian politics, however, because both the Empire and its politics had begun to decline since the onset of the Peloponnesian War (several years before Plato's birth). Outside the political sphere, Plato enjoyed success in athletics and engaged in both poetry and drama. According to Aristotle, Plato also became familiar with the teachings of Cratylus—a student of Heraclitus—as well as those of other pre-Socratic thinkers such as Pythagoras and Parmenides. These teachings provided the young philosopher with an introduction to the foundations of Greek metaphysics and epistemology.

    35. EAWC Essay: Plato And His Dialogues
    plato belonged to one of the leading families of Athens his father Ariston was said to descend from Kodros, the last legendary king of Athens,
    http://eawc.evansville.edu/essays/suzanne.htm
    Exploring Ancient World Cultures
    Essays on Ancient Greece
    Plato and His Dialogues
    Bernard F. Suzanne Platon et ses dialogues Plato's Autobiography When I was young, I felt like so many in that situation: I expected, as soon as I would become master of myself, to go straight to the city's affairs. And here is how I happened to find the state of public affairs then: many being dissatisfied with the existing constitution, a revolution took place... [This revolution took place in 404 BCE ; Plato was born in all probability in 427 BCE, so he was about 23 at the time.] [Plato belonged to one of the leading families of Athens: his father Ariston was said to descend from Kodros, the last legendary king of Athens, and the family of his mother Perictione was connected to Solon; Critias, who played a leading role in the government of the Thirty, was his mother's cousin, and Charmides, another one of the Thirty, his mothers' brother.] ... who immediately asked me to join them, as in something fit for me. Feeling not the least surprised, owing to my youth, I expected them to govern the city so as to lead it from a life of injustice toward a just behavior, and so I watched with the utmost attention what they would do, only to see these men make in very little time the former state of affairs look like a golden age. Among other things, they called on my friend

    36. Human Intelligence: Plato
    The biographical profile of plato, focusing on his/her contributions to the development of intelligence theory and testing.
    http://www.indiana.edu/~intell/plato.shtml

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    Plato
    (ca. 428/427 - 348/347 B.C.E.)
    Greek Philosopher
    Influences Education
    • Studied philosophy in Athens under Socrates, 408-400 B.C.E.
    Career
    • Ca. 387, established the Academy of Athens, taught philosophy there for 40 years
    Ideas and Contributions Plato was born into a wealth Athenian family and planned to become a politician. As he grew older, he became repulsed by the brutal and unethical practices of Athenian dictators. In 399 B.C.E. he left Athens when his friend Socrates was sentenced to death. Twelve years later, he founded a school of philosophy and science called the Academy , the first university. Plato is famous for his written dialogues , conversations between two or more characters debating philosophical issues. His earliest dialogues utilize Socrates as the main character who questions others on their beliefs and ideas. ( World Book Plato's philosophy was based on his theory of a soul divided into three components, reason, will and appetite. He contended that one can identify the parts of the soul because they sometimes clash with each other. A person may crave or have an appetite for something, yet resist the craving with willpower. A correctly operating soul requires the highest part, reason, to control the lowest part, appetite, with assistance from the will.

    37. Plato (ca. 427-ca. 347 BC) -- From Eric Weisstein's World Of Scientific Biograph
    plato advocated the quadrivium (the four math fields of study in the liberal arts), which starts with arithmetic, then progresses to plane geometry,
    http://scienceworld.wolfram.com/biography/Plato.html
    Branch of Science Philosophers Nationality Greek
    Plato (ca. 427-ca. 347 BC)

    Greek philosopher who was a student and follower of Socrates . He founded the Academy school in Athens. His works consisted of "dialogs" between Socrates and others. Like Socrates , he was interested in moral, not natural philosophy. He believed that the heads of government should be "philosopher kings" and developed a course of study stressing abstract thought for their education in the Republic. Plato advocated the "quadrivium" (the four math fields of study in the liberal arts), which starts with arithmetic, then progresses to plane geometry, solid geometry, and finally astronomy and harmonics. Plato believed that knowledge was "forgotten" at birth, and could be remembered. He saw the search for understanding as an attempt to gain pure knowledge, or "forms." In Eikos Mythos (A Likely Story ), he said that cosmology is, at best, a likely account. In Timaeus, he presented his cosmology which consisted of forms, particular objects, God the Craftsman, absolute space, and brute matter. As a craftsman, God could not make a perfect world from imperfect material.

    38. Philosophers - Platon
    When plato was a child, his father died, and his mother married Pyrilampes, As a young man plato had political ambitions, but he became disillusioned by
    http://www.nyu.edu/pages/linguistics/courses/v0051/plato.html
    Biography
    PLATO (c. 428-c. 347 BC), Greek philosopher, one of the most creative and influential thinkers in Western philosophy.Life. Plato was born to an aristocratic family in Athens. His father, Ariston, was believed to have descended from the early kings of Athens. Perictione, his mother, was distantly related to the 6th-century BC lawmaker Solon. When Plato was a child, his father died, and his mother married Pyrilampes, who was an associate of the statesman Pericles. As a young man Plato had political ambitions, but he became disillusioned by the political leadership in Athens. He eventually became a disciple of Socrates, accepting his basic philosophy and dialectical style of debate: the pursuit of truth through questions, answers, and additional questions. Plato witnessed the death of Socrates at the hands of the Athenian democracy in 399 BC. Perhaps fearing for his own safety, he left Athens tempor arily and traveled to Italy, Sicily, and Egypt. Plato's own theory of knowledge is found in the Republic, particularly in his discussion of the image of the divided line and the myth of the cave. In the former, Plato distinguishes between two levels of awareness: opinion and knowledge. Claims or assertions about the physical or visible world, including both commonsense observations and the propositions of science, are opinions only. Some of these opinions are well founded; some are not; but none of them counts as genuine knowledge. The higher level of awareness is knowledge, because there reason, rather than sense experience, is involved. Reason, properly used, results in intellectual insights that are certain, and the objects of these rational insights are the abiding universals, the eternal Forms or substances that constitute the real world.

    39. Plato's Cave & The Matrix
    Today the Republic is the most influential work by plato, and the allegory of the Cave the most famous part of the Republic. If you know that Socrates was
    http://whatisthematrix.warnerbros.com/rl_cmp/new_phil_partridge.html
    I. Introduction Viewers of The Matrix remember the moment in the film when Neo is released from his prison and made to grasp the truth of his life and the world. The account above roughly captures that turning point in the 1999 film, and yet it is drawn from an image crafted almost twenty-four hundred years ago by the Greek philosopher, Plato (427-347 B.C.E.). Today the Republic is the most influential work by Plato, and the allegory of the Cave the most famous part of the Republic. If you know that Socrates was tried, convicted, and sentenced to death by drinking hemlock, or that Socrates thought that the unexamined life is not worth living, you may also know that Socrates in the Republic Apology
    The Matrix Republic . Like the allegory of the Cave, The Matrix
    To see what I am calling a deeper connection between the film and the allegory of the Cave, I begin in Part II by recounting the context in which the Cave appears and the philosophical positions it figuratively depicts. In Part III I compare and contrast the film and the allegory, focusing attention on the difficulty in sorting out deceptive sensory information. Finally, in Part IV I examine the warnings and concessions Plato places in the dramatic spaces of

    40. Plato
    Fonts Download the special fonts plato needs to run. Download - Download either the Mac or PC version of plato. - Updated 11/2/98
    http://www.utexas.edu/courses/plato/
    Plato Home Information Courses Fonts ... Glossary Welcome. Search this site. Home - This page.
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    Download - Download either the Mac or PC version of Plato. - Updated 11/2/98
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