Plato’s Protagoras: Negotiating Impartial, Common Standards of Discourse

Abstract

Plato's Protagoras casts the leading sophist of the 5th century BCE, Protagoras, against the author's paradigmatic philosopher, Socrates. In this paper I focus on what is arguably the guiding methodological issue of the dialogue: finding agreement upon impartial, common standards for resolving disagreements over abstract questions. In terms of this conference's theme, Protagoras dramatizes a search for common ground between figures who fundamentally disagree over how to locate that ground.

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References found in this work

Relying on Your Own Voice.Charles L. Griswold Jr - 1999 - Review of Metaphysics 53 (2):283-307.
Philosophy is Education is Politics.Jonathan R. Cohen - 2002 - Ancient Philosophy 22 (1):1-20.
Can virtue be bought?Eugene Garver - 2004 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 37 (4):353-382.
The Argument Laughs at Socrates and Protagoras.Shannon Dubose - 1973 - Tulane Studies in Philosophy 22:14-21.

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