Results for 'Michael Plato'

940 found
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  1.  75
    Lysis, or, Friendship.Michael Plato & Bordt - 1968 - [Mount Vernon, N.Y.]: Printed for the members of the Limited Editions Club at the Press of A. Colish. Edited by Benjamin Jowett & Eugene Karlin.
  2.  44
    Plato's stepping stones: degrees of moral virtue.Michael Cormack - 2006 - New York: Continuum.
    Examines the dialogues from Plato's early and middle periods and illustrates the similarities and differences between Plators"s concept of craft knowledge and ...
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  3. Michael Despland, The Education of Desire: Plato and the Philosophy of Religion Reviewed by.S. E. Marshall - 1987 - Philosophy in Review 7 (5):187-190.
     
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  4.  45
    Postmodern Platos: Nietzsche, Heidegger, Gadamer, Strauss, Derrida.Michael Dink - 1997 - Review of Metaphysics 51 (1):183-186.
    Zuckert has written an intriguing book, whether taken in its exoteric form, as indicated by the title and introduction, as a detached and balanced account of the response to Plato of five “postmodern” thinkers, or in its esoteric form, as indicated by the assignment of the three central chapters to Strauss, as an exposition and defense of Strauss’s account of the truth about the human good. Even if her accounts of the other four are, for many readers, the honey (...)
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  5. Imposing Alfarabi on Plato : Averroes's Novel Placement of the Platonic City / Alexander Orwin - Ibn Bajja : An Independent Reader of the Republic / Josep Puig Montada - Expelling Dialectics from the Ideal State : Making the World Safe for Philosophy in Averroes's Commentary on Plato's "Republic" / Yehuda Halper - Music, Poetry, and Politics in Averroes's Commentary on Plato's "Republic" / Douglas Kries - Averroes on Family and Property in the Commentary on Plato's "Republic" / Catarina Belo - Notes on Averroes's Political Teaching / Shlomo Pines (trans. Alexander Orwin) - The Sharia of the Republic : Islamic Law and Philosophy in Averroes Commentary on Plato's "Republic" / Rasoul Namazi - An Indecisive Truth : Divine Law and Philosophy in the Decisive Treatise and Commentary on Plato's "Republic" / Karen Taliaferro - Averroes between Jihad and McWorld / Michael Kochin - The Essential Qualities of the Ruler in Averroes's Commentary on Plato's "Republic" / Rosalie Helena de Souza Pereir.Michael Engel - 2022 - In Alexander Orwin, Plato's Republic in the Islamic context: new perspectives on Averroes's commentary. Rochester, NY: University of Rochester Press.
  6.  21
    ‘‘Plato Socraticus’ – The Apology of Socrates and Euthyphro.Michael Erler - 2011 - Peitho 2 (1):79-92.
    The present paper focuses on the two works of Plato’s first tetralogyso as to bring out and generally characterize the Socratic dimensionof Plato’s philosophizing. It is common knowledge that Socrates’ trialand defense inspired Plato to engage in dialogical writing which culminatedin the famous logoi Sokratikoi. The article deals with the followingissues: 1. Philosophy as a ‘care for the soul’ in the Apology; 2. “The unexaminedlife is not worth living for a human being” ; 3. Philosophyas a service (...)
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  7.  14
    Plato's third eye: studies in Marsilio Ficino's metaphysics and its sources.Michael J. B. Allen - 1995 - Brookfield, Vt.: Variorum.
    Marsilio Ficino (1433-1499) was one of the luminaries of the Florentine Renaissance and the scholar responsible for the revival of Platonism. The translator and interpreter of the works of both Plato and Plotinus as well as of various Hermetic and Neoplatonic texts, Ficino was also a musician, priest, magus and psychotherapist, an original philosopher and the author of a vast and important correspondence with the intellectual figures of his day including Lorenzo the Magnificent. Professor Allen has become the foremost (...)
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  8.  27
    Plato's Socratic conversations: drama and dialectic in three dialogues.Michael C. Stokes - 1986 - Baltimore, Md.: Johns Hopkins University Press.
  9. Imposing Alfarabi on Plato : Averroes's Novel Placement of the Platonic City / Alexander Orwin - Ibn Bajja : An Independent Reader of the Republic / Josep Puig Montada - Expelling Dialectics from the Ideal State : Making the World Safe for Philosophy in Averroes's Commentary on Plato's "Republic" / Yehuda Halper - Music, Poetry, and Politics in Averroes's Commentary on Plato's "Republic" / Douglas Kries - Averroes on Family and Property in the Commentary on Plato's "Republic" / Catarina Belo - Notes on Averroes's Political Teaching / Shlomo Pines (trans. Alexander Orwin) - The Sharia of the Republic : Islamic Law and Philosophy in Averroes Commentary on Plato's "Republic" / Rasoul Namazi - An Indecisive Truth : Divine Law and Philosophy in the Decisive Treatise and Commentary on Plato's "Republic" / Karen Taliaferro - Averroes between Jihad and McWorld / Michael Kochin - The Essential Qualities of the Ruler in Averroes's Commentary on Plato's "Republic" / Rosalie Helena de Souza Pereir.Michael Engel - 2022 - In Alexander Orwin, Plato's Republic in the Islamic context: new perspectives on Averroes's commentary. Rochester, NY: University of Rochester Press.
  10.  17
    Plato's Bedroom: Ancient Wisdom and Modern Love by David K. O'Connor.Michael Platt - 2018 - Review of Metaphysics 72 (1):147-149.
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  11.  16
    You Know My Name : The Structural Significance of Plato’s Lambda Formula in John Donne’s “a Litany”.Michael T. Smith - 2014 - Renascence 66 (4):235-254.
    Donne used Plato’s Lambda numbers to construct “A Litany.” Specifically, each number in the Lambda sequence ties not only to the concept of world-creation as outlined in Timaeus, but also to its notion of the circular nature of the world, of man returning to the monad.
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  12. On Plato : Phaedrus 227a-245e.Michael Share & Dirk Baltzly - 2018 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic. Edited by Dirk Baltzly & Michael John Share.
    This commentary records, through notes taken by Hermias, Syrianus' seminar on Plato's Phaedrus, one of the world's most influential celebrations of erotic beauty and love. It is the only Neoplatonic commentary on Plato's Phaedrus to have survived in its entirety. Further interest comes from the recorded interventions by Syrianus' pupils - including those by Proclus, his eventual successor as head of the Athenian school, who went on to teach Hermias' father, Ammonius. The second of two volumes of Hermias' (...)
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  13. "Philosophy" in Plato's Sophist.Michael L. Morgan - 1993 - Proceedings of the Boston Area Colloquium of Ancient Philosophy 9:83-111.
     
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  14. Non-Being and the Structure of Privative Forms in Plato’s Sophist.Michael Wiitala - 2015 - Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy 19 (2):277-286.
    In Plato’s Statesman, the Eleatic Stranger explains that the division of all human beings into Greek and barbarian is mistaken in that it fails to divide reality into genuine classes or forms (eidē). The division fails because “barbarian” names a privative form, that is, a form properly indicated via negation: non-Greek. This paper examines how the Stranger characterizes privative forms in the Sophist. I argue that although the Stranger is careful to define privative forms as fully determinate, he nevertheless (...)
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  15.  33
    Plato’s Animals: Gadflies, Horses, Swans, and Other Philosophical Beasts.Jeremy Bell & Michael Naas (eds.) - 2015 - Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press.
    Plato's Animals examines the crucial role played by animal images, metaphors, allusions, and analogies in Plato's Dialogues. These fourteen lively essays demonstrate that the gadflies, snakes, stingrays, swans, dogs, horses, and other animals that populate Plato's work are not just rhetorical embellishments. Animals are central to Plato's understanding of the hierarchy between animals, humans, and gods and are crucial to his ideas about education, sexuality, politics, aesthetics, the afterlife, the nature of the soul, and philosophy itself. (...)
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  16. The Politics of Gender and the Psychology of Virtue: A Study in the Interpretation of Plato's "Republic" and "Laws".Michael Shalom Kochin - 1996 - Dissertation, The University of Chicago
    The language and ideals of Greek political life identified citizenship with manliness. Plato saw this engendering of politics as a threat to the unity, stability, and excellence of a city, for the unmoderated manliness of actual cities, he claimed, fosters bigoted patriotism, female dissipation, and unnatural vice. Moreover, these cities' civic pieties could not match the egoistic appeal of tyranny, for the Greek ideal of masculinity itself points to tyranny as the most manly life. ;Plato's project, as I (...)
     
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  17.  68
    The Tragedy of Law: Gyges in Herodotus and Plato.Michael Davis - 2000 - Review of Metaphysics 53 (3):635 - 655.
    THE SECOND BOOK OF PLATO’S REPUBLIC begins with a spirited outburst. Glaucon, not satisfied with Socrates’ arguments proving the goodness of justice in book 1, demands a new proof. At once deeply tempted and deeply repelled by the life of injustice, he wishes to be purged of his longing for tyranny and, accordingly, wants Socrates to show that justice itself, by itself, is good, that is, that justice is not simply a necessary evil, something good by law or nomos (...)
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  18.  69
    The Forms in the Euthyphro and the Statesman: A Case against the Developmental Reading of Plato’s Dialogues.Michael Oliver Wiitala - 2014 - International Philosophical Quarterly 54 (4):393-410.
    The Euthyphro is generally considered one of Plato’s early dialogues. According to the developmental approach to reading the dialogues, when writing the Euthyphro Plato had not yet developed the sort of elaborate “theory of forms ” that we see presented in the middle dialogues and further refined in the late dialogues. This essay calls the developmental account into question by showing how key elements from the theory of forms that appear in the late dialogues, particularly in the Statesman, (...)
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  19. Plato's Sophist on false statements'.Michael Frede - 1992 - In Richard Kraut, The Cambridge Companion to Plato. New York, NY, USA: Cambridge University Press. pp. 397--424.
     
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  20.  25
    Plato and the Invention of Life.Michael Naas - 2018 - New York: Fordham University Press.
    Beginning with a reading of Plato's Statesman, this work interrogates the relationship between life and being in Plato's thought. It argues that in his later dialogues Plato discovers--or invents--a form of true or real life that transcends all merely biological life and everything that is commonly called life.
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  21.  42
    The ontological difference and the pre-metaphysical status of the being of beings in Plato.Michael C. Hudac - 1990 - Man and World 23 (2):191-203.
  22.  87
    David Hilbert's lectures on the foundations of geometry 1891–1902. edited by Michael Hallett and Ulrich Majer, David Hilbert's Lectures on the Foundations of Mathematics and Physics, 1891–1933, vol. 1. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg and New York, 2004, xviii + 661 pp.Jan von Plato - 2006 - Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 12 (3):492-494.
  23. Plato's eschatological myths.Michael Inwood - 2009 - In Catalin Partenie, Plato’s Myths. New York: Cambridge University Press.
  24.  38
    How Joseph De Maistre Read Plato’s Laws.Michael S. Kochin - 2002 - Polis 19 (1-2):29-43.
    Maistre’s Soirées de Saint-Pétersbourg is modeled on Plato’s Laws. Plato and Maistre both demand the political control of natural inquiry, and implement these controls through theodictic conversation. Maistre, following the lead of Plato’s legislator, publishes an exemplary conversation about providence between a young man tempted by an atheistic Enlightenment and two older, wiser, and more learned men of affairs. Maistre defends providentialism from materialist interpretations of natural science even as Plato defended it from ancient materialism.
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  25.  67
    Plato and the Sightlovers of the Republic.Michael C. Stokes - 1992 - Apeiron 25 (4):103-132.
  26.  21
    Rational spirituality and divine virtue in Plato: a modern interpretation and philosophical defense of Platonism.Michael LaFargue - 2016 - Albany, NY: SUNY Press.
    Describes a Platonic personal spirituality based on reason that is readily accessible to people today. presents an important and accessible aspect of Plato’s legacy largely overlooked today: a variety of personal spirituality based on reason and centered on virtue. Plato’s Virtue-Forms are transcendent in their goodness, ideals that Platonists can use to improve character and become like God so far as is humanly possible. constructs a model of inductive Socratic reasoning capable of acquiring knowledge of these perfect Virtue-Forms, (...)
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  27.  32
    Socratic Ignorance and Platonic Knowledge in the Dialogues of Plato by Sara Ahbel-Rappe.Michael Erler - 2019 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 57 (2):339-340.
    Rappe's book argues for a "contemplative" understanding of Socrates and proposes to distinguish between an "outer Socrates," the one who strives for definitions and denies being wise, and an "inner Socrates," who exemplifies a wisdom that consists in self-investigation. The introduction, "Socratic Ignorance and Platonic Knowledge," presents Socrates as being part of the western "esoteric tradition"—as Rappe calls it—in so far as he stands for an initiation to philosophy that is in essence self-knowledge. According to Rappe, this esoteric tradition is (...)
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  28. Mocht Plato zien wat er van de universiteit geworden is, dan zou hij stomverbaasd en bezorgd zijn.Michael S. Merry & Bart Van Leeuwen - 2024 - Https://Www.Knack.Be/Nieuws/Belgie/Onderwijs/Mocht-Plato-Zien-Wat-Er-van-de-Universiteit-Geworden-is -Dan-Zou-Hij-Stomverbaasd-En-Bezorgd-Zijn/.
    Als Plato de hedendaagse academie zou aanschouwen, zou hij niet alleen stomverbaasd zijn over de massificatie en de byzantijnse bureaucratie, maar gezien het ethische doel van de universiteit zou hij ook reden hebben om bezorgd te zijn.
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  29.  61
    Plato and Aristotle on Negative Predication and Semantic Fragmentation.Michael T. Ferejohn - 1989 - Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie 71 (3):257-282.
  30. Plato and Greek religion.Michael L. Morgan - 1992 - In Richard Kraut, The Cambridge Companion to Plato. New York, NY, USA: Cambridge University Press. pp. 227--47.
     
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  31.  56
    Plato and the spectacle of laughter.Michael Naas - 2016 - Angelaki 21 (3):13-26.
    This essay examines the critical role played by comedy and laughter in Plato. It begins by taking seriously Plato's critique of comedy and his concerns about the negative effects of laughter in dialogues such as Republic and Laws. It then shows how Plato, rather than simply rejecting comedy and censuring laughter, attempts to put these into the service of philosophy by rethinking them in philosophical terms. Accordingly, the laughable or the ridiculous is understood not just in relation (...)
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  32. Knowledge and Belief from Plato to Locke.Michael Ayers & Maria Rosa Antognazza - 2019 - In Knowing and Seeing: Groundwork for a New Empiricism. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. pp. 3–33.
    This essential historical introduction to the main themes of the book starts with a close, sympathetic, and significantly novel analysis of a famous argument in Plato’s Republic in which Plato draws a distinction of kind between knowledge and belief, and between their objects. It is then demonstrated that the distinction, broadly so understood, remained a dominant force, in one form or another, in all non-sceptical branches of the European philosophical tradition, including empiricism, until the eighteenth century. It is (...)
     
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  33.  78
    Plato on Punishment Trevor J. Saunders: Plato's Penal Code: Tradition, Controversy, and Reform in Greek Penology. Pp. xvii + 414. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1991. £50. [REVIEW]Michael Gagarin - 1993 - The Classical Review 43 (01):82-84.
  34.  13
    (1 other version)Belief, Knowledge, and Learning in Plato's Middle Dialogues.Michael L. Morgan - 1983 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy, Supplementary Volume 9:63-100.
    There is a problem about belief and knowledge in Plato's epistemology that has exercised serious students of Plato only to settle into a recent orthodoxy. Guthrie characterizes the problem and its current resolution this way: ‘In the Meno doxa appeared to be a dim apprehension of the same objects of which knowledge is a clear and complete understanding … in the Republic each is directed to different objects, knowledge to the Forms and doxa to the sensible world alone (...)
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  35.  61
    Plato’s religious voice: Socrates as godsent, in Plato and the Platonists1.Michael Erler - 2013 - In Anna Marmodoro & Jonathan Hill, The Author's Voice in Classical and Late Antiquity. Oxford University Press. pp. 313.
    An obvious feature of Plato’s writings that distinguishes them from the works of later Platonists is his use of the dialogue form. Even more specifically and strikingly, the character of Socrates—whose voice is sometimes so hard to disentangle from that of Plato himself—occupies centre stage in almost all of Plato’s writings, while he is conspicuous by his absence from those of later Platonists. Yet the voice of Socrates can still be heard in the writings of later Platonists, (...)
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  36.  48
    Detailed Completeness and Pleasure of the Narrative. Some Remarks on the Narrative Tradition and Plato.Michael Erler - 2015 - In Gabriele Cornelli, Plato's Styles and Characters: Between Literature and Philosophy. De Gruyter. pp. 103-118.
  37.  48
    Did Plato Nod? Some Conjectures on Egoism and Friendship in the Lysis.Michael D. Roth - 1995 - Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie 77 (1):1-20.
  38.  19
    (1 other version)The "realization of the due-measure" as structural principle in Plato's statesman.Michael Hoffmann - 1993 - Polis 12 (1-2):77-98.
  39. Parts of Difference in Plato’s Sophist, with Help from Republic V.Michael Wiitala - 2024 - In Brisson Luc, Halper Edward & Perry Richard, Plato’s Sophist. Selected Papers of the Thirteenth Symposium Platonicum. Baden Baden: Verlag Karl Alber. pp. 425-431.
    In the Sophist, the Eleatic Stranger develops an account of non-being according to which it is understood as a part of Different. Yet the precise language he uses to characterize the form Non-Being and other negative forms has two variations. In the first, a negative form is characterized as a part of the nature of Different contraposed to the nature of the form negated. Thus, Non-Beautiful is described as ‘something different among beings that is marked-off from some one kind and (...)
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  40. Plato and Protagoras.Michael Gagarin - 1968 - Dissertation, Yale University
  41. «Quisque in sphaera sua»: Plato's statesman, Marsilio Ficino's Platonic theology, and the resurrection of the body.Michael Jb Allen - 2007 - Rinascimento 47:25-48.
  42.  17
    Harmonising Plato and Aristotle. I. Hadot athenian and alexandrian neoPlatonism and the harmonization of Aristotle and Plato. Translated by Michael chase. Pp. X + 188. Leiden and boston: Brill, 2015. Cased, €103, us$133. Isbn: 978-90-04-28007-6. [REVIEW]Michael F. Wagner - 2016 - The Classical Review 66 (2):391-392.
  43.  31
    Pharmakon: Plato, Drug Culture, and Identity in Ancient Athens.Michael A. Rinella - 2010 - Lexington Books.
    Pharmakon traces the emergence of an ethical discourse in ancient Greece, one centered on states of psychological ecstasy. In the dialogues of Plato, philosophy is itself characterized as a pharmakon, one superior to a large number of rival occupations, each of which laid claim to their powers being derived from, connected with, or likened to, a pharmakon. Accessible yet erudite, Pharmakon is one of the most comprehensive examinations of the place of intoxicants in ancient thought yet written.
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  44. (1 other version)3. Plato, Christianity, and the Cinematic Craft of Andrew Niccol.Michael P. Foley - 2006 - Logos. Anales Del Seminario de Metafísica [Universidad Complutense de Madrid, España] 9 (2).
  45.  43
    Plato's Statesman: The Web of Politics. [REVIEW]Michael Dink - 1997 - Review of Metaphysics 50 (3):686-686.
    Rosen's web is woven out of a warp of laborious textual commentary and a woof of excursuses, which develop three main issues. Two of these concern the Eleatic Stranger's differences from Socrates--on the character of the method of division and on the end of politics. The third concerns the distinction and relationship between technê and phronêsis in politics. Rosen's penchant for scattering the excursuses through the commentary with apparent randomness and his lack of clarity about which of the three--Stranger, (...), or Rosen--is being assigned responsibility for any particular claim make it difficult to piece together a coherent account of what he wants to say on these three issues. (shrink)
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  46.  24
    The Birth of Mathematics in the Age of Plato. Francois Lasserre.Michael Crowe - 1966 - Isis 57 (1):137-138.
  47.  18
    Parmenides, Plato, and the Semantics of Not-Being. [REVIEW]Michael Morris - 1992 - Philosophical Review 101 (4):835.
  48. Observations on Perception in Plato's Later Dialogues.Michael Frede - 1999 - In Gail Fine, Plato, Volume 1: Metaphysics and Epistemology. Oxford University Press.
  49.  52
    Plato: A Guide for the Perplexed. [REVIEW]Michael Wiitala - 2009 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 83 (4):630-634.
    Review of Gerald A. Press, Plato: A Guide for the Perplexed.
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  50.  45
    Plato, Inquiry, and Painting.Michael L. Morgan - 1990 - Apeiron 23 (2):121 - 145.
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