Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Philosophers - Plato
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 2     21-40 of 179    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | 7  | 8  | 9  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         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 And His Dialogues : Welcome - Platon Et Ses Dialogues : Bienvenue
dialogues as a progressive program of education for philosopher-kings, unfolding in seven tetralogies from Alcibiades to Laws
http://plato-dialogues.org/
You are here at
this site's new location
since September, 2001.
If you had bookmarked pages of it,
be sure to update your bookmarks
with the new address:
Nouvel emplacement du site
depuis septembre 2001.
http://plato-dialogues.org/ English section Map of site Plan du site
Bernard SUZANNE

22. Plato And His Dialogues : Welcome - Platon Et Ses Dialogues : Bienvenue
A new interpretation of plato's dialogues as a progressive program of education for philosopherkings, unfolding in seven tetralogies from Alcibiades to Laws, with the Republic as its logical à
http://www.plato-dialogues.org/
You are here at
this site's new location
since September, 2001.
If you had bookmarked pages of it,
be sure to update your bookmarks
with the new address:
Nouvel emplacement du site
depuis septembre 2001.
http://plato-dialogues.org/ English section Map of site Plan du site
Bernard SUZANNE

23. Plato: The Republic 5-10
plato Education and the Value of Justice. Men and Women. plato recognized that the picture of the Divided Line may be difficult for many of us to understand.
http://www.philosophypages.com/hy/2h.htm
Philosophy
Pages
F A Q Dictionary ... Locke
Plato: Education and the Value of Justice
Men and Women
As an account of political organization on the larger scale, Plato 's defense of an aristocratic government was unlikely to win broad approval in democratic Athens. He used the characters Glaucon and Adeimantus to voice practical objections against the plan. They are especially concerned (as Plato's Athenian contemporaries may well have been) with some of its provisions for the guardian class, including the participation of both men and women, the elimination of families, and the education of children. Republic ) Thus, Plato maintained that prospective guardians, both male and female, should receive the same education and be assigned to the same vital functions within the society. In addition, Plato believed that the interests of the state are best preserved if children are raised and educated by the society as a whole, rather than by their biological parents. So he proposed a simple (if startlingly unfamiliar) scheme for the breeding, nurturing, and training of children in the guardian class. (Note that the same children who are not permitted to watch and listen to "dangerous" art are encouraged to witness first-hand the violence of war.) The presumed pleasures of family life, Plato held, are among the benefits that the higher classes of a society must be prepared to forego.
Philosopher / Kings
A general objection to the impracticability of the entire enterprise remains. Even if we are persuaded that

24. All-Reviews.com Movie/Video Review: Plato's Run
Review.
http://www.all-reviews.com/videos-5/platos-run.htm
All reviews all the time! Home Movies Music Video Games ... Buy Movie Posters
Search Amazon Video DVD All Products Video Games Popular Music Classical Music Books Electronics Software Tools Kitchen Wireless Phones Browse Movies in Theaters
by Title

by Year

by Reviewer Rating
...
by Director

Browse by Genre Action
Comedy

Drama

Sci-Fi/Fantasy
...
more genres
Other Reviewer Directory Become a Reviewer Take our survey Contact Us
All-Reviews.com Movie/Video Review Plato's Run
out of 4 Starring: Gary Busey Roy Scheider Director: James Beckett Rated: R RunTime: 96 Minutes Release Date: July Genre: Action Buy this DVD Amazon.com Buy this Video ... Half.com *Also starring: Steven Bauer, Jeff Speakman Review by Dragan Antulov 1 star out of 4 The end of Cold War deprived the world of the movies featuring rugged individuals who save free people from Red Menace. All those nostalgic for those good old times could find traces of Hollywood's Cold War in the plot of PLATO'S RUN, 1997 action film directed by James Becket. Protagonist of the film is Plato Smith (played by Gary Busey), mine expert, former Navy SEAL and former CIA covert operative. After the end of Cold War he is utterly bored and spends all of its time hanging out with equally bored Cold War veterans in South Florida. Lack of money and persuasive powers of his former flame Marta (played by Tiani Warden) are reasons why he agrees to conduct covert operation for Gomez (played by Salvador Levy), powerful Cuban American. Gomez' son has been rotting in Castro's prison so Plato goes to Cuba to rescue him. But when it turns out that "son" was actually an assassin hired to kill Gomez, all hell breaks lose. Plato is set up for murder and must hide himself not only from police and vengeful Gomez's men, but also from Alexander Senarkian (played by Roy Scheider), menacing arms dealer.

25. Weather Underground: Plato, Minnesota Forecast
Active advisories, if any. Current conditions, forecast, links to weather maps.
http://www.weatherunderground.com/cgi-bin/findweather/getForecast?query=Plato, M

26. P.L.A.T.O. - FREE Scholarship Search

http://www.plato.org/search.htm

27. Comer Y Beber
Sitio dedicado a la gastronom­a de Chiclana de la Frontera (C¡diz). Vinos, productos, platos y restaurantes.
http://www.chiclana.com/chiclana/gastronomia.htm
CHICLANA DE LA FRONTERA: GASTRONOMIA Y VINOS
Gastromía El vino de Chiclana es el mejor exponente de la cultura gastronómica de la ciudad Chiclana tiene una larga tradición vitivinícola. El vino de Chiclana era uno de los de mayor producción dentro del Marco de Jerez. Aunque la producción ha descendido mucho últimamente, en las bodegas existentes se crían vinos finos y moscateles de gran calidad. Los vinos son elaborados con procesos rigurosamente tradicionales y artesanales. La visita a una de las bodegas y la degustación de los caldos de la tierra puede ser una magnífica experiencia para el visitante, que descubrirá que Chiclana, además de buen clima, sol y mar, le ofrece también unos vinos de excepcional calidad. En cuanto a la cocina local, sigue la pauta de la cocina tradicional andaluza. El plato más típico es la Berza Chiclanera. Los pescados y mariscos están criados en los esteros y piscifactorías que integran sus marismas. Gran desconocido es el langostino de Chiclana. De un calibre algo menor que el habitual y finísima carne, es complemento ideal para acompañar uno de los vinos de la tierra.

28. The Internet Classics Archive | The Republic By Plato
The Republic By plato Written 360 BCE Translated by Benjamin Jowett. The Republic has been divided into the following sections The
http://classics.mit.edu/Plato/republic.html

Home

Browse and

Comment

Search
...
Help

The Republic
By Plato
Written 360 B.C.E
Translated by Benjamin Jowett The Republic has been divided into the following sections:
The Introduction
Book I Book II Book III ... Book X Commentary: Quite a few comments have been posted about The Republic Read them or add your own Reader Recommendations: Recommend a Web site you feel is appropriate to this work, list recommended Web sites , or visit a random recommended Web site Download: A 664k text-only version is available for download

29. Aaron Shepard's Atlantis Page The Story According To Plato
Information on plato's Atlantis, the lost city, continent, empire.
http://www.aaronshep.com/Atlantis

30. Greek Philosophy: Plato
The most famous of Socrates s pupils was an aristocratic young man named plato. After the death of Socrates, plato carried on much
http://www.wsu.edu:8080/~dee/GREECE/PLATO.HTM

Aristotle

The Republic , and, next to his account of Socrates's trial, The Apology The Republic is one of the single most influential works in Western philosophy. Essentially, it deals with the central problem of how to live a good life; this inquiry is shaped into the parallel questions (a) what is justice in the State, or what would an ideal State be like, and (b) what is a just individual? Naturally these questions also encompass many others, such as how the citizens of a state should be educated, what kinds of arts should be encouraged, what form its government should take, who should do the governing and for what rewards, what is the nature of the soul, and finally what (if any) divine sanctions and afterlife should be thought to exist. The dialogue, then, covers just about every aspect of Plato's thought. There are several central aspects to the dialogue that sum up Platonic thought extremely well: a.) what the nature of justice is; b.) the nature of an ideal republic; and c.) the allegory of the cave and the divided line, both of which explain Plato's theory of forms. The Nature of Justice . The question which opens this immense dialogue is: what is justice? Several inadequate definitions are put forward, but the most emphatically presented definition is given by a young Sophist, Thrasymachus. He defines justice as whatever the strongest decide it is, and that the strong decide that whatever is in their best interest is just (review again the Athenian position in

31. Plato [Internet Encyclopedia Of Philosophy]
Biography and description of the philosophy of plato.
http://www.utm.edu/research/iep/p/plato.htm
Plato Plato is one of the world's best known and most widely read and studied philosophers. Known as the student of Socrates and the teacher of Aristotle, he wrote in the middle of the fourth century B.C.E. His earliest works are regarded as the most reliable of the ancient sources on Socrates. His later works, including his most famous work, the Republic, blend ethics, political philosophy, moral psychology, epistemology, and metaphysics into an interconnected and systematic philosophy. It is most of all from Plato that we get the theory of Forms, according to which the world we know through the senses is only an imitation of the pure, eternal, and unchanging world of the Forms. Plato's works also contain the origins of the familiar complaint that the arts work by inflaming the passions, the ideal of "Platonic love," and the myth of Atlantis.
Table of Contents (Clicking on the links below will take you to that part of this article)
Biography Birth It is widely accepted that Plato, the Athenian philosopher, was born in 428-7 B.C.E and died at the age of eighty or eighty-one at 348-7 B.C.E. These dates, however, are not entirely certain, for according to

32. Greek Philosophy: Plato, The Allegory Of The Cave, The Divided Line
plato s line is also a hierarchy the things at the top (first principles) have more truth and more existence; the things at the bottom (the reflections) have
http://www.wsu.edu:8080/~dee/GREECE/ALLEGORY.HTM
The Divided Line ( The Republic , Book VI)
Socrates Glaucon Socrates Glaucon Socrates Glaucon Socrates Glaucon Socrates Glaucon Socrates Glaucon Socrates Glaucon Socrates Glaucon Socrates Glaucon Socrates Glaucon
The Allegory of the Cave ( The Republic , Book VII)
Socrates Glaucon Socrates Glaucon Socrates Glaucon Socrates Glaucon Socrates Glaucon Socrates Glaucon Socrates Glaucon Socrates Glaucon Socrates Glaucon Socrates Glaucon Socrates Glaucon Socrates Glaucon Socrates Glaucon Socrates Better to be the poor servant of a poor master, and to endure anything, rather than think as they do and live after their manner? Glaucon Socrates Glaucon Socrates Glaucon Socrates Glaucon Socrates Glaucon Socrates Glaucon Socrates Glaucon Socrates Glaucon Socrates Glaucon Socrates Glaucon Socrates Glaucon Socrates Glaucon Socrates Glaucon Socrates Glaucon Socrates Glaucon Socrates Glaucon Socrates Glaucon Socrates Glaucon Socrates Glaucon Socrates Glaucon Socrates Glaucon Socrates
ENDNOTES
If you understand this first distinction, the much more difficult division of the intelligible world will make more sense. Think over this carefully: the visible world, that is, the world you see, has two kinds of visible objects in it. The first kind are shadows and reflections, that is, objects you see but aren't really there but derive from the second type of visible objects, that is, those that you see and are really there. The relation of the visible world to the intelligible world is identical to the relation of the world of reflections to the world of visible things that are real.
More Greek Philosophy

33. Renaissance, Baroque, And Classical Era Music: Composers
Course resources by Gordon J. Callon at McGill University.
http://plato.acadiau.ca/courses/musi/callon/2233/composer.htm
Renaissance, Baroque, and Classical Era Music: Composers
Gordon J. Callon site map
General Composer Reference
Individual Composers, A-H ... Grove Music Online [Open access only to general information and demos; full access only by subscription]
Music 2223
(Renaissance) Music 2233 (Baroque) Composers Top
Individual Composers
A Ad... Ag... Al... ...
Grove Music Online
(Open access only to general information and demos; full access only by subscription)]

34. Renaissance & Baroque Chronology, Details
detailed timeline and composer reference
http://plato.acadiau.ca/courses/musi/callon/2233/details.htm
Gordon J. Callon
site map
Conditions of Use

This site is under construction. History Other Details, Music History Composers
Graphical Chronologies:
Early Twelfth-Century Chronology (1140-1199) Late Twelfth-Century Chronology (1140-1199) Early Thirteenth-Century Chronology (1190-1249) Late Thirteenth-Century Chronology (1240-1299) ... Late Eighteenth-Century Chronology (1740-1799)
  • Download more complete chronologies: Renaissance Baroque [46Kb] (text versions—MS Word format).
Music 2223 Music 2233 Top Music 2223 Course Description ... Composer Links
Some Details:
History
English monk Alcuin ( ca . 732–804) meets Charlemagne; Alcuin encouraged study of liberal arts, influencing the Carolingian Renaissance . Alcuin was largely responsible for the revision of the Church Liturgy during the reign of Charlemagne. Charlemagne (742–814) crowned first Holy Roman Emperor. The Great Schism divides western and eastern Christianity. Battle of Hastings; William of Normandy conquers England. Bayeux Tapestry Crusades; Jerusalem captured 1099. ca Notre Dame Cathedral, Chartres construction.

35. Plato And His Dialogues: A Short Biography Of Plato
As an introduction to a new interpretive theory of plato s dialogues, this page presents a short biography of plato. © 1996
http://plato-dialogues.org/life.htm
Bernard SUZANNE Last updated September 30, 2001 Plato and his dialogues : Home Biography - Works and links to them History of interpretation New hypotheses - Map of dialogues : table version or non tabular version . Tools : Index of persons and locations Detailed and synoptic chronologies - Maps of Ancient Greek World . Site information : About the author " Mankind will not get rid of its evils until either the class of those who philosophize in truth and rectitude reach political power or those most powerful in cities, under some divine dispensation, really get to philosophizing. " VIIth Letter, 326a-b Lives and Opinions of Eminent Philosophers , no earlier than the third century AD. And these bear very little resemblance with what we expect from a biography nowadays. To make things worse, Plato almost never talks about himself in his dialogues (he does so only twice, once in the Apology and once in the , each time in connection with the trial and death of Socrates). But, if we accept the authenticity of the VIIth Letter (which I do), we have there the closest thing to an autobiography we can dream of owing to the scarcity of our sources, though quite limited in scope despite its late date in Plato's life (it could not have been written before Dion's assassination in 354 BC, to which it refers, that is, at a time Plato was over 70).

36. Untitled
Archive of funnyanimal strips by Zookumar.
http://www.chebucto.ns.ca/~zookumar/Zoocomix.html
Sorry, you have a nonJavascript browser.

37. Plato.evansville.edu/life.htm
plato.nl cd/dvd shop plato S BESTSELLERS. Amos, Tori 2 CD EUR 18.50, Amos, Tori. Welcome To Sunny Florida. plato Top 100. Bezoek ook onze winkel in Den Haag.
http://plato.evansville.edu/life.htm

38. On Plato’s Criticism Of Democracy
Essay accepting plato's observations of the weaknesses of democracy, but recognizing that the weaknesses can be minimized.
http://web.singnet.com.sg/~chlim/plato.html
On Plato’s Criticism of Democracy.
In this essay I shall argue that while Plato has successfully shown the inherent weakness of democracy in its potential to collapse into tyranny, he has failed to recognise that this weakness can be minimised, and hence I don’t share his low opinion of democracy. Before I begin my discussion of Plato’s argument for the inherent weakness of democracy in The Republic , I have to clarify what is meant by ‘democracy’ in this context. By ‘democracy’ Plato is not referring to modern democracy, which he would have perceived as alien. Nor is he referring to the democracy of Athens in this argument. In this argument, Plato characterises democracy as being ‘the extreme of popular liberty’, where ‘slaves - male and female - have the same liberty as their owners’ and where there is ‘complete equality and liberty in the relations between the sexes’ (563b). Democracy as the ‘extreme of popular liberty’ is further illustrated as follows: ‘Then in democracy,’ I went on, ‘there’s no compulsion either to exercise authority if you are capable of it, or to submit to authority if you don’t want to; you needn’t fight if there’s a war, or you can wage a private war in peacetime if you don’t like peace; and if there’s any law that debars you from political or judicial office, you will none the less take either if they come your way. It’s a wonderfully pleasant way of carrying on in the short run, isn’t it? ‘In the short run perhaps.’

39. Plato - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
plato. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. plato add more on the dialogue form. plato s Metaphysics platonism, or realism. One
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plato
Main Page Recent changes Edit this page Page history ... Printable version Not logged in
Log in
Help
Other languages: Dansk Deutsch Esperanto Eesti ... Simple English
Plato
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Plato (c. 427 BC - c. 347 BC ) was an immensely influential classical Greek philosopher , student of Socrates and teacher of Aristotle . One of his most famous works is The Republic (Greek Politeia, 'city') in which he outlines Socrates's vision of an "ideal" state. It is most famous not for its content, but rather the formula for philosophical inquiry, often known as the socratic method. Plato also wrote the Laws and many dialogues in which Socrates is the main participant. Plato's works typically take the form of a dialogue between Socrates and other characters about the "true" nature of some abstract ideal, such as justice, piety, love, virtue, etc., etc. Though the works are framed as transcribed conversations, it is clear from their length and depth that many liberties have been taken with the speakers' words, and given the evolution of the philosophical ideas presented, it is clear that at least in later dialogues Plato has his fictional Socrates espouse ideas that may never have occurred to the actual Socrates.
"The safest general characterization of the European philosophical tradition is that it consists of a series of footnotes to Plato."

40. Decision Tree For Optimization Software
You may cite this guide formally as HD Mittelmann and P. Spellucci, Decision Tree for Optimization Software, World Wide Web, http//plato.asu.edu/guide.html
http://plato.la.asu.edu/guide.html
Problems/
Software
Benchmarks
Testcases ...
Sources
Decision Tree for Optimization Software
Search the Decision Tree
Web statistics for server Plato
Welcome! This site aims at helping you identify ready to use solutions for your optimization problem, or at least to find some way to build such a solution using work done by others. If you know of useful sources not listed here, please let us know. If something is found to be erroneous, please let us know, too. Where possible, public domain software is listed here. In any case, observe the expressed or implied LICENSE conditions ! In most cases, these accompany the source code. As a rule, most codes are free for research. This means free for academic research and teaching or for trying whether it serves your needs. Commercial uses (either direct or indirect) require licensing, as a rule. We do not aim at giving an overview over existing commercial products (there exists lots of that). Information on commercial solvers can be found here: linear/nonlinear-programming-faq's NEOS Software Guide We have structured the information in the way you can see at the top bar. Clicking on the corresponding part takes you there. The contents are as follows:

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 2     21-40 of 179    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | 7  | 8  | 9  | Next 20

free hit counter