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         Plato:     more books (98)
  1. Reading Plato's Theaetetus by T. D. J. Chappell, 2005-03-31
  2. Plato's Meno (Special Edition for Students) by Plato, 2010-03-19
  3. Six Great Dialogues: Apology, Crito, Phaedo, Phaedrus, Symposium, The Republic (Thrift Edition) by Plato, 2007-05-11
  4. Plato: The Republic, Books 1-5 (Loeb Classical Library No. 237) by Plato, 1930-01-01
  5. The Republic: A New Translation by Plato, 1996-08-17
  6. The Dialogues of Plato, Volume 2: The Symposium by Plato, 1993-08-25
  7. Plato's Phaedo by Plato, 2010-05-06
  8. Opera: Volume I: Euthyphro, Apologia Socratis, Crito, Phaedo, Cratylus, Sophista, Politicus, Theaetetus (Oxford Classical Texts) by Plato, 1995-10-19
  9. Protagoras and Meno by Plato, 2006-01-01
  10. Plato: Symposium (Cambridge Greek and Latin Classics) (Greek Edition) by Plato, 1980-03-31
  11. Plato's Political Philosophy by Mark Blitz, 2010-09-28
  12. The Last Days of Socrates by Plato, 2010-05-06
  13. Plato's Republic (Cliffs Notes) by Thomas Thornburg, 2000-12-15
  14. Plato: Gorgias by Plato, 2009-09-25

61. Plato: Vladimir Solov'ev
The 1935 Richard Gill translation of Vladimir Solovyov's Essay on plato. Presented on a single page.
http://www.geocities.com/hckarlso/plato.html
Plato
By Vladimr Solov'ev
Translated by Richard Gill
To view the whole text, click here: Plato To go directly to a section in the text, click on the section listing below: I II III IV ...
Return to the realism page

62. Plato
Forum devoted to discussing plato's works.
http://killdevilhill.com/platochat/wwwboard.html
Plato Plato's Dialogues, Socrates, The Apology, Republic, Platos Republic, Great Books and Plato research paper tips. Study hard and write your own essays and papers! //Required //var site = '681666'; //var mnum = '139010'; //Not Required var max_words = 4; var max_links_per_word = 4; var link_color = '0107A1'; var boxbg_color = 'FFFAEA'; var boxtitle_color = 'black'; var boxdesc_color = 'black'; var boxurl_color = 'red'; Open Source CMS Renaissance Postnuke Hosting Gallery Hosting Blog Hosting ... Cool Credit Cards
Ahoy mate! Welcome to the new Plato campfire forum!
Here's the old Plato campfire.
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Forum List Go to Top New Topic ... Older Messages Topics Author Date Looking for help for a paper, Life imitates Art debate new E French Plato new Dana divided line, why unequal sections? new ortega ++++ Portable DVD player SALE! $120 EACH new Vdotdvds Gay Marriage and Plato's virtue theory new Rob The Forms and The GOOD new michael plato and mill new Michael Plato's Republic new Christine Plato's relevance and other things new Paul Rezendes neo-Platonists new Re: neo-Platonists new Tikhal Re: neo-Platonists new ralph Re: neo-Platonists new warren a new a help!why does plato give so much importance to the guardinas?

63. PLATOMANIA - De Site Van / Door Muziekliefhebbers
platomania.nl is een nederlandstalige site boordevol recensies van cd s uit alle genres van de popmuziek, en nieuws over releases en acties uit de plato winkels
http://www.platomania.nl/

64. 10 Questions With Dana Plato - Autograph Collector, August 1999
Autograph Collector, August 1999, a brief biography.
http://www.odysseygroup.com/acm899/10.htm
Autograph Collector Online A
sidekicks Todd Bridges and Gary Coleman.
In 1989 she posed for Playboy,
Dana Plato
After that, Plato appeared in B-rated bombs like Bikini Beach Race (1992) and Compelling Evidence (1995), and tried her hand in a stage play, Last of the Red Hot Lovers. In 1997 she turned in a credible performance as the friend (and later lesbian lover) of a woman betrayed by her cheating husband in the soft-core video flick Different Strokes.
Todd Bridges. Both strugled after the popular

sitcom was cancelled. Steve Woolf photo

Dana Plato
If Dana Plato were alive today, she would still be signing autographs, just as she did for Autograph Collector and hundreds of her fans when she and former
Dana Plato
AC: Do you sign autographs through the mail? How many requests do you receive? DP: Yes. AC: What is the strangest autograph request you have ever had?
Hundreds of fans kept Plato and Bridges

signing throughout the day. Steve Woolf photo
AC: Are you aware of how large the hobby of collecting autographs has become? How did you become aware? DP: No I was not. I became aware at the collectors shows.

65. Plato's Republic
plato s Republic. plato usually wrote relatively short pieces, like the Euthyphro, Meno, etc. plato s Republic, Note Machiavelli s View of Government.
http://www.friesian.com/plato.htm
Plato's
Republic
Plato usually wrote relatively short pieces, like the Euthyphro Meno , etc. In all his writings there are only two book length works, the Republic and the Laws . The Laws was the last thing Plato wrote, at eighty, and it is a grim and terrifying culmination of the totalitarian tendencies in his earlier political thought. It is also pretty dull, since Plato had all but abandoned his earlier lively dialogue format. The Republic , however, is the supreme product of Plato's most mature years, thought, and style. It contains virtually the entire universe of Plato's philosophy. The word "republic" is from Latin: Res publica means "public matters" or "the state." In Greek, the title was the Politeia , which means the Constitution . But the Republic does not start out about politics. It is initially a familiar kind of Socratic dialogue about justice, just as the Euthyphro is about piety and the Meno is about virtue. The Republic is divided into ten Books. Each of these was originally what would fit onto one papyrus scroll. [By late Roman times, the scrolls were cut up and sewn together into codices , or the kind of bound books that we continue to use.] The entire first Book of the

66. Justice As A Virtue
Survey of justice as a virtue from plato to Rawls; by Michael Slote.
http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/justice-virtue/
version history
HOW TO CITE

THIS ENTRY
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
A B C D ... Z
This document uses XHTML-1/Unicode to format the display. Older browsers and/or operating systems may not display the formatting correctly. last substantive content change
MAR
Justice as a Virtue
When we speak of justice as a virtue, we are usually referring to a trait of individuals, even if we conceive the justice of individuals as having some (grounding) reference to social justice. But Rawls and others regard justice as "the first virtue of social institutions" (1971, p. 3), so "justice as a virtue" is actually ambiguous as between individual and social applications. This essay will reflect and explore that ambiguity, though the principal focus will understandably be on the justice of individuals.
1. History
Although the idea of social justice based in a social contract is mentioned in Plato's Republic and was known even earlier, the Republic's conception of individual justice is distinctively virtue ethical. To be sure, Plato understands individual justice on analogy with justice "writ large" in the state, but he views the state, or republic, as a kind of organism or beehive, and the justice of individuals is not thought of as primarily involving conformity to just institutions and laws. Rather, the just individual is someone whose soul is guided by a vision of the Good, someone in whom reason governs passion and ambition through such a vision. When, but only when, this is the case, is the soul harmonious, strong, beautiful, and healthy, and individual justice precisely consists in such a state of the soul. Actions are then just if the sustain or are consonant with such harmony.

67. Plato Area Map
Shows where plato is in relation to Glencoe, Hutchinson, and Minneapolis.
http://tiger.census.gov/cgi-bin/mapsurfer?infact=2&outfact=2&act=move&am

68. Plato.htm
Journal of the International Society of plato
http://www.ex.ac.uk/plato/
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69. Solo Cocina
Colecci³n de platos tradicionales, salsas, sopas y postre. Contiene adem¡s tabla de calor­as, gu­a de vinos, foro y enlaces relacionados.
http://jo.burdalo.eresmas.net/
www.solococina.net RECETAS, MENÚ, SANDWICHES, BAGUETTES Y TODO LO REFERENTE A LA GASTRONOMÍA menú de lujo tabla de calorías medidas de interés vinos de la Rioja ... LAS INFUSIONES POR J. BURDALO Tomates confitados LAS HIERBAS EN LA COCINA Estofado de Jabalí Merluza asturiana ... los cócteles ENLACES DE INTERÉS www.uskola.cocinar.tk www.mundorecetas.com www.sabor-artesano.com las ensaladas ... los postres Gracias por tu visita Añadir enlace var logDomain = 'www.wanadoo.es'; var logChannel = 'miweb'; var logPath = 'control_net';

70. ILTweb - K-12 Projects
Technologies,1992. Nettleship The Theory of Education in the Republic of plato Teachers College Press Classics in Education Series No. 36
http://www.ilt.columbia.edu/academic/digitexts/aristotle/bio_aristotle.html
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71. Gastronomía Peñes Dixital
Informaci³n sobre la cocina de Asturias, recetas de los principales platos t­picos y gu­a de bares y restaurantes.
http://www.pdixital.org/PAGINAS/index.html

72. Perseus Encyclopedia
www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgibin/text?lookup=encyclopedia+plato More results from www.perseus.tufts.edu Redirecting to platoYou are being redirected to plato® Web Learning Network (on www.platoweb.com). Click here to speed up the process If you can
http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/encyclopedia?entry=Plato

73. Atlantis: Timaeus And Critias
One of the earliest, and most quoted, mention of the lost continent of Atlantis, came from these two dialogues of plato.
http://www.activemind.com/Mysterious/Topics/Atlantis/timaeus_and_critias.html

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Atlantis: Timaeus and Critias Introduction The Dialogues Cast of Characters Timaeus and Critias, two of Plato 's dialogues, are the only existing written records which specifically refer to Atlantis. The dialogues are conversations between Socrates, Hermocrates, Timeaus, and Critias. Apparently in response to a prior talk by Socrates about ideal societies, Timeaus and Critias agree to entertain Socrates with a tale that is "not a fiction but a true story." The story is about the conflict between the ancient Athenians and the Atlantians 9000 years before Plato's time. Knowledge of the distant past apparently forgotten to the Athenians of Plato's day, the story of Atlantis was conveyed to Solon by Egyptian priests. Solon passed the tale to Dropides, the great-grandfather of Critias. Critias learned of it from his grandfather also named Critias, son of Dropides. The dialogues that follow were written by Plato some time around 360 BC and are English translations by Benjamin Jowett: Note : The pages and paragraphs of the dialogues are a convenience created by myself. They are not a part of the originals but are intended to make load times relatively short and to make reading on computer monitors less of a strain.

74. Plato Quotes - The Quotations Page
Quotations by Author. plato (427 BC 347 BC) Greek author philosopher in Athens more author details. We have 2 book reviews related to plato.
http://www.quotationspage.com/quotes/Plato

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Quotations by Author
Plato (427 BC - 347 BC)

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Showing quotations 1 to 10 of 36 total We have 2 book reviews related to Plato.
Read the works of Plato online
at The Literature Page
Be kind, for everyone you meet is fighting a hard battle.
Plato
Death is not the worst than can happen to men.
Plato
If women are expected to do the same work as men, we must teach them the same things.
Plato
- More quotations on: Men And Women
Ignorance, the root and the stem of every evil.
Plato
Laws are partly formed for the sake of good men, in order to instruct them how they may live on friendly terms with one another, and partly for the sake of those who refuse to be instructed, whose spirit cannot be subdued, or softened, or hindered from plunging into evil.
Plato
- More quotations on: Laws
Man...is a tame or civilized animal; never the less, he requires proper instruction and a fortunate nature, and then of all animals he becomes the most divine and most civilized; but if he be insufficiently or ill- educated he is the most savage of earthly creatures.
Plato
Never discourage anyone...who continually makes progress, no matter how slow.

75. The Academy [Internet Encyclopedia Of Philosophy]
of the philosophical institution founded by plato, which advocated skepticism in succeeding generations.......
http://www.utm.edu/research/iep/a/academy.htm
The Academy
Philosophical institution founded by Plato, which advocated skepticism in succeeding generations. The Academy ( Academia Academia is frequently used in philosophical writings, especially in Cicero, as indicative of the Academic sect. Sextus Empiricus enumerates five divisions of the followers of Plato. He makes Plato founder of the first Academy, Aresilaus of the second, Carneades of the third, Philo and Charmides of the fourth, Antiochus of the fifth. Cicero recognizes only two Academies, the Old and the New, and makes the latter commence as above with Arcesilaus. In enumerating those of the old Academy, he begins, not with Plato, but Democritus, and gives them in the following order: Democritus, Anaxagoras, Empedocles, Parmenides, Xenophanes, Socrates, Plato, Speusippus, Xenocrates, Polemo, Crates, and Crantor. In the New, or Younger, he mentions Arcesilaus, Lacydes, Evander, Hegesinus, Carneades, Clitomachus, and Philo ( Acad. Quaest. iv. 5). If we follow the distinction laid down by Diogenes, and alluded to above, the Old Academy will consist of those followers of Plato who taught the doctrine of their master without mixture or corruption; the Middle will embrace those who, by certain innovations in the manner of philosophizing, in some measure receded from the Platonic system without entirely deserting it; while the New will begin with those who relinquished the more questionable tenets of Arcesilaus, and restored, in come measure, the declining reputation of the Platonic school.

76. Emoticons And Smileys On PLATO In The 1970s
Emoticons and smileys emerged on the plato system in the 1970s in a unique and different way. In fact, emoticons on plato were already an art form by 1976.
http://www.platopeople.com/emoticons.html
Home About What's New Research Questions ... FAQ PLATO Emoticons
13 September 2002 The news is floating around the Web right now about the "discovery" of the first online emotion-conveying icon or "emoticon." What readers and reporters are apparently not aware of is that the emoticon or "smiley" being discussed is the first ASCII smiley. Like so many things, PLATO was doing emoticons and smileys, online and onscreen, years earlier. In fact, emoticons on PLATO were already an art form by 1976. PLATO users began doing smiley characters probably as early as 1972 (when PLATO IV came out), but possibly even earlier on PLATO III (still to be determined... old-timer PLATO III users please speak up!).
A close-up of some famous PLATO smileys. How were these things done? Well, on PLATO, you could press SHIFT-space to move your cursor back one space and then if you typed another character, it would appear on top of the existing character. And if you wanted to get real fancy, you could use the MICRO and SUB and SUPER keys on a PLATO keyboard to move up and down one pixel or more in effect providing a HUGE array of possible emoticon characters. So if you typed "W" then SHIFT-space then "O" then SHIFT-space then "B", "T", "A", "X", all with SHIFT-spaces in between, all those characters would plot on top of each other, and the result would be the smiley as shown above in the "WOBTAX" example. Below are just some examples of smileys and emoticons collected from lesson =m4= on PLATO in the mid 1970s:

77. Instruments
Includes links to museums and collections, historical guides, historical sources and facsimiles, societies, individual instruments, and world instruments.
http://plato.acadiau.ca/courses/musi/Callon/2273/Instr.htm
Links to History of Musical Instruments
Gordon J. Callon site map
Museums and Collections
Historical Guides ...
Museums and Collections
Kenneth G. Fiske Museum of Musical Instruments at The Claremont Colleges Albert R. Rice , curator] musée de la musique (Paris) [in French;

78. 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 community
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: 28 February 2004

79. Plato's Republic
plato the Platypus and his buddies make the transition from college to careers but can't quite get the hang of it. By Alexis Fajardo.
http://www.platosrepublic.com/
Today's archived strip
new weekly strips in the ION
An introduction to the site!
New weekly strips.
Character Highlights!
A list of links to other top-notch sites!
May 23, 2004
In lieu of this week's strip, I've uploaded a short story, Funeral Games , for your entertainment. I'm submitting this to the SPX Anthology (the topic of the anthology is war , now how could I pass that up?). Let me know what you think. It's just amazing what you'll find on the internet these days...like this review of Plato's Republic #911 from Sequential Tart . Granted the review is years old but better late than never! You can now order this comic strip classic, click the cover below.
Articles and editorials about the strip.
Animations and more!
An open forum for readers and fans.
Shop Plato's Republic! Read archived strips by date. Read archived strips by storylines!
Plato's Republic Alexis Fajardo and may not be reproduced in any form, by any method for any purpose without the prior written consent of Alexis Fajardo. So there.

80. Plato. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001
plato. (pl ´t ) (KEY) , 427?–347 BC, Greek philosopher. plato’s teachings have been among the most influential in the history of Western civilization. 1.
http://www.bartleby.com/65/pl/Plato.html
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