George Washington Madam Curie Abraham Lincoln Napoleon Bonaparte Orville and Wilbur Wright Queen Victoria Albert Einstein Mahatma Ghandi Confucius  AllBiographies' Forum
Our Dictionary
Our Math Site
free slot
 search biography names
  match all words
match any words
use wildcards
 browse biographies
get a new biography

browse by name

browse by year
 browse by category
Top 100 Categories

Categories 101-300

Categories 301-500

Categories 501-633

Dictionary and Language Portal
English Dictionary
allmath.com
math for students


travel deals
hotel rooms

$500 Bonus. Click here.


allbiographies.com privacy policy

biography classifications major works cross references
biography
name: Plato

sex: male
lived: (c.428–347 BC)

biography: Greek philosopher, probably born in Athens, Greece of an aristocratic family. Little is known of his early life, but he was a devoted disciple of Socrates. He travelled widely, then in about 367 BC founded his Academy at Athens, where Aristotle was his most famous pupil. He remained there for the rest of his life, apart from visits to Syracuse, where he was involved in political experiments. His 30 or more dialogues are conventionally divided into three periods. The early dialogues have Socrates as the principal character engaged in ironic and inconclusive interrogations about the definition of different moral virtues (piety in the Euthyphro, courage in the Laches, and so on). In the middle, highly literary dialogues, such as the Symposium, Gorgias, Phaedo, and Republic, he increasingly develops his own positive doctrines, such as the theory of knowledge as recollection, the immortality of the soul, the tripartite division of the soul, and above all the theory of forms (or ‘ideas’) which contrasts the transient, material world of ‘particulars’ (objects merely of perception, opinion, and belief) with the timeless, unchanging world of universals or forms (the true objects of knowledge). The Republic also describes Plato's celebrated political utopia, ruled by philosopher-kings who have mastered the discipline of ‘dialectic’. The third group of later dialogues (including the Parmenides, Theaetetus, and Sophist) represents a series of highly sophisticated criticisms of the metaphysical and logical assumptions of his middle period, and contain some of his most demanding and original work. Taken as a whole, his philosophy has been so enormously influential that the whole subsequent Western tradition was described by Whitehead as a series of ‘footnotes to Plato’.

free slot
browse by name
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

browse by year
  2700 - 691 BC
690 - 531 BC
530 - 481 BC
480 - 391 BC
390 - 281 BC
280 - 131 BC
130 - 61 BC
60 BC - 29 AD
30 - 109
110 - 239
240 - 329
330 - 409
410 - 549
550 - 639
640 - 799
800 - 899
900 - 979
980 - 1039
1040 - 1099
1100 - 1139
1140 - 1179
1180 - 1219
1220 - 1249
1250 - 1279
1280 - 1319
1320 - 1349
1350 - 1379
1380 - 1549
1550 - 1649
1650 - 1659
1660 - 1749
1750 - 1789
1790 - 1819
1820 - 1839
1840 - 1859
1860 - 1869
1870 - 1879
1880 - 1889
1890 - 1899
1900 - 1909
1910 - 1919
1920 - 1929
1930 - 1939
1940 - 1949
1950 - 2005
No Birth Date

 
 
Copyright © 2008 WhiteBeard the Pirate, You've Been Hacked!, All rights reserved.