A History of Greek Philosophy: The fifth-century enlightenmentUniversity Press, 1962 - Philosophy, Ancient |
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Page xiii
... true of the Sophists , namely that ' while the Enlightenment was a family of philosophes , it was something more as well : it was a cultural climate , a world in which the philosophes acted , from which they noisily rebelled and quietly ...
... true of the Sophists , namely that ' while the Enlightenment was a family of philosophes , it was something more as well : it was a cultural climate , a world in which the philosophes acted , from which they noisily rebelled and quietly ...
Page 7
... true knowledge . Like the empirical reason , it analysed and resolved things into basic ' natures ' ; however , these were not mere names ( as they were to the empiricist ) , but real , absolute ideas . This account is drawn from ...
... true knowledge . Like the empirical reason , it analysed and resolved things into basic ' natures ' ; however , these were not mere names ( as they were to the empiricist ) , but real , absolute ideas . This account is drawn from ...
Page 23
... true foundation on which the State is built , and grows daily in import- ance ... I refer to manners , customs , and , above all , opinion . Then for a different point of view we can turn to Locke : The law of nature being unwritten ...
... true foundation on which the State is built , and grows daily in import- ance ... I refer to manners , customs , and , above all , opinion . Then for a different point of view we can turn to Locke : The law of nature being unwritten ...
Page 28
... true ' and a ' false ' meaning according to the user's point of view . The sophia of charioteer , shipwright or musician must have been to a large extent acquired by learning , but Pindar no doubt pleased his royal patron when he wrote ...
... true ' and a ' false ' meaning according to the user's point of view . The sophia of charioteer , shipwright or musician must have been to a large extent acquired by learning , but Pindar no doubt pleased his royal patron when he wrote ...
Page 29
... true , a poet should conceal such wickedness rather than present it on the stage , because ' as schoolboys have teachers to show them the way , so poets are teachers of men ' . Euripides himself , challenged to state the grounds on ...
... true , a poet should conceal such wickedness rather than present it on the stage , because ' as schoolboys have teachers to show them the way , so poets are teachers of men ' . Euripides himself , challenged to state the grounds on ...
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Common terms and phrases
agree Alcibiades Alcidamas Antiphon Antisthenes Apol appears areté argued argument Aristippus Aristophanes Aristotle Aristotle's atheism Athenian Athens believed called Callicles character claim Clouds connexion contemporary Cratylus Critias criticism death definition democracy Democritus dialogue Diogenes discussion divine doctrine Eleatic ethical Euripides evidence existence fact fifth century Gesch give gods Gomperz Gorgias Greek Grote Halbb Hippias historical human idea interest Isocrates justice knowledge logos Lycophron matter means mentioned mind moral nature Nestle nomoi nomos opinion orator origin Parmenides passage Phaedo philosophers physis Plato pleasure poets political practical probably Prodicus Prot Protagoras Protagoras's psyche pupil question quoted reference rhetoric says sense Sextus slave Socrates Socrates's Sophists Sophs soul speaks speech teaching Theaet Theaetetus theory things thought Thrasymachus Thucydides true truth Untersteiner unwritten laws virtue VMzuL words writing Xenophon Zeus καὶ τὸ τῶν