Tell your friends about this item:
Parmenides
Plato
Ordered from remote warehouse
Also available as:
- Paperback Book (2017) € 13.99
- Paperback Book (2014) € 14.99
- Paperback Book (2015) € 15.49
- Paperback Book (2014) € 15.49
- Paperback Book (2015) € 15.49
- Paperback Book (2016) € 15.49
- Paperback Book (2011) € 16.99
- Paperback Book (2017) € 16.99
- Paperback Book (2018) € 16.99
- Paperback Book (2008) € 18.49
- Paperback Book (2016) € 18.49
- Paperback Book (2016) € 19.49
- Paperback Book (2019) € 20.49
- Paperback Book (2017) € 20.99
- Paperback Book (2013) € 20.99
- Paperback Book (2018) € 21.99
- Paperback Book (2008) € 22.49
- Paperback Book (2009) € 22.49
- Paperback Book (2008) € 24.49
- Book (2022) € 26.49
- Paperback Book (2024) € 27.49
- Hardcover Book (1912) € 28.49
- Book (2017) € 28.49
- Hardcover Book (2008) € 31.49
- Paperback Book (2011) € 31.99
Parmenides
Plato
Publisher Marketing: Parmenides By Plato Greek Classics Translated by Benjamin Jowett Parmenides is one of the dialogues of Plato. It is widely considered to be one of the more, if not the most, challenging and enigmatic of Plato's dialogues. The Parmenides purports to be an account of a meeting between the two great philosophers of the Eleatic school, Parmenides and Zeno of Elea, and a young Socrates. The occasion of the meeting was the reading by Zeno of his treatise defending Parmenidean monism against those partisans of plurality who asserted that Parmenides' supposition that there is a one gives rise to intolerable absurdities and contradictions. The heart of the dialogue opens with a challenge by Socrates to the elder and revered Parmenides and Zeno. Employing his customary method of attack, the reductio ad absurdum, Zeno has argued that if as the pluralists say things are many, then they will be both like and unlike; but this is an impossible situation, for unlike things cannot be like, nor like things unlike. But this difficulty vanishes, says Socrates, if we are prepared to make the distinction between sensibles on the one hand and Forms, in which sensibles participate, on the other. Thus one and the same thing can be both like and unlike, or one and many, by participating in the Forms of Likeness and Unlikeness, of Unity and Plurality; I am one man, and as such partake of the Form of Unity, but I also have many parts and in this respect I partake of the Form of Plurality. There is no problem in demonstrating that sensible things may have opposite attributes; what would cause consternation, and earn the admiration of Socrates, would be if someone were to show that the Forms themselves were capable of admitting contrary predicates. Contributor Bio: Plato Plato (427-347 B. C.) was a classical Greek philosopher and writer whose best-known works include the "Republic", the "Apology", and the "Symposium". Contributor Bio: Jowett, Benjamin Plato, was a philosopher, as well as mathematician, in Classical Greece. He is considered an essential figure in the development of philosophy, especially the Western tradition, and he founded the Academy in Athens, the first institution of higher learning in the Western world. Along with Socrates and his most famous student, Aristotle, Plato laid the foundations of Western philosophy and science. Alfred North Whitehead once noted: "the safest general characterization of the European philosophical tradition is that it consists of a series of footnotes to Plato."
Media | Books Paperback Book (Book with soft cover and glued back) |
Released | June 26, 2013 |
ISBN13 | 9781490536316 |
Publishers | Createspace |
Genre | Chronological Period > Ancient (To 499 A.d.) |
Pages | 140 |
Dimensions | 189 × 246 × 8 mm · 263 g |
More by Plato
Others have also bought
More from this series
See all of Plato ( e.g. Paperback Book , Hardcover Book , Book , CD and Book pack )