Don't hope to get rid of books (Umberto Eco)
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The measure of all things

4.99 €
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The measure of all things
4.99 €
In basket
Plato of Athens was an ancient Greek philosopher, a student of Socrates, and the teacher of Aristotle. It was with Plato that philosophy emerged as a system of knowledge.
"Man is the measure of all things." Or is he? Socrates debates this with the Sophist philosophers in Protagoras, defending the goodness of the gods but not of man and explaining to his opponents the concept of virtue, which is the highest knowledge.
The collection also includes Plato's works "Theages," "Menexenus," "Euthydemus," "Gorgias," and "Meno." These Socratic works take the form of dialogues, in which, through question and answer, they clarify issues of upbringing and the principles of education, knowledge and ignorance, truth and falsehood, chaos and order, good and evil.
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