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  2. The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy organizes scholars from around the world in philosophy and related disciplines to create and maintain an up-to-date reference work.

  3. Plato - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy

    plato.stanford.edu/entries/plato

    Plato (429?–347 B.C.E.) is, by any reckoning, one of the most dazzling writers in the Western literary tradition and one of the most penetrating, wide-ranging, and influential authors in the history of philosophy.

  4. feminist philosophy of — see feminist philosophy, interventions: philosophy of religion and morality in western philosophy (John Hare and Jennifer Herdt) natural — see theology, natural and natural religion

  5. Plato’s Timaeus - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy

    plato.stanford.edu/entries/plato-timaeus

    Timaeus. First published Tue Oct 25, 2005; substantive revision Fri May 13, 2022. In the Timaeus Plato presents an elaborately wrought account of the formation of the universe and an explanation of its impressive order and beauty. The universe, he proposes, is the product of rational, purposive, and beneficent agency.

  6. Plato’s Ethics and Politics in - Stanford Encyclopedia of...

    plato.stanford.edu/entries/plato-ethics-politics

    Not that ethics and politics exhaust the concerns of the Republic. The account in Books Five through Seven of how a just city and a just person are in principle possible is an account of how knowledge can rule, which includes discussion of what knowledge and its objects are.

  7. Plato on Rhetoric and Poetry - Stanford Encyclopedia of...

    plato.stanford.edu/entries/plato-rhetoric

    Not just that: the quarrel is not simply between philosophy and Homer, but philosophy and poetry. Plato has in his sights all of “poetry,” contending that its influence is pervasive and often harmful, and that its premises about nature and the divine are mistaken.

  8. Friedrich Nietzsche (1844–1900) was a German philosopher and cultural critic who published intensively in the 1870s and 1880s. He is famous for uncompromising criticisms of traditional European morality and religion, as well as of conventional philosophical ideas and social and political pieties associated with modernity. Many of these ...

  9. Plato’s Myths - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy

    plato.stanford.edu/entries/plato-myths

    Plato’s Myths. What the ancient Greeks—at least in the archaic phase of their civilization—called muthos was quite different from what we and the media nowadays call “myth”. For them a muthos was a true story, a story that unveils the true origin of the world and human beings.

  10. Plato’s Ethics: An Overview. First published Tue Sep 16, 2003; substantive revision Wed Feb 1, 2023. Like most other ancient philosophers, Plato maintains a virtue-based eudaemonistic conception of ethics. That is to say, happiness or well-being (eudaimonia) is the highest aim of moral thought and conduct, and the virtues (aretê ...

  11. Artificial Intelligence - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy

    plato.stanford.edu/entries/artificial-intelligence

    AI is the field devoted to building artifacts that are intelligent, where ‘intelligent’ is operationalized through intelligence tests (such as the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale), and other tests of mental ability (including, e.g., tests of mechanical ability, creativity, and so on).