Meno - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Meno is a Socratic dialogue written by Plato. Written in the Socratic dialectic style, it attempts to determine the definition of virtue, or arete, meaning in this case virtue in general, rather th...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meno
Plato's Problem - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Plato's problem is the term given by Noam Chomsky to the gap between knowledge and experience. It presents the question of how we account for our knowledge when environmental conditions seem to be an...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plato's_Problem
Specifically, if Socrates' part of the dialectic is edited out (and Meno's few lines are also eliminated), the dialectic reveals a different meaning: the dialectic demonstrates sophistry. Witness the slave boy's part of the dialectic:
www.ed.uiuc.edu/EPS/PES-Yearbook/96_docs/boyles.html
By changing the question, and redirecting it towards Meno, Socrates refuses to take-up the role of answerer and assumes, instead, his familiar stance of critique and cross-examination.
www.ed.uiuc.edu/EPS/pes-yearbook/94_docs/higgins.htm www.ed.uiuc.edu/EPS/pes-yearbook/94_docs/higgins.htm
Essays about Meno Socrates ... Philosophy; ... doubting and thinking. In Platoamp39s dialogue Meno Socrates discusses ways in which virtue can be acquired with Meno. There are three ... View More; Wordcount: 2342 ... Platoamp39s Meno; ... In Platoamp39s ampquotMenoampquot, Meno asks Socrates, the great philosopher,
www.megaessays.com/essay_search/Meno_Socrates.html www.megaessays.com/essay_search/Meno_Socrates.html
In Platos Meno, Socrates argues in favour of the pre-natal existence of knowledge, ... As a result, Socrates demonstrates the limits of sophistry: because we now perceive the dialectic as being questionable in intent, we must also look at Platos belief that all knowledge can be recollected in a questioning light.
www.paperlw.net/html/Philosophy/200807/21-8727.html
explained, but shown: just as Socrates demonstrates to Meno what teaching is, and what virtue is, by showing him how to teach his slave, Plato demonstrates ...
people.ucsc.edu/~abestone/papers/short_meno.pdf people.ucsc.edu/~abestone/papers/short_meno.pdf
The Meno and the Symposium show two instances of. Socrates's search for wisdom. In the process, they demonstrate that wisdom is important not just for ...
www.cupr.org/VI2/VoicingIdeas-McDonald2.pdf
In one famous dialog, Meno, Socrates demonstrates that even a poor slave boy has the same knowledge of truth available to him as the most noble of Greeks.
hnn.us/articles/1494.html
Socrates demonstrates that a slave boy of Meno's household can learn certain facts of geometry (a subset of the Pythagorean theorem: that the diagonal of a square produces a square twice the area of the original square: h2 = 2a2).
everything2.com/title/Meno everything2.com/title/Meno