About
Some dialogues of Plato are of so various a character that their relation to the other dialogues cannot be determined with any degree of certainty. The Theaetetus, like the Parmenides, has points of similarity both with his earlier and his later writings. The perfection of style, the humour, the dramatic interest, the complexity of structure, the fertility of illustration, the shifting of the points of view, are characteristic of his best period of authorship. The vain search, the negative conclusion, the figure of the midwives, the constant profession of ignorance on the part of Socrates, also bear the stamp of the early dialogues, in which the original Socrates is not yet Platonized.
Related Subjects
Artists
Similar Artists
Alexander Hamilton
Allan Bloom
Aristotle
Brian Alexander
Clayborne Carson
Confucius
Edwin A. Abbott
Fareed Zakaria
Herodotus
James Legge
John Perry
John Stuart Mill
Lucius Annaeus Seneca
Lucretius
Ovid
Philip Stokes
Rene Descartes
Robert Garland
Sharon M. Kaye
Simon Blackburn
Soren Kierkegaard
Thomas More
Thucydides
Tom Griffith
Walpola Rahula
William James
Xenophon
