Plato's Meno is the dialogue which more than any other occupies a transitional position between the early Socratic dialogues and the developed middle period theory of the Phaedo, Symposium and Republic. It is thus of particular interest for the insights that it gives us into the process by which Plato arrived at that theory. The issues which it raises are philosophically interesting in themselves: how can we know that we have the right answer to a question, unless we knew what the answer was before we asked the question in the first place? Is excellence (arete) something that we can acquire by being taught, or is it something that we are born with? And the dialogue is of historical interest for the evidence it provides, both for ancient Greek notions of what constitutes excellence, and for contemporary attitudes to the Sophists, who claimed to teach excellence and took larger fees for doing so. First published in 1985, this edition was revised in 1991, and the preface and bibliography updated in 2004. Greek text with facing-page English translation, introduction, notes and commentary.
ISBN: | 9780856682490 |
Publication date: | 1st January 1985 |
Author: | Plato, R W Sharples |
Publisher: | Liverpool University Press an imprint of Oxbow Books |
Format: | Paperback |
Pagination: | 195 pages |
Series: | Aris & Phillips Classical Texts |
Genres: |
Ancient, classical and medieval texts Literary studies: ancient, classical and medieval Ancient Greek and Roman philosophy Ancient history |