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         Plato:     more books (98)
  1. The Cambridge Companion to Plato (Cambridge Companions to Philosophy)
  2. The Laws of Plato by Plato, 2010-04-20
  3. Six Great Dialogues: Apology, Crito, Phaedo, Phaedrus, Symposium, The Republic (Thrift Edition) by Plato, 2007-05-11
  4. Early Socratic Dialogues (Penguin Classics) by Plato, 2005-12-27
  5. Plato's Republic (Cliffs Notes) by Thomas Thornburg, 2000-12-15
  6. The Trial and Death of Socrates by Plato, 2010-07-01
  7. Plato: The Republic (Cambridge Texts in the History of Political Thought) by Plato, 2000-09-25
  8. Plato's Phaedo by Plato, 2010-05-06
  9. The Republic: A New Translation by Plato, 1996-08-17
  10. From Plato To Piaget by William Cooney, 1993-11-16
  11. Defence of Socrates, Euthyphro, Crito (Oxford World's Classics) by Plato, 2008-07-15
  12. Plato's Philosophers: The Coherence of the Dialogues by Catherine H. Zuckert, 2009-06-01
  13. Plato's Political Philosophy by Mark Blitz, 2010-09-28
  14. Reading Plato's Theaetetus by T. D. J. Chappell, 2005-03-31

61. Redirecting To PLATO
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62. Justice As A Virtue
Survey of justice as a virtue from plato to Rawls; by Michael Slote.
http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/justice-virtue/
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Justice as a Virtue
When we speak of justice as a virtue, we are usually referring to a trait of individuals, even if we conceive the justice of individuals as having some (grounding) reference to social justice. But Rawls and others regard justice as "the first virtue of social institutions" (1971, p. 3), so "justice as a virtue" is actually ambiguous as between individual and social applications. This essay will reflect and explore that ambiguity, though the principal focus will understandably be on the justice of individuals.
1. History
Although the idea of social justice based in a social contract is mentioned in Plato's Republic and was known even earlier, the Republic's conception of individual justice is distinctively virtue ethical. To be sure, Plato understands individual justice on analogy with justice "writ large" in the state, but he views the state, or republic, as a kind of organism or beehive, and the justice of individuals is not thought of as primarily involving conformity to just institutions and laws. Rather, the just individual is someone whose soul is guided by a vision of the Good, someone in whom reason governs passion and ambition through such a vision. When, but only when, this is the case, is the soul harmonious, strong, beautiful, and healthy, and individual justice precisely consists in such a state of the soul. Actions are then just if the sustain or are consonant with such harmony.

63. Decision Tree For Optimization Software
Ready to use solutions for optimization problems, or at least a way to build such a solution using Category Science Math Numerical Analysis Software......Decision Tree for Optimization Software. Search the Decision Tree Webstatistics for server plato Welcome! This site aims at helping
http://plato.la.asu.edu/guide.html
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Welcome! This site aims at helping you identify ready to use solutions for your optimization problem, or at least to find some way to build such a solution using work done by others. If you know of useful sources not listed here, please let us know. If something is found to be erroneous, please let us know, too. Where possible, public domain software is listed here. In any case, observe the expressed or implied LICENSE conditions ! In most cases, these accompany the source code. As a rule, most codes are free for research. This means free for academic research and teaching or for trying whether it serves your needs. Commercial uses (either direct or indirect) require licensing, as a rule. We do not aim at giving an overview over existing commercial products (there exists lots of that). Information on commercial solvers can be found here: linear/nonlinear-programming-faq's NEOS Software Guide We have structured the information in the way you can see at the top bar. Clicking on the corresponding part takes you there. The contents are as follows:

64. Plato Area Map
Shows where plato is in relation to Glencoe, Hutchinson, and Minneapolis.
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65. Benchmarks For Optimization Software
Problems/ Software. Benchmarks. Testcases. Books/ Tutorials. Tools.Websub mission. Other Sources. Benchmarks for Optimization Software.
http://plato.la.asu.edu/bench.html
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Benchmarks for Optimization Software
by Hans Mittelmann (mittelmann@asu.edu)
Category I: Several codes, one computer
LINEAR PROGRAMMING MIXED INTEGER LINEAR PROGRAMMING QUADRATIC PROGRAMMING MIXED INTEGER NONLINEAR PROGRAMMING QUADRATICALLY CONSTRAINED QUADRATIC PROGRAMMING SEMIDEFINITE/SQL PROGRAMMING LARGE-SCALE NONLINEAR SYSTEM BENCHMARK

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67. IPS - International Plato Society
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68. Gastronomía Peñes Dixital
Informaci³n sobre la cocina de Asturias, recetas de los principales platos t­picos y gu­a de bares y restaurantes.
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69. Plato Woodwork, Inc.
plato Woodwork specializes in customized cabinetry for every room of your home.Category Business Consumer Goods and Services Furniture Home......plato Woodwork is a familyowned business specializing in custom cabinetryfor every room in your home. Copyright © 2002 plato Woodwork, Inc.
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71. Plato
Metaphysics Research LabHome Page plato. plato's Life Born, 428 BC(?),in Athens or Aegina; prior to 399 BC, studied with Socrates;
http://mally.stanford.edu/plato.html
Home Page
Plato
Plato (b. 428 B.C.?, d. 347 B.C.?) was a student of Socrates, and wrote numerous philosophical works in the form of dialogues between Socrates and various interlocutors representing different strata of Greek society. Major Works:
  • The Apology
  • The Phaedo
  • The Crito
  • The Meno
  • The Symposium
  • The Republic
  • Gorgias
  • Phaedrus
  • Philebus
  • Theaetetus
  • Protagoras
  • The Sophist
  • Timaeus
Plato's Life:
  • Born, 428 B.C.(?), in Athens or Aegina
  • prior to 399 B.C., studied with Socrates
  • 399 B.C., after the execution of Socrates, took refuge in Megara
  • 399 - 387 B.C., traveled extensively in Greece. Egypt, and Italy
  • 387 B.C., founded The Academy in Athens
  • 367 B.C., went to Syracuse to tutor Dionysius II at the suggestion of Dion
  • Died, 347 B.C.(?)
Plato's Contribution to Philosophy: Plato carved out a subject matter for philosophy by formulating and discussing a wide range of metaphysical and ethical questions. To explain the similarities and resemblances among objects of the physical world, he developed a metaphysics of Forms. His views about ethical questions could be grounded in his metaphysics of Forms via the contemplation of the Form of The Good. Plato therefore found an inherent connection between metaphysics and ethics. His greatest work, The Republic , developed an insightful analogy between harmony in the state and harmony in the individual, and it is often considered one of the greatest works ever written. Plato wrote dialogues that considered the nature of virtue itself, as well as the nature of particular virtues. He also considered epistemological questions, such as whether knowledge is justified true belief.

72. Atlantis: Timaeus And Critias
One of the earliest, and most quoted, mention of the lost continent of Atlantis, came from these two dialogues of plato.
http://www.activemind.com/Mysterious/Topics/Atlantis/timaeus_and_critias.html

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Atlantis: Timaeus and Critias Introduction The Dialogues Cast of Characters Timaeus and Critias, two of Plato 's dialogues, are the only existing written records which specifically refer to Atlantis. The dialogues are conversations between Socrates, Hermocrates, Timeaus, and Critias. Apparently in response to a prior talk by Socrates about ideal societies, Timeaus and Critias agree to entertain Socrates with a tale that is "not a fiction but a true story." The story is about the conflict between the ancient Athenians and the Atlantians 9000 years before Plato's time. Knowledge of the distant past apparently forgotten to the Athenians of Plato's day, the story of Atlantis was conveyed to Solon by Egyptian priests. Solon passed the tale to Dropides, the great-grandfather of Critias. Critias learned of it from his grandfather also named Critias, son of Dropides. The dialogues that follow were written by Plato some time around 360 BC and are English translations by Benjamin Jowett: Note : The pages and paragraphs of the dialogues are a convenience created by myself. They are not a part of the originals but are intended to make load times relatively short and to make reading on computer monitors less of a strain.

73. Plato
He is also known for being the mentor of Aristotle. In 387, platofounded the Megarian Institute of Philosophy. plato's Writings.
http://www.lcc.gatech.edu/gallery/rhetoric/figures/plato.html
lato was a Greek who was born in 428 BC. He was taught by philosopher Socrates and acquired many of his philosophies. He met the philosopher in boyhood and through many years of teaching he developed a deep respect for him. He also wrote a lot about Socrates because of this respect that he had for him. He is also known for being the mentor of Aristotle . In 387, Plato founded the Megarian Institute of Philosophy. The school primarily focused on the areas of philosophy and sciences. Plato spent the majority of the rest of his life presiding over the academy. He was the founder of Platonism, a philosophy named for himself. He went on to be one of the most famous Greek philosophers
Plato's Writings
Plato took many of his ideas about Rhetoric from his mentor, Socrates. Therefore, many of his writings included Socrates as the main character presenting the point of view that Plato wanted to convey. Both he and Socrates felt that rhetoric is most often used for selfish reasons. This is shown through Plato's work, Gorgias Gorgias says that rhetoric is "the queen of all arts" while Socrates argues that rhetoric is simply "a knack for humoring the audience." On top of this, Plato and Socrates felt that using rhetoric is immoral and "conducive to health of soul." In another work

74. Aristotle Poetics
An essay by Souvik Mukherjee, which considers the Poetics in the context of plato and more recent writers.
http://www.english-literature.org/essays/aristotle_poetics.html
Aristotle's Poetics
Complexity and Pleasure: Aristotle's 'Complex Plot' and the pleasure element in tragedy
by Souvik Mukherjee
English Literature Home Page Course Summary English Literature Resources English Literature Essays ... Contact Us
Aristotle 384-322 BC First, the instinct of imitation is implanted in man from childhood, one difference between him and other animals being that he is the most imitative of living creatures, and through imitation learns his earliest lessons; and no less universal is the pleasure felt in things imitated. We have evidence of this in the facts of experience. Objects which in themselves we view with pain, we delight to contemplate when reproduced with minute fidelity
Poetics Chapter 1V
In his Poetics [1] Aristotle classifies plot into two types: simple [haplos], and complex [peplegmenos]. The simple plot is defined as a unified construct of necessary and probable actions accompanied by a change of fortune. The complex plot, says Aristotle, is accompanied by two other features, namely; peripeteia or reversal, and anagnorisis, or recognition. It is this which Aristotle feels is the best kind of tragic plot, in that it provides the best possibility of delivering tragic pleasure.
Before we look at the distinctive features of the complex plot, it would perhaps be instructive to examine those features which it shares with the simple plot. The unity of structure recommended by Aristotle includes the tripartite division of the plot into the beginning, the middle and the end, as well as the unities of time and action. He stresses unified action, where all action in the plot carries a definite link to other actions, and subsequent actions are the necessary and probable outcomes of the former.

75. Plato's Republic
plato's Republic. plato usually wrote relatively short pieces, like the Euthyphro,Meno, etc. plato's Republic, Note Machiavelli's View of Government.
http://www.friesian.com/plato.htm
Plato's
Republic
Plato usually wrote relatively short pieces, like the Euthyphro Meno , etc. In all his writings there are only two book length works, the Republic and the Laws . The Laws was the last thing Plato wrote, at eighty, and it is a grim and terrifying culmination of the totalitarian tendencies in his earlier political thought. It is also pretty dull, since Plato had all but abandoned his earlier lively dialogue format. The Republic , however, is the supreme product of Plato's most mature years, thought, and style. It contains virtually the entire universe of Plato's philosophy. The word "republic" is from Latin: Res publica means "public matters" or "the state." In Greek, the title was the Politeia , which means the Constitution . But the Republic does not start out about politics. It is initially a familiar kind of Socratic dialogue about justice, just as the Euthyphro is about piety and the Meno is about virtue. The Republic is divided into ten Books. Each of these was originally what would fit onto one papyrus scroll. [By late Roman times, the scrolls were cut up and sewn together into codices , or the kind of bound books that we continue to use.] The entire first Book of the

76. Welkom
plato is een intensief begeleidings en ondersteuningsprogramma voor groeibedrijvengebaseerd op het B peterschapsprincipe /B /FONT . plato Vlaanderen.
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78. Read Plato - WELCOME!
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79. Benjamin Peirce
Life and work of 19th century mathematician and philosopher of mathematics; by Ivor GrattanGuinness and Alison Walsh.
http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/peirce-benjamin/
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Benjamin Peirce
Benjamin Peirce (b. April 4, 1809, d. October 6, 1880) was a professor at Harvard with interests in celestial mechanics, applications of plane and spherical trigonometry to navigation, number theory and algebra. In mechanics, he helped to establish the (effects of the) orbit of Neptune (in relation to Uranus). In number theory, he proved that there is no odd perfect number with fewer than four distinct prime factors. In algebra, he published a comprehensive book on complex associative algebras. Peirce is also of interest to philosophers because of his remarks about the nature and necessity of mathematics.
1. Career
Born in 1809, Peirce became a major figure in mathematics and the physical sciences during a period when the U.S. was still a minor country in these areas (Hogan 1991). A student at Harvard College, he was appointed tutor there in 1829. Two years later he became Professor of Mathematics in the University, a post which was changed in 1842 to cover astronomy also; he held it until his death in 1880. He played a prominent role in the development of the science curriculum of the university, and also acted as College librarian for a time. However, he was not a successful teacher, being impatient with students lacking strong gifts; but he wrote some introductory textbooks in mathematics, and also a more advanced one in mechanics (Peirce 1855). Among his other appointments, the most important one was Director of the U.S. Coast Survey from 1867 to 1874. Peirce also exercised influence through his children. By far the most prominent was

80. Plato Collection At Bartleby.com
Articles on plato from Columbia Encyclopedia and The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language.Category Society Philosophy Philosophers plato...... plato. plato’s teachings have been among the most influential in the history ofWestern civilization.—continue at Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition.
http://www.bartleby.com/people/Plato.html
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