.
Greek philosopher, probably born in Athens of an aristocratic
family. Little is known of his early life, but he was a devoted
disciple of Socrates. He travelled widely, then in about 367 BC
founded his Academy at Athens, where Aristotle was his most famous
pupil. He remained there for the rest of his life, apart from visits
to Syracuse, where he was involved in political experiments. His 30 or
more dialogues are conventionally divided into three periods. The
early dialogues have Socrates as the principal character engaged in
ironic and inconclusive interrogations about the definition of
different moral virtues (piety in the Euthyphro, courage in the
Laches, and so on). In the middle, highly literary dialogues, such as
the Symposium, Gorgias, Phaedo, and Republic, he increasingly develops
his own positive doctrines, such as the theory of knowledge as
recollection, the immortality of the soul, the tripartite division of
the soul, and above all the theory of forms (or "ideas') which
contrasts the transient, material world of "particulars' (objects
merely of perception, opinion, and belief) with the timeless,
unchanging world of universals or forms (the true objects of
knowledge). The Republic also describes Plato's celebrated political
utopia, ruled by philosopher-kings who have mastered the discipline of
"dialectic'. The third group of later dialogues (including the
Parmenides, Theaetetus, and Sophist) represents a series of highly
sophisticated criticisms of the metaphysical and logical assumptions
of his middle period, and contain some of his most demanding and
original work. Taken as a whole, his philosophy has been so enormously
influential that the whole subsequent Western tradition was described
by Whitehead as a series of "footnotes to Plato'.
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