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Plato - Biography |  | Plato - Biography: Encyclopedia II - Plato - Biography |  | Plato was born in Athens or Aegina in May or December in 428 BC or 427 BC. He was raised in a moderately well-to-do aristocratic family. His father was named Ariston, and his mother Perictione. His family claimed descent from the ancient Athenian kings, and he was related — though there is disagreement as to exactly how — to the prominent politician Critias. According to a late Hellenistic account by Diogenes Laertius, Plato's given name was Aristocles, whereas his wrestling coach, Ariston of Argos, dubbed him Platon, meani ...
See also:Plato, Plato - Biography, Plato - Work, Plato - Themes, Plato - Form and basis, Plato - Metaphysics, Plato - Epistemology, Plato - The state, Plato - Platonic scholarship, Plato - Bibliography, Plato - By tetralogy, Plato - Stephanus pagination, Plato - Chronology, Plato - Middle Dialogues, Plato - Loeb Classical Library |  | | Plato, Plato - Bibliography, Plato - Biography, Plato - By tetralogy, Plato - Chronology, Plato - Epistemology, Plato - Form and basis, Plato - Loeb Classical Library, Plato - Metaphysics, Plato - Middle Dialogues, Plato - Platonic scholarship, Plato - Stephanus pagination, Plato - The state, Plato - Themes, Plato - Work, Important publications in Western philosophy, Mitchell Miller, Alexander Nehamas, Neoplatonism, Platonic love, Platonism, Plotinus, Theory of Forms |  | |
|  |  | Plato: Encyclopedia II - Plato - Biography
Plato - Biography
Plato was born in Athens or Aegina in May or December in 428 BC or 427 BC. He was raised in a moderately well-to-do aristocratic family. His father was named Ariston, and his mother Perictione. His family claimed descent from the ancient Athenian kings, and he was related — though there is disagreement as to exactly how — to the prominent politician Critias. According to a late Hellenistic account by Diogenes Laertius, Plato's given name was Aristocles, whereas his wrestling coach, Ariston of Argos, dubbed him Platon, meaning broad on account of his robust figure. Diogenes mentions alternative accounts that Plato derived his name from the breadth (platutês) of his eloquence, or else because he was very wide (platus) across the forehead. According to Dicaearchus, Plato wrestled at the Isthmian games. Such was his learning and ability that the ancient Greeks declared him to be the son of Apollo and told how, in his infancy, bees had settled on his lips, as prophecy of the honeyed words which were to flow from them.
Plato became a pupil of Socrates in his youth, and—at least according to his own account—he attended his master's trial, though not his execution. He was deeply affected by the city's treatment of Socrates, and much of his early work records his memories of his teacher. It is suggested that much of his ethical writing is in pursuit of a society where similar injustices could not occur. During the twelve years following the death of Socrates, he traveled extensively in Italy, Sicily, Egypt, and Cyrene in a quest for knowledge.
After his return to Athens at the age of 40, Plato founded one of the earliest known organized schools in Western civilization on a plot of land in the Grove of Academe. The Academy was "a large enclosure of ground which was once the property of a citizen at Athens named Academus... some, however, say that it received its name from an ancient hero" (Robinson, Arch. Graec. I i 16), and it operated until AD 529, when it was closed by Justinian I of Byzantium, who saw it as a threat to the propagation of Christianity. Many intellectuals were schooled in the Academy, the most prominent one being Aristotle.
Plato was also deeply influenced by a number of prior philosophers, including: the Pythagoreans, whose notions of numerical harmony have clear echoes in Plato's notion of the Forms; Anaxagoras, who taught Socrates and who held that the mind, or reason, pervades everything; and Parmenides, who argued for the unity of all things and may have influenced Plato's concept of the soul.
Other related archives(The) Apology (of Socrates), (The) Laws, (The) Republic, (The) Symposium, 16th century, 1945, 19th century, 21st century, 347 BC, 427 BC, 428 BC, 529, Academus, Academy, Aegina, Al-Farabi, Albert Einstein, Alexander Nehamas, Alfred Tarski, Alonzo Church, Anaxagoras, Apology, Arabic, Aristotle, Athenian, Athenian kings, Athens, Atlantis, Averroes, Avicenna, Being, Byzantine Empire, Byzantium, Charmides, Christianity, Constantinople, Cratylus, Critias, Crito, David Hume, Demiurge, Dicaearchus, Diogenes Laertius, Enneads, Epinomis, Euthyphro, First Alcibiades, Friedrich Nietzsche, George Gemistos Plethon, Gnostics, Gorgias, Gottlob Frege, Greek, Hellenistic, Henricus Stephanus, Hipparchus, Immanuel Kant, Important publications in Western philosophy, Ion, Isthmian games, James Loeb, John Locke, Justinian I, Karl Popper, Kurt Gödel, Laches, Latin, Laws, Loeb Classical Library#Plato, Lorenzo de Medici, Lysis, Martin Heidegger, May 21, Menexenus, Meno, Middle Ages, Mitchell Miller, Neoplatonic, Neoplatonism, Niels Bohr, Parmenides, Persian, Phaedo, Phaedrus, Plato's allegory of the cave, Plato's metaphor of the sun, Platonic epistemology, Platonic idealism, Platonic love, Platonic realism, Platonism, Plotinus, Protagoras, Pythagoreans, Renaissance, Republic, Saint Justin Martyr, Scholastic, Scholasticism, Second Alcibiades, Socrates, Socratic Dialogues, Socratic dialogues, Socratic problem, Stephanus pagination, Symposium, The Bell Curve, The Form of the Good, The Mismeasure of Man, The Open Society and Its Enemies, The Republic, Theaetetus, Thomas Hobbes, Thrasyllus, Thrasymachus, Tiberius, Timaeus, Zoroaster, Zoroastrian, abstract, allegory of the cave, aristocracy, arts, attributes, classical Greek, commentaries, content, convention, democracy, despotism, dialectic, dialogue, dialogues, dualism, environment, epigrams, ethical, eugenic, first principles, forms, government, harmony, hereditary, heredity, hierarchy, ideas, imagination, intelligence, interpretations, knowledge, learning, letters, metaphor of the sun, metaphors, mind, mise en scène, monarchy, moral, nature, nature versus nurture, objective, oligarchy, ontological, opinion, perception, personality, philosopher, postmodernists, pro forma, quantum mechanics, reality, reason, recollection, right opinion, sense-perception, social classes, societal, soul, state, subjective, tetralogies, the Forms, the divided line, the divided line of Plato, totalitarian, treatises, tyranny, universals, universe, virtue
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Biography", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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