My Name is Plato
As was the case with all the posts so far in the series 10 People Who Would Have Been Great Bloggers, based on research, I attempted to get into the head of these great thinkers and project what I thought they would say. But this time, for Plato, I decided to stick to the research. I like Plato because he loved to ask good questions, and I am quite fascinated by his notion of Atlantis. Though, I did not try to write in his voice, Plato would have been an excellent educational blogger, and he would ask us the tough questions forcing us to think. Here is a short 7-minute video about Plato and his life.
Mentor: Socrates
Protege: Aristotle
Written Works: The Apology (of Socrates), Crito, Laches, Lysis, Charmides, Euthyphro, Hippias Minor and Major, Meno, Euthydemus, Menexenus, Cratylus, Repuglic, Phaedrus, Syposium, Phaedo, Republic, Parmenides, Theatetus, Sophist,Statesmas,Timaeus,Critias,Philebus, and Laws
Platonics
- Plato’s birth name was Aristocles and was given the nickname Platon because of his broad shoulders
- Founder of the the philosophical school, Academy in Athens in 387 B.C - named after a legendary Greek called Academus - the first institution of higher learning in the Western world
- The way in which Plato operated the Academy, his ideas on what constitutes an educated “man” greatly influenced educational theory
- Plato served as tutor to the new king Dionysius II
- Studied the doctrines of Cratylus, and the work of Pythagoras and Parmenides before he met Socrates
- Writings mostly take the form of question and answer dialogues
- Mastered the art of asking good questions
- Well traveled, had a career in the military and politic,s and studied music and poetry when he was young
- During his 12-year travel after Socrates’ death, Plato studied with the Pythagoreans in Italy, and then studied the philosophy of his contemporaries, geometry, geology, astronomy and religion
Plato was a diligent learner, and loved to dialogue, though he was shy. What can you learn from him? Would he make an ideal Invisible Mentor?
Further Reading
Video Credit: Encyclopedia channel
Related articles by Zemanta
- Plato’s dialogues, part 1: Why Plato? (guardian.co.uk)
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