Some dialogues of Plato are of so various a character that their relation to the other dialogues cannot be determined with any degree of certainty. The Theaetetus, like the Parmenides, has points of similarity both with his earlier and his later writings. The perfection of style, the humour, the dramatic interest, the complexity of structure, the fertility of illustration, the shifting of the points of view, are characteristic of his best period of authorship. The vain search, the negative conclusion, the figure of the midwives, the constant profession of ignorance on the part of Socrates, also bear the stamp of the early dialogues, in which the original Socrates is not yet Platonized.
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The Patient One

The Silver Locket

Summer Secrets at Bletchley Park

Great Expectations

A Daughter’s Return

The Secrets of Saffron Hall

59 Memory Lane

he Winter Garden: A captivating novel of intrigue and survival in pre-war Berlin

A Cornish Cottage by the Sea : A romantic comedy set in Cornwall

The Poppy Field

A Cosy Christmas in Cornwall

Summer in Mayfair

10 Masterpieces You Have to Read Before You Die, Vol.5 : The Odyssey, The Republic, Meditations, The Divine Comedy, Faust and others

The Complete Plato

The Republic

Laws

Summary of The Republic

Gorgias : A Clash Between Rhetoric and Philosophy – Plato’s Dialogue on Power, Morality, and the Good Life

Protagoras : A Dialogue on Virtue, Sophistry, and Education – Wisdom Versus Reputation in Ancient Greece

Philebus : What Brings True Happiness? – Plato’s Dialogue on Pleasure, Intelligence, and the Good Life

Minos : What Is Law? – Plato’s Fragmentary Dialogue on Justice and Political Philosophy

Sophist : A Deep Inquiry into Falsehood, Language, and Reality – Plato’s Study of the Nature of Being

Parmenides : A Complex Exploration of Being, Unity, and the Theory of Forms – One of Plato’s Most Challenging Dialogues

Hippias Minor : A Dialogue on Lying and Intention – Can the Better Man Do Wrong on Purpose?












