Difference between revisions of "Protagoras"

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'''Protagoras''' (c. 490 - c. 420 BC) was a [[Presocratic Philosophy|Presocratic]] [[Greek]] [[philosopher]].  
 
'''Protagoras''' (c. 490 - c. 420 BC) was a [[Presocratic Philosophy|Presocratic]] [[Greek]] [[philosopher]].  
  
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Diogenes Laertius' book "Lives of the Philosophers" is source for many early Greek philosophers including Protagoras; but this work was compiled over six hundred years after Protagoras' death and consequently not accurate. [[Plato]] also wrote about Protagoras,considering him a sophist; [[Aristotle]] regarded Protagoras as who first introduced a spiritual principle, as a sober man among the inebriated.   
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Diogenes Laertius' book "Lives of the Philosophers" is source for many early Greek philosophers including Protagoras; but this work was compiled over six hundred years after Protagoras' death and consequently not accurate. [[Plato]] also wrote about Protagoras, considering him a sophist; [[Aristotle]] regarded Protagoras as who first introduced a spiritual principle, as a sober man among the inebriated.   
  
 
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Revision as of 04:45, May 27, 2008

Protagoras (c. 490 - c. 420 BC) was a Presocratic Greek philosopher.

Diogenes Laertius' book "Lives of the Philosophers" is source for many early Greek philosophers including Protagoras; but this work was compiled over six hundred years after Protagoras' death and consequently not accurate. Plato also wrote about Protagoras, considering him a sophist; Aristotle regarded Protagoras as who first introduced a spiritual principle, as a sober man among the inebriated.

Protagoras' doctrines can be divided into three groups:

1. Orthoepeia: the study of the correct use of words 2. Man-measure statement: the notion that knowledge is relative to the knower 3. Agnosticism: the claim that we cannot know anything about the gods. [1]


He could be considered an agnostic and relativist.

See also

External links