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Encyclopedia > Theaetetus

Theaetetus (c. 417 B.C. – 369 B.C.) was a Greek mathematician of Geometry. His principal contributions were on irrational lengths, which was included in Book X of Euclid's Elements.


He was described as having a short nose and protruding eyes. Much of what we know of him comes from Plato.


The Theaetetus crater on the Moon is named after him.


The Theætetus is a dialogue by Plato thought to have taken place in the year 369 B.C. In this dialogue Socrates, Theodorus and Theaetetus try to define what knowledge is. Other participants in the dialogue are Eucleides and Terpsion.


Although the dialogue never succeeds in giving a clearcut answer to the question "What is knowledge?", it shows the reader some failed and some more fruitful approaches to the question. Approaches not very different from these are still discussed in modern epistemology.


The dialogue is split into roughly three sections, Knowledge is perception, Knowledge is true belief, and Knowledge is justified true belief.

Contents

Knowledge is perception

(More about the different approaches...)


Knowledge is true belief

Knowledge is justified true belief

External Link

The full text is available from Project Gutenberg (http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/webbin/gutbook/lookup?num=1726)


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  Results from FactBites:
 
PLATO'S DISCUSSION OF "KNOWLEDGE" IN THE THEAETETUS AND THE REPUBLIC - Jud Evans - Athenaeum Library of ... (2843 words)
The Theaetetus is aporetic - it is a dialogue that ends in an insoluble contradiction or paradox of meanings, though the development of the dialectic is both fascinating and highly educative epistemologically.
Socrates rejects Theaetetus' suggested definition of 'perception as knowledge' and concludes that it relegates the contextual definition to a doctrine which rules out a concise explanation of the meaning of the word 'knowledge,' for all criteria of judgment are relative to the individuals and situations involved.
Theaetetus acknowledges that thanks to Socrates he has already given utterance to more than he had in him.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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