
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy organizes scholars from around the world in philosophy and related disciplines to create and maintain an up-to-date reference work.
Plato (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)
Mar 20, 2004 · There is another feature of Plato’s writings that makes him distinctive among the great philosophers and colors our experience of him as an author. Nearly everything he wrote …
The Meaning of Life - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
May 15, 2007 · It has become increasingly common for philosophers of life’s meaning, especially objectivists, to hold that life as a whole, or at least long stretches of it, can substantially affect …
Plato’s Ethics: An Overview - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
Sep 16, 2003 · Like most other ancient philosophers, Plato maintains a virtue-based eudaemonistic conception of ethics. That is to say, happiness or well-being (eudaimonia) is …
Stoicism - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
Jan 20, 2023 · The only complete works by Stoic philosophers that survive are those by writers of Imperial times, Seneca, Epictetus, and Marcus Aurelius, as well as by lesser known authors …
Loyalty (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)
Aug 21, 2007 · Loyalty is usually seen as a virtue, albeit a problematic one. It is constituted centrally by perseverance in an association to which a person has become intrinsically …
The Cambridge Platonists - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
Oct 3, 2001 · The Cambridge Platonists have yet to receive full recognition as philosophers. Evidence from publication and citation suggests that their philosophical influence was more far …
Japanese Philosophy (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)
Apr 5, 2019 · The early twentieth-century academic philosophers in Japan, for example, were so well educated in the world’s texts and theories, many in the original languages, that they were …
Seneca (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)
Oct 17, 2007 · Like other ancient philosophers, Seneca discusses virtue as the ideal of “becoming like God.” This is, however, not an otherworldly ideal—rather, it is the ideal of perfecting our …
Philosophy of Technology (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)
Feb 20, 2009 · Humanities philosophers of technology tend to take the phenomenon of technology itself largely for granted; they treat it as a ‘black box’, a given, a unitary, monolithic, …