About 52,700 results
Open links in new tab
  1. 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.

  2. 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 …

  3. 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 …

  4. 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 …

  5. 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 …

  6. 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 …

  7. 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 …

  8. 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 …

  9. 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 …

  10. 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, …