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| | Philosophy - Plato: Platonism (Site not responding. Last check: ) |
 | | Initially, Platonism (Platoica secta) was rather dogmatic, and it denoted specific philosophical systems, which Plato's companions and followers at the Academy developed from his dialogues and oral discussions. |
 | | "Platonism" was not created by Plato, and in the most general of terms, is an intense concern for the quality of human life -- always ethical, often religious, and sometimes political -- based on a belief in unchanging and eternal realities, which are independent of the changing particulars of the world perceived by the senses. |
 | | Platonism is not concerned, for example, with Plato's reaction to the Sophistic Movement or with Greek poetic anthropomorphism or with the origin of of the Socratic technique of question-and-answer and refutation -- or indeed Socrates himself. |
| www.archaeonia.com /philosophy/plato/platonism.htm (934 words) |
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