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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 3 page paper compares and contrasts the pre-socratic thinkers with the ideas of Aristotle, Plato and Socrates. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
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3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: RG13_SA102pre.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
would come later like Aristotle (The New York Times, 2008). Indeed, the later philosophers like Aristotle and Plato would write books would use the pre-Socratic literature as a springboard for
discussion. What was the focus of these early thinkers? Pre-Socratic philosophers looked for explanations that would help resolve mysteries and would go above and beyond the usual mythology (The New
York Times, 2008). Authors contend that while the term is somewhat uncomplimentary as it implies that little credible information emerged before Socrates, it also implies the opposite in that Socrates
was not the first philosopher (The New York Times, 2008). Indeed, there was much thought to emerge prior to his arrival. The Milesean School was thought to be promoted between
625 and 545 BC and highlights the contributions of Thales and Miletus (The New York Times, 2008). Thales for examples argued that the source of everything is attached to water
(The New York Times, 2008). The Pythagoreans were heavily involved with mathematics and this school of thought-obviously started by the well known Pythagoras-was relevant until the fourth century BC (The
New York Times, 2008). Heraclitus took on problems proposed by the Mileseans and proposed that all things would come down to the element of fire (The New York Times, 2008).
He lived during the late fifth century BC (The New York Times, 2008). The Eleatic school for instance, would argue that there was a difference between the real world, and
the ordinary world that everyone was used to living in (The New York Times, 2008). The Sophists are perhaps the most well known of all the pre-Socratic scholars. And of
the Sophists, Protagoras is the best known (The New York Times, 2008). Protagoras contended that truth is relative (The New York Times, 2008). The focus of the Sophists was seemingly
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