2. The Republic is a philosophical dialogue work written by Plato (427- 347 BC), an ancient Greek philosopher. This book mainly discusses the construction, governance and justice of Plato's ideal country, with the theme of state management. Plato's Republic is his masterpiece, involving politics, education, ethics, philosophy and many other fields. His thought is broad and profound, which almost represents the whole Greek culture. From 20 15 to 1 1, The Republic was rated as one of the 20 most influential academic books in British Academic Book Week.
3, "drinking" (or translated as "banquet" and "banquet talk", English: The Symposium, ancient Greek: σ υ μ π? Sigma argument), by Plato. This dialogue describes the tragic actor Agathon inviting several friends to drink and chat at home to celebrate the award of his play. Participants included rhetorician Fidel, comedian aristophanes, philosopher Socrates and others. The whole dialogue mainly consists of six passages of ode to eros, the god of love.
4. One of Plato's works. Mainly analyzes the finite and infinite. Plato thinks that the idea is absolute in the Phaedo and the National Chapter, and the "big idea" is absolutely big and cannot be combined with the "small"; Opposing ideas are separated from each other and cannot be connected. In The Wise Man, it is pointed out that the most common opposites (concepts or categories), such as existence and non-existence, movement and stillness, similarity and difference, can be interlinked.
5. One of Plato's most profound dialogues. This book is Plato's later work. This book is a dialogic philosophical work, which reflects the core ideas of Plato's late ontology, epistemology and philosophy of language and occupies an important position in the history of ancient Greek philosophy.