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  1. Platão e alguns mitos que lhe atribuímos.Miguel Spinelli - 2007 - Trans/Form/Ação 30 (1):191-204.
    Não é objetivo deste estudo investigar os mitos que Platão supostamente inventou, e, sim, os que (na tentativa de interpretar a sua obra) foram inventados sobre ele: convicções que lhe foram atribuídas e que não são dele, mas de outras crenças que buscaram nas dele justificativa e amparo. Dois desses mitos são neste estudo analisados com maior destaque: um, aquele que diz que “Platão fez do corpo um inimigo da alma”; outro, que “Platão refuta a percepção sensível”.
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  • Socrate 'Dream' in the Theaetetus.Hans Meyerhoff - 1958 - Classical Quarterly 8 (3-4):131-.
    AT the beginning of the third part of the Theaetetus , Socrates entertains an interesting theory of knowledge in the form of a ‘dream’. In Cornford's translation, it reads as follows: I seem to have heard some people say that what might be called the first elements () of which we and all other things consist are such that no account () can be given of them. Each of them just by itself can only be named; we cannot attribute to (...)
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  • Socrate ‘Dream’ in the Theaetetus.Hans Meyerhoff - 1958 - Classical Quarterly 8 (3-4):131-138.
    AT the beginning of the third part of the Theaetetus, Socrates entertains an interesting theory of knowledge in the form of a ‘dream’. In Cornford's translation, it reads as follows: I seem to have heard some people say that what might be called the first elements () of which we and all other things consist are such that no account () can be given of them. Each of them just by itself can only be named; we cannot attribute to it (...)
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