Ví dụ về việc sử dụng Thrasymachus trong Tiếng anh và bản dịch của chúng sang Tiếng việt
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And Thrasymachus is a sophist.
Life and work of Thrasymachus.
For Thrasymachus, justice is merely the advantage of the stronger.
That's because you're a clever fellow, Thrasymachus.
According to Thrasymachus, injustice is better than justice.
Socrates has 3 arguments to go against what Thrasymachus stated.
According to Thrasymachus, justice is nothing else but the advantage of the stronger.
Far am I from agreeing with Thrasymachus that justice is the.
Thrasymachus defines justice as the advantage or what is beneficial to the stronger(338c).
The most famous representatives of the sophistic movement are Protagoras, Gorgias, Antiphon, Hippias,Prodicus and Thrasymachus.
Thrasymachus: I declare that justice is nothing else than that which is advantageous to the stronger.
When we had got to this point in the argument, and every one saw that the definition ofjustice had been completely upset, Thrasymachus, instead of replying to me, said.
Never, then, my blessed Thrasymachus, can injustice be more profitable than justice.
Plato thinks he can prove that his ideal Republic is good; a democrat who accepts the objectivity of ethics may think that he can prove the Republic bad;but anyone agreeing with Thrasymachus will say:"There is no question of proving or disproving;
In ethics, Thrasymachus' ideas have often been seen as the first fundamental critique of moral values.
I thought what I said to Thrasymachus showed that justice is better than injustice, but you won't accept it from me.
Thrasymachus, breaking angrily into the discussion, declares that he has a better definition of justice to offer.
The difference between Plato and Thrasymachus is very important, but for the historian of philosophy it is one to be only noted, not decided.
Thrasymachus, in the first book of the Republic, argues that there is no justice except the interest of the stronger;
I think that Thrasymachus gave up before he had to, charmed by you as if he were a snake.
Though Thrasymachus claims that this is his definition, it is not really meant as a definition of justice as much as it is a delegitimization of justice.
First he makes Thrasymachus understand and admit that his point of references view injustice as a virtue.
Nonsense!" cried Thrasymachus"Any fool can see that a horse has a very long jaw bone so it must have forty-two teeth.".
Cicero mentions Thrasymachus several times in connection with Gorgias and seems to imply that Gorgias and Thrasymachus were contemporaries.