A. Jacques-Louis David
B. Aristotle
C. Xenophon
D. Plato
Western Political Thoughts
Western Political Thoughts
A. The radius of a circle
B. The height of the Parthenon
C. The double of a square’s area
D. The golden ration of a given square
A. Recollection
B. Virtue
C. Political skill
D. Gift of the gods
A. Infinitely large
B. Inherently virtuous
C. Corruptible
D. Immortal
A. How can one look for what one does not know?
B. How can those without virtue be elected if democracy is virtuous?
C. Xeno’s paradox
D. How can virtue be wisdom but not knowledge?
A. Socrates is quick
B. Socrates is numbing
C. Socrates is cold-hearted
D. Socrates is suspicious
A. This is a list, not a definition
B. The definition implicitly contains the term it is to define
C. The definition does not correspond to an eidos
D. The definition does not cover all cases of virtue
A. “than not to know the truth?”
B. “than to seek virtue and fail to find it?”
C. “than to desire bad things and secure them?”
D. “than to be a sophist?”
A. Shape and color
B. Shape and ordor
C. Color and sound
D. Tables and chairs
A. Justice
B. Moderation
C. Wisdom
D. All of the above