A. Plato
B. Aristotle
C. Socrates
D. Xenophon
Related Mcqs:
- Who stressed that ‘virtue was the most valuable of all possessions; the ideal life was spent in serch of the Good. Truth lies beneath the shadows of existence, and it is the job of the philosopher to show the rest how little they reall know.”
A. Plato
B. Aristotle
C. Socrates is cold-hearted
D. Xenophon - Who said that the state comes into existence for the sake of life and continues for the sake of good life?
A. Aristotle
B. Plato
C. Cicero
D. Machiavelli - The view that “State comes into existence for the sake of life and continues for the sake of good life” was expressed by:
A. Plato
B. Aristotle
C. Bentham
D. Idealists - Whose valuable works were published after his death according to his will?
A. Al-Ghazali
B. Al-Mawardi
C. Al-Farabi
D. Nazam-ul-Mulk Tusi - In Search of Theory book is written by:__________?
A. Horn, david Bayne
B. Small, Melvin
C. R.W. Mansbach and J.A. Vasquez
D. None of these - Anytus suggests that Meno talk to whom to learn about virtue?
A. The Sophists
B. Any Athenian on the street
C. An oracle
D. Gorgias - What mistake does Socrates eventually reveal in Meno’s definition of virtue as the desire for beautiful things and power to attain them?
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 - Who said, “Virtue – all virute – is knowledge”?
A. Socrates
B. Xenophon
C. Plato
D. Aristotle - Who said, “Virtue is sefficient for happiness”?
A. Aristotle
B. Socrates
C. Plato
D. Xenophon - What mistake does Socrates eventually reveal in Meno’s definition of virtue as the desire for beautiful things and the power to attain them?
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