These dialogues, e.g., Charmides, Laches, Crito, Euthydemus, and Euthyphro, are called aporetic. |
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The significance of this distinction among dialogues is that one can isolate a strain of moral teaching in the aporetic and mixed dialogues. |
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For Plutarch, rather Plato accommodates harmoniously both an aporetic and a doctrinal element in his philosophy. |
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Any attentive reader of the dialogues must feel that Socrates has now given an answer to the questions that started many of the aporetic dialogues. |
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Adorno's Aesthetic Theory devotes its attention to the dialectic evolving from this aporetic foundation of poetry. |
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The access to citizenship, a necessary condition to have the same rights as the children of Italian parents, is made up of a long, torturous and often aporetic administrative procedure. |
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Derrida attends to what is necessarily hidden and aporetic within a discourse, and emphasizes the secrets irreducible to public disclosure. |
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In spite of their inconclusive nature, in the aporetic dialogues the character Socrates maintains principles about morality that he seems to take to be fundamental. |
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The evidence of an aporetic conclusion in the theoretical account of freedom prepares the ground for the important distinction between theoretical and practical reasoning. |
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