Daniel C. Dennet said in a wonderful accident, "Our thoughts - if you want - it is as realistic as our dreams" (Kayzer, 37). If this is true, if our thoughts and consciousness are simply dreams and brain structures, what we feel, our memories, and reality are just illusions. . Not only is this the correct remark in science, but also doubts about who we are and what we know.
Does philosophy lead us to a better life? Here, Professor Philip Kitcher at Columbia University explains Plato, Aristotle, Socrates, Confucius, Mencius, Emmanuel Kant, Friedrich Nietzsche, Albert Coronation, Jean-Paul Sartre and others. Such a wonderful idea helps to find the meaning and happiness of human existence even if there is no "better place".
As time passed, philosophers such as Plato, Aristotle, Socrates, Kant cast doubt about the meaning of art. Several dialogues in Plato solved the problem of art: Socrates said that inspiration for poetry came from the museum, not rational. He agrees with other forms of Phaedrus (265a-c) sacred craziness (alcoholism, desires and dreams), but in the Republic he would like to cancel Homer's wonderful poetry art and laughter. In 'Aeon', Socrates did not imply his opposition to the Homer of the Republic. Today's Bible, as it is in the modern Christian world, suggests that Hoemier's Iliad plays a role in the ancient Greek world.
Socrates and Aristotle dedicated their lives to exchange studies and discovery practices. Most of their ideas are on books like republics and rhetoric. Socrates completed the dialecticism - while one communicates by suggesting an objection, the other responds by preserving an established thinking school. On the other hand, Aristotle explains rhetoric - the ability of a person to persuade people's ideas through a one-way dialogue (also called a demonstration).