Clear all
Work #358

Sophist

Plato
c. 360 BC · Classical Greek
Philosophical dialogue · Classical Greek philosophy

Plato's late dialogue on the nature of false statement and the sophist — major engagement with Parmenidean monism

Attribute Fingerprint

Rows where works disagree are highlighted in gold. The full ontology grid is shown.

Attribute Sophist
Time · Extent Infinite
Time · Ontological Status Substantival
Time · Grain Continuous
Time · Freedom Non-Deterministic
Time · Traversability Linear
Time · Dimensionality One
Time · Direction Uni-directional
Space · Extent Infinite
Space · Ontological Status Substantival
Space · Curvature Flat
Space · Dimensionality Three
Space · Locality Local
Matter · Extent Infinite
Matter · Ontological Status Substantival
Matter · Conservation Conserved
Matter · Dimensionality Three
Matter · Locality Local
Observer · Time Instance Single
Observer · Space Instance Single
Observer · Knowledge Extent Partial
Observer · Knowledge Retainment Total
Observer · Physicality Embodied
Observer · Agency Active
Observer · Number Plural
Observer · Metaphysical Agency Cosmic-ordering
Observer · Moral Authority Reason
Observer · Theological Method
Energy · Extent Infinite
Energy · Ontological Status Substantival
Energy · Conservation Conserved
Energy · Dispersibility Irreversible
Information · Ontological Status Substantival
Information · Cosmic Conservation Conserved
Information · Personal Conservation Non-conserved
Information · Granularity Continuous

Dimension-by-Dimension Evidence

What each work's passages reveal about its stance on each of the six dimensions.

Time

Sophist

Atemporal Forms; temporal philosophical inquiry.

Space

Sophist

Athenian philosophical space.

Matter

Sophist

Forms and their participants.

Observer

Sophist

The Eleatic Stranger as principal interlocutor.

Energy

Sophist

Dialectical-philosophical energies.

Information

Sophist

Platonic tradition of categorical analysis.

Internal Tensions

Where each work's argument pulls against itself.

Sophist

Plato's response to Parmenidean monism has been continuously interpreted.