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Theaetetus (Plato)The Theætetus is a dialogue by Plato thought to have been written in the year 369 B.C. In this dialogue Socrates, Theodorus and Theaetetus try to define what knowledge is. Other participants in the dialogue are Eucleides and Terpsion. Although the dialogue never succeeds in giving a clearcut answer to the question "What is knowledge?", it shows the reader some failed and some more fruitful approaches to the question. Approaches not very different from these are still discussed in modern epistemology. The dialogue is split into roughly three sections, Knowledge is perception, Knowledge is true belief, and Knowledge is justified true belief.
Knowledge is perception(More about the different approaches...) Knowledge is true beliefKnowledge is justified true beliefExternal LinkThe full text is available from Project Gutenberg The contents of this article are licensed from Wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License.
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