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The Nature of Knowledge and Plato Now

Confronting Epistemology with Some of its Ancient Roots

The Nature of Knowledge and Plato Now cover

The Nature of Knowledge and Plato Now

Confronting Epistemology with Some of its Ancient Roots

Description

A bold and revisionary synthesis of contemporary and ancient Greek ways of knowing that confronts epistemology with its Platonic roots and reveals its flaws.

Through close engagement with Plato's Meno, Theaetetus, and Republic, Stephen Hetherington argues that several foundational assumptions in contemporary epistemology fail to hold up when measured against the philosophical depth of these dialogues. Should epistemology, as practiced today, begin anew?

Focusing on central Platonic concerns about the nature of knowledge, Hetherington challenges the idea that epistemology can be pursued as a purely conceptual enterprise. He suggests that a historically grounded approach may not only enrich epistemological inquiry but also draw it closer to metaphysical reflection.

In this ambitious work, Hetherington explains that we need a clearer understanding of epistemology's Platonic roots-both to make sense of what we are doing when we ask what knowledge is, and to improve how we understand knowledge itself.

Table of Contents

Preface and Acknowledgements

Introduction

1. Tethering Epistemology's Meno Metaphor?

2. Should the Theaetetus Have Been Even More Aporetic?

3. Gettier's Platonic Moment

4. Knowledge-Practicalism and the Republic's Powers Argument

5. What Might Socrates Say about Post-Gettier Epistemology?

References

Product details

Bloomsbury Academic Test
Published 26 Nov 2026
Format Ebook (Epub & Mobi)
Edition 1st
Pages 272
ISBN 9781350621145
Imprint Bloomsbury Academic
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Author

Stephen Hetherington

Stephen Hetherington is Emeritus Professor of Phil…

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