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Essay on Plato

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Plato: The Life of Plato

Plato was born around 427 BC, in Athens Greece to rich and politically involved family. Plato's parents spared no expense in educating him; he was taught at the finest schools. He was taught by Socrates and defended Socrates when he was on trial. Plato traveled to Italy and may have even visited Egypt before founding The Academy. Plato also visited Sicily and instructed a young king there before returning to The Academy to teach for twenty years before his death in 347 BC at the age of eighty.
Growing up Plato would have gone to best schools the area had to offer; his parents were rich there were no limitations to what they could afford. Plato was taught by the best teachers available and was a very skillful …show more content…

At a later date Plato wrote "The Apology" remembering this horrendous time and the conversations as he and Socrates other students argued for Socrates life.
After Socrates death Plato and several of Socrates other students traveled to Megara where they stayed for 9 years. He also traveled to Italy around 390 BC where he met Archytas of Tarentum who introduced Plato to Pythagorenism. This helped form Plato's ideas that mathematics was the truest way of expressing the universe. There are also rumors of Plato traveling to Egypt and learning of the water clock but like all rumors it is not know for sure.
Plato founded The Academy in 387 BC; it was build on land that once belonged to a man named Academos hence the name The Academy. Plato founded The Academy for the purpose of teaching future leaders of Greece. The Academy had a gymnasium and several shrines on its large lot of land. After founding The Academy Plato traveled to Sicily, came back taught for four years, left for Sicily again, and then returned to The Academy to teach for twenty years. When Plato died he was succeeded by his nephew, not by Aristotle, which was who most people thought the successor would be. The Academy was eventually shut down in 529 AD, but it holds an immense record, it was kept open for nine hundred years, a feat no other establishment of its kind can claim.
In 367 BC Dion, a student and good friend of Plato, requested Plato to come and

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