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Protagoras

Protagoras was born around 481 BC in Andera in Ancient Greece. He was a pre-Socratic philosopher and is numbered as one of the sophists by Socrates. He died c. 420 B.C.

Protagoras was famous as a teacher of rhetoric and debate which were vital to Greek social life. Due to those interests, he was fascinated by the study of orthopaedia, or the correct use of words.

His most famous saying is: "Man is the measure of all things, of those that are that they are, and of those that are not that they are not." Despite its fame, this phrase was passed down absent any context, and its meaning isn't entirely clear. It is generally thought to be promoting relativism. It was his teachings that spurred later philosophers such as Plato to search for objective, transcendent guidelines to underly moral behavior, and the importance of subjectivity is an important theme in modern philosophy.

Protagoras was also a famous proponent of agnosticism. In "On the Gods," he wrote, "Concerning the gods, I have no means of knowing whether they exist or not or of what sort they may be."

Referenced By

481 BC | Abdera, Thrace | Alcibiades | Ancient philosophy | Complete works of Plato | Ethical relativism | Greek philosophy | Hippias | History of philosophy | Human scale | List of Greek phrases | List of Greek proverbs | List of Greeks | List of agnostics | List of ancient Greeks | List of famous Greeks | List of people by name: Pp | List of people by name: Pp-Pr | List of people by name: Pq | List of people by name: Pr | List of philosophers | List of philosophical topics (I-Q) | Listing of noted agnostics | Moral relativism | Plato | Plato/Complete works | Platon | Platonian | Pre-Socratic | Pre-Socratic philosophy | Presocratic | Presocratics | Presocriaic | Prodicus | Rhetoric | Sophist | Sophists | The Clouds | The Pre-Socratics | The Presocratics

 

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Protagoras".

 

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