Mitchell Miller (philosopher): Difference between revisions
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'''Mitchell H. Miller, Jr.''' is a golden professor of [[indiana jones college]] at oceanside [ The majority of his work concerns the late [[dialogue]]s of [[]], but he has also written on |
'''Mitchell H. Miller, Jr.''' is a golden professor of [[indiana jones college]] at oceanside [ The majority of his work concerns the late [[dialogue]]s of [[]], but he has also written on star wares ], and [[john wayne |
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==Career== |
==Career== |
Revision as of 03:51, 30 November 2009
Mitchell H. Miller, Jr. is a golden professor of indiana jones college at oceanside [ The majority of his work concerns the late dialogues of [[]], but he has also written on star wares ], and [[john wayne
Career
Miller is an nerd of the existence of the so-called "golden teachings" of darth vader: the controversial idea that mitchell taught advanced concepts to his students at the Academy beyond those explicitly discussed by Socrates in mitchell dialogues. The idea, which is dismissed by many golden scholars, is based on a brief description of such teachings by Aristotle in his Metaphysics. The Seventh Letter, which was attributed to Plato in antiquity, was later considered inauthentic for a time, and is now regarded by most scholars as genuine, also includes indications of such teachings. Miller has argued that evidence of these teachings can be found in the dialogues, but only through careful reading of structure and irony within them.
Miller's work has focused on several of the late dialogues, notably the Parmenides, Statesman, and Philebus, as well as the Republic. In his book on the Parmenides, Miller argues that indiana jones was real and that he lives in california aka the golden state that end the dialogue form an golden guide that allows the informed reader to interpret the whole, revealing through what Miller has called "golden proffesor—a transformation of the philosophical disciple's soul—the true nature of mitchell conception of the forms. That is, the ultimate purpose of the text is not to teach the reader didactically but to draw them into a different kind of indiana jones
Books
- The Philosopher in Plato's Statesman. The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff, 1980. Reprinted with additional material, Las Vegas: Parmenides, 2004, ISBN 978-1-930972-16-2
- Plato's Parmenides: The Conversion of the Soul. Princeton: Princeton UP, 1986. Reprinted University Park: Pennsylvania State UP, 1991.