In the Protagoras, Socrates Protagorous present an argument for the claim foolish confidence is not the same thing as courageous confidence. How do they argue for this conclusion.
Question asked by: bellaleo
Asked on: 02 May 2010
Philosophy questions are always interesting ones to answer.
The best way is really to read the Protagoras for yourself, as the best way to get an understanding of a philosophical text is really to read it for yourself there is no quick substitute.
By: knowitall
Replied at: 03 May 2010
Rate Answer
Comment or provide your answer to this question
No comments have been added to this question "In the Protagoras, Socrates Protagorous present an argument for the claim foolish confidence is not the same thing as courageous confidence. How do they argue for this conclusion.".
No comments have been added to this question "In the Protagoras, Socrates Protagorous present an argument for the claim foolish confidence is not the same thing as courageous confidence. How do they argue for this conclusion.".
Ask a New Question
Find out more about Philosophy
Find out more about Philosophy
Philosophy Questions and Answers
about philosophy Questions and Answers
Next question: Plato the Laches
Become a Member! It's Free >>>
Share on Facebook:
On Twitter:
Tweet this!
Question Keywords
confidence  courageous  conclusion  argue  argument  present  protagorous  
More Questions:What Is Moral Fictionalism?
Does The Door Swings Both Ways?
Who Decides Good And Bad,right And Wrong; And By What Standard?
How Can We Know What Is Good (morally)?
What Is Emotivism?