-
Socrates and is
introduced by him in Plato's
Theaetetus as
midwifery (
maieutics)
because it is emplo**** to
bring out
definitions implicit in the interlocutors'...
-
technology behind the
Maieutic Engine, an
intuitive search engine based on
behavior analysis and non-declarative queries. The
Maieutic Engine is inspired...
-
discipline that
understands the task of reasoning, not as foundational, but as
maieutic. In the 17th-century
Dutch Republic, the rise of
early modern rationalism...
-
Doxastic attitudes Epistemology Gnothi seauton Ignoramus et
ignorabimus Maieutics Münchhausen
trilemma Pyrrhonism Sapere aude
Skepticism There are known...
- of contrasts, and the
dialogs of Plato, as well as a
precursor to the
maieutic Socratic method of Socrates. The
Milesian philosopher Thales is also known...
-
means "soul guidance". The
psychagogy of
Ancient Greece, also
known as
maieutic psychagogy,
involved Socrates (or
another advanced teacher)
helping a parti****nt...
- orientation/identity and/or
gender identity Socratic questioning (or
Socratic maieutics),
disciplined questioning that can be used to
pursue thought in many directions...
-
Socratic questioning (or
Socratic maieutics) was
named after Socrates. He
utilized an
educational method that
focused on
discovering answers by asking...
-
professional obligations are in the
humanist tradition. He
would call for a
maieutic (jurisprudential)
oratory art
against the
grain of the
modern privilege...
-
create additional problems. Permissiveness, the
metaphor of mid-wifery (or
maieutics), "guidance", a
dependence on things, "changing minds", all
contain either...