Charmides proposes that temperance is minding your own business. Critias takes up the argument with Socrates suggesting that temperance might be the same as [...]. Socrates says that if wisdom really is knowing what you know and knowing what you don't know, no one would ever make a mistake, and we would pass through life without erring. He concludes that this does not happen, and that science is impossible.
Charmides proposes that temperance is minding your own business. Critias takes up the argument with Socrates suggesting that temperance might be the same as [...]. Socrates says that if wisdom really is knowing what you know and knowing what you don't know, no one would ever make a mistake, and we would pass through life without erring. He concludes that this does not happen, and that science is impossible.
Charmides proposes that temperance is minding your own business. Critias takes up the argument with Socrates suggesting that temperance might be the same as [...]. Socrates says that if wisdom really is knowing what you know and knowing what you don't know, no one would ever make a mistake, and we would pass through life without erring. He concludes that this does not happen, and that science is impossible.
status | not learned | measured difficulty | 37% [default] | last interval [days] | |||
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repetition number in this series | 0 | memorised on | scheduled repetition | ||||
scheduled repetition interval | last repetition or drill |