Plato

Plato wrote his books in the form of dialogues -- people talking about ideas, and sometimes disagreeing about them. This makes Plato's books more interesting to read.
Socrates is usually the main person in Plato's dialogues. People who study Plato argue about whether Socrates really said the same things that Plato makes him say, or whether Plato just used Socrates as a character, to make the ideas he was talking about seem more important.
One of Plato's most famous works is The Republic (In Greek, Politeia, or 'city'). In that work, he describes Socrates's vision of an "ideal" state. The method of questioning in this dialogue, called the Socratic method, is more important than the content. The Republic contains ideas of Socrates: "Socrates said it, Plato wrote it."
Plato also wrote the Laws.
Works by Plato
We have many dialogues that were supposed to be written by Plato. But because he was such a famous philosopher, some later philosophers said that their works were really written by him, to make their works seem more important.
In the list on this page, a work is marked (1) if scholars are not sure that Plato really wrote it, and it is marked (2) if scholars generally agree that Plato did not really write it.
- Alcibiades (1)
- Apology
- Axiochus (2)
- Charmides
- Clitophon (1)
- Cratylus
- Critias
- Crito
- Definitions (2)
- Demodocus (2)
- Epigrams
- Epinomis (2)
- Eryxias (2)
- Euthydemus
- Euthyphro
- Gorgias
- Greater Hippias (1)
- Halcyon (2)
- Hipparchus (2)
- Ion
- Laches
- Laws
- Lesser Hippias
- Letters
- Lysis
- Menexenus
- Meno
- Minos (2)
- On Justice (2)
- On Virtue (2)
- Parmenides
- Phaedo
- Phaedrus
- Philebus
- Protagoras
- Rival Lovers (2)
- Republic
- Second Alcibiades (2)
- Sisyphus (2)
- Sophist
- Statesman
- Symposium
- Theaetetus
- Theages (2)
- Timaeus