The post-Socratic dialogues represent a more advanced, sometimes more technical phase of Plato’s thinking. They reflect a willingness to question previous theories (like the Forms) and to construct a systematic cosmology that reconciles the human ethical realm with the wider nature of Being, often employing mathematical and harmonic analogies. g., Parmenides or Timaeus )? between early and late Plato? The role of the Eleatic Stranger ?
Socrates ceases to be the central speaker, often taking a backseat or disappearing entirely, as in the Laws . Plato and the Post-Socratic Dialogue
Features a young Socrates facing harsh, unanswered objections to his Theory of Forms, followed by a dense, contradictory set of deductions. followed by a dense