Mark D. Jordan Quote

The end of philosophic education, on many ancient views, is not a body of propositions to be measured against an equally propositional and already apprehended truth. The end is, rather, the having (hexis, habitus) of abiding intellectual excellences, of a power (arete, virtus) to think truthfully.


Authority and persuasion in philosophy (1985)


The end of philosophic education, on many ancient views, is not a body of propositions to be measured against an equally propositional and already...

The end of philosophic education, on many ancient views, is not a body of propositions to be measured against an equally propositional and already...

The end of philosophic education, on many ancient views, is not a body of propositions to be measured against an equally propositional and already...

The end of philosophic education, on many ancient views, is not a body of propositions to be measured against an equally propositional and already...