Filósofo

Isocrates

436 BC - 338 BC

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Isócrates (em grego: Ἰσοκράτης; 436 a.C. – 338 a.C. ou 336 a.C.) foi um orador e retórico ateniense. Isócrates, chamado de o Pai da Oratória, porque foi o primeiro a escrever discursos, que serviam de modelo a seus discípulos. Foi ele quem implantou a Retórica no currículo escolar de Atenas. Leia mais na Wikipédia

His biography is available in 47 different languages on Wikipedia. Isocrates is the 148th most popular filósofo (down from 133rd in 2024), the 71st most popular biography from Greece (down from 67th in 2019) and the 14th most popular Greek Filósofo.

Isocrates is most famous for his orations, which were written speeches that he delivered to persuade his audience to take a certain course of action.

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Among Filósofos

Among filósofos, Isocrates ranks 148 out of 1,267Before him are Mozi, Kanada, Wilhelm Dilthey, Edith Stein, Chrysippus, and Alexander Gottlieb Baumgarten. After him are Proclus, Buddhaghosa, Emanuel Swedenborg, John Venn, Han Fei, and Louis Althusser.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 436 BC, Isocrates ranks 2Before him is Artaxerxes II of Persia.  Among people deceased in 338 BC, Isocrates ranks 1After him are Shang Yang, Artaxerxes III, Duke Xiao of Qin, and Archidamus III.

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In Greece

Among people born in Greece, Isocrates ranks 71 out of 1,024Before him are Polykleitos (-450), Nikos Kazantzakis (1883), Alcaeus of Mytilene (-620), Epaminondas (-418), Pope Dionysius (200), and Demetrius of Thessaloniki (270). After him are Constantine I of Greece (1868), Nana Mouskouri (1934), Lysippos (-390), George II of Greece (1890), Princess Marina of Greece and Denmark (1906), and Peleus (null).

Among Filósofos In Greece

Among filósofos born in Greece, Isocrates ranks 14Before him are Protagoras (-486), Gorgias (-483), Theophrastus (-371), Apollodorus of Athens (-180), Antisthenes (-445), and Pyrrho (-365). After him are Clement of Alexandria (150), Melissus of Samos (-470), Hippias (-443), Diotima of Mantinea (-450), Prodicus (-460), and Cratylus (-500).

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