Across
- 3. A Greek philosopher and polymath during the Classical period in Ancient Greece. Taught by Plato, he was the founder of the Lyceum
- 6. The art of persuasion, which along with grammar and logic, is one of the three ancient arts of discourse
- 7. An argument or disagreement, especially an official one between, for example, workers and employers or two countries with a common border
- 9. Exactly what is needed or wanted
- 10. A Greek word literally translating to the state or condition of 'good spirit'
- 11. Generally a questioning attitude or doubt towards one or more putative instances of knowledge which are asserted to be mere belief or dogma
- 12. Type of conservative religious movement characterized by the advocacy of strict conformity to sacred texts
- 14. An ancient Greek sophist, pre-Socratic philosopher, and rhetorician who was a native of Leontinoi in Sicily
- 16. A family of philosophical views which deny claims to objectivity within a particular domain
- 22. A saying derived from Plato's account of the Greek philosopher Socrates. It is also called the Socratic paradox.
- 24. Discipline concerned with what is morally good and bad and morally right and wrong
Down
- 1. A written composition in which two or more characters are represented as conversing
- 2. basic and fundamental beliefs that guide or motivate attitudes or actions
- 4. Socrates` call of the philosophy
- 5. Moral excellence
- 8. A pre-Socratic Greek philosopher and rhetorical theorist,numbered as one of the sophists by Plato
- 13. Someone who practices philosophy
- 15. A Greek philosopher from Athens who is credited as a founder of Western philosophy
- 17. The philosophical study of beauty and taste
- 18. The philosophical study of goodness or the worth of something
- 19. An Athenian philosopher during the Classical period in Ancient Greece, founder of the Platonist school
- 20. The philosophical idea that only one's mind is sure to exist
- 21. Teacher in ancient Greece in the fifth and fourth centuries BC
- 23. One of the Delphic maxims and was the first of three maxims inscribed in the pronaos of the Temple of Apollo at Delphi
