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One could argue that since Socrates was eventually sentenced to death for heresy, he was at least imprudent, in his philosophical teaching. But on the other hand, had he lived a cautious and prudent life, keeping his ideas to himself to avoid causing controversy, no one today would remember who he was. It may be that his accomplishments, as one of history's most influential philosophers, outweigh his shortened lifespan. In any event, I would not call Socrates crazy.
Socrates is famous in part for claiming ignorance, not knowledge. In fact, with respect to causal knowledge or knowing why, he is reported by Plato to have said that it was so impossible that he gave up what we would call science because of it. .
Majority
He claims that he is a midwife as he provides a service to the world by giving them the truth that they already have inside of them through philosophy; much like a midwife provides a service.
The orators claimed to be wise (sophos in Greek), but they specialized in using rhetorical (verbal) tricks to win any argument. When someone asked Aristotle if he considered himself a wise person (sophist) he said he wasn't sure, but he had always been a lover (philos=love) of wisdom - a philosophos. Socrates went even further, after a famous oracle (priestess) declared that he was the wisest man in Athens he denied that he possessed any wisdom at all (which is called Socratic ignorance). He began searching for someone wiser than himself by asking everyone he met questions about things he himself was unsure of. Many people thought they knew the answers to Socrates' questions. Rather than directly arguing with them (as the sophists did), Socrates would respond with more questions, exposing flaws in their reasoning (this came to be called the Socratic Method). When no one could successfully answer his questions, he concluded that the oracle had been right because while the other Athenians had believed they were wise when they were not, Socrates had always known that he did not know and this was his only wisdom (philosophers call that Socratic irony).
Suqraat
Charlese E. Brown has written: 'Answering the call to teach' -- subject(s): Teaching, Vocational guidance
Kumon Learning Centers, and the Kumon method they teach, are named for their creator, Toru Kumon.
In Pakistan, the teaching method typically follows a lecture-based approach where teachers present information to students and students take notes. There is also a focus on rote memorization and exams to assess learning. However, there is a growing emphasis on incorporating more interactive and student-centered teaching methods in some schools to promote critical thinking and creativity.
you call it an teaching hijacker
I assume the question is about Java. How you call a method from inside the main method depends on whether this is an instance method or a static method. To call an instance method, you need to have a valid instance. Say foo is an instance of class Foo, which was created inside the main method. Then to call the instance method implode() use foo.implode() To call the static method bar() of class Foo, use Foo.bar().
One could argue that since Socrates was eventually sentenced to death for heresy, he was at least imprudent, in his philosophical teaching. But on the other hand, had he lived a cautious and prudent life, keeping his ideas to himself to avoid causing controversy, no one today would remember who he was. It may be that his accomplishments, as one of history's most influential philosophers, outweigh his shortened lifespan. In any event, I would not call Socrates crazy.
yes we can call a static method with object
At the time of developing jvm the development team by default make a only one method call i.e; 'main' method call in the jvm that's why when the call is loading into the jvm the jvm call the main method...and execution was starts..
No
Roman Catholic AnswerCatholic priests teach Christianity as taught to us by Our Blessed Lord, and handed down from His disciples though the Bishops in union with His Vicar, the Pope. Part of that teaching is the Bible which we compiled in the first four centuries after Christ's resurrection. The main source of Christian belief is what we call, "Tradition", which is the teaching handed down through the Church, part of Tradition which got written down was the Bible, but that was a century or so later. All teaching is, of course, consistent with the Bible, as the Bible is part of that teaching.
coach