"Ulysses signifies, at the same time, wandering, peregrination, leaving one's own world, knowledge, heroism and privations, temptations but also returning to Ithaca, driven by the longing for a dear shore, with all that its existence implies. Ancient Greece is, in fact, an Ulysses in perpetual search and finding, wandering and returning. Likewise, the philosophical problematic of the Greek sages is not foreign but, on the contrary, closely related to the epic of the quests, wanderings and returns of Ulysses and of the Greeks in general. We can say, without exaggeration, that this spirit was embedded in everything that the Greeks created. Thus, the homeland of dialectics appeared with its three great landmarks: Socrates, Plato, Aristotle..." Lucian Cherata