This essay articulates the differences and suggests the similarities between the practices of Socratic political speaking and those of Platonic political writing. The essay delineates Socratic speaking and Platonic writing as both erotically oriented toward ideals capable of transforming the lives of individuals and their relationships with one another. Besides it shows that in the Protagoras the practices of Socratic political speaking are concerned less with Protagoras than with the individual young man, Hippocrates. In the Phaedo, this ideal of a Socrates is amplified in such a way that Platonic writing itself emerges as capable of doing with readers what Socratic speaking did with those he encountered. Socrates is the Platonic political...
This essay aims at elucidating the distinction between sophistry and rhetoric in Plato’s Gorgias sta...
Plato wrote his philosophy in the dialogue form. In his dialogues, a character called Socrates often...
In this thesis I start by examining collection and division in Plato???s Phaedrus. I argue that\ud i...
The Pennsylvania State University- USA This essay articulates the differences and suggests the simil...
This essay articulates the differences and suggests the similarities between the practices of Socrat...
Understanding Plato's contribution to democratic education means more than understanding the substan...
The position of Socrates in Plato’s earlier dialogues is often seen as an anticipation of contempora...
Phaedrus’ speech in Plato’s Symposium was often ignored by Platonic scholars as unphilosophical, and...
The intention of this research is to elaborate on Socrates’ philosophy and its serious consequences ...
The following essay presents a close reading of the Platonic dialogue Alcibiades I. In the text, Soc...
The Hipparchus, Plato’s short dialogue on the love of gain, generally receives little attention from...
One of the most comical implications of Socrates’ (in)famous suggestion that "philosopher-kings" be ...
Plato is performing a dialectical thought process in juxtaposing Socrates and the Eleatic Stranger i...
Traditional interpretations of Plato see him either as an enemy of the imagination in his views of p...
Plato andAristeoteles have a teacher-student relationship. And both philosophers have the same teach...
This essay aims at elucidating the distinction between sophistry and rhetoric in Plato’s Gorgias sta...
Plato wrote his philosophy in the dialogue form. In his dialogues, a character called Socrates often...
In this thesis I start by examining collection and division in Plato???s Phaedrus. I argue that\ud i...
The Pennsylvania State University- USA This essay articulates the differences and suggests the simil...
This essay articulates the differences and suggests the similarities between the practices of Socrat...
Understanding Plato's contribution to democratic education means more than understanding the substan...
The position of Socrates in Plato’s earlier dialogues is often seen as an anticipation of contempora...
Phaedrus’ speech in Plato’s Symposium was often ignored by Platonic scholars as unphilosophical, and...
The intention of this research is to elaborate on Socrates’ philosophy and its serious consequences ...
The following essay presents a close reading of the Platonic dialogue Alcibiades I. In the text, Soc...
The Hipparchus, Plato’s short dialogue on the love of gain, generally receives little attention from...
One of the most comical implications of Socrates’ (in)famous suggestion that "philosopher-kings" be ...
Plato is performing a dialectical thought process in juxtaposing Socrates and the Eleatic Stranger i...
Traditional interpretations of Plato see him either as an enemy of the imagination in his views of p...
Plato andAristeoteles have a teacher-student relationship. And both philosophers have the same teach...
This essay aims at elucidating the distinction between sophistry and rhetoric in Plato’s Gorgias sta...
Plato wrote his philosophy in the dialogue form. In his dialogues, a character called Socrates often...
In this thesis I start by examining collection and division in Plato???s Phaedrus. I argue that\ud i...