According to some Late Antique commentators we should take as the only purpose of each dialogue the doctrine of the whole work.Thus the Anonymous on Plato's philosophy rejects the opinion that the rhetoric is one of the themes of the Phaedrus. In the Hermias' Scholia in Phaedrum the dialogue as a whole deals with universal beauty which should be considered the only theme. Purpose at which this paper aims is to discuss Socrates' analogous eros. Socrates is seen as a doctor of the souls and a supreme lover of the wisdom and of the divine beauty
Eros - in theory and, perhaps, in practice - was a central concern of certain pre-Socratics, most ob...
none1noIn this chapter I will focus on some relevant aspects of the first three encomiastic speeches...
This paper tackles Socrates’s paideia as conceptualized in the texts of Aristophanes (esp. Clouds) a...
Plato’s Symposium (2001) consists of seven speeches in praise of eros — the god of love, the shared ...
This paper will examine Plato's conception of eros in the Symposium by looking to his predecessors. ...
The final thesis aims to develop the question of beauty in Plato. To do so, it tries to gain a prope...
//// Abstract: This essay explores the difference between the erotic Socrates portrayed in the Sympo...
In this paper I investigate the understanding of eros expressed in the speeches of Phaedrus and Agat...
The first part of my hypothesis, then, is simple enough, and would be accepted in principle by most ...
One of the ways in which Plato has captured the popular imagination is with the claim that the philo...
In the Symposium and Phaedrus Plato transforms the coeval way of thinking about eros. Since the time...
Plato\u27s Symposium is one of the most puzzling dialogues among his works to interpret. It has many...
Commentators of Plato’s Symposium rarely recognize the importance of traditional Greek conceptions o...
Various currents of thought and individual thinkers recently refer to Plato’s epimeleia heautou: the...
Plato's Phaedrus consists of three speeches about love (230e-257b) and the discussion about rhetoric...
Eros - in theory and, perhaps, in practice - was a central concern of certain pre-Socratics, most ob...
none1noIn this chapter I will focus on some relevant aspects of the first three encomiastic speeches...
This paper tackles Socrates’s paideia as conceptualized in the texts of Aristophanes (esp. Clouds) a...
Plato’s Symposium (2001) consists of seven speeches in praise of eros — the god of love, the shared ...
This paper will examine Plato's conception of eros in the Symposium by looking to his predecessors. ...
The final thesis aims to develop the question of beauty in Plato. To do so, it tries to gain a prope...
//// Abstract: This essay explores the difference between the erotic Socrates portrayed in the Sympo...
In this paper I investigate the understanding of eros expressed in the speeches of Phaedrus and Agat...
The first part of my hypothesis, then, is simple enough, and would be accepted in principle by most ...
One of the ways in which Plato has captured the popular imagination is with the claim that the philo...
In the Symposium and Phaedrus Plato transforms the coeval way of thinking about eros. Since the time...
Plato\u27s Symposium is one of the most puzzling dialogues among his works to interpret. It has many...
Commentators of Plato’s Symposium rarely recognize the importance of traditional Greek conceptions o...
Various currents of thought and individual thinkers recently refer to Plato’s epimeleia heautou: the...
Plato's Phaedrus consists of three speeches about love (230e-257b) and the discussion about rhetoric...
Eros - in theory and, perhaps, in practice - was a central concern of certain pre-Socratics, most ob...
none1noIn this chapter I will focus on some relevant aspects of the first three encomiastic speeches...
This paper tackles Socrates’s paideia as conceptualized in the texts of Aristophanes (esp. Clouds) a...