Taking the form of a dialogue between Socrates, Polus and Callicles, the Gorgias debates crucial questions about the nature of government. While the aspiring politician Callicles propounds the view that might is right, and the rhetorician Gorgias argues that oratory and the power to persuade represent 'the greatest good', Socrates insists on the duty of politicians to consider the welfare of their citizens--a duty he believed had been dishonoured in the Athens of his time. The dialogue offers fascinating insights into how classical Athens was governed, as well as creating a theoretical framework that has been highly influential on subsequent political debate. Walter Hamilton’s distinguished translation has been completely updated for thi...
The political and cultural forces of Periclean Athens brought rhetoric to the fore as the master kno...
In the Apology, Socrates claims he is better off than others because he knows he does not know. This...
This thesis explores Plato’s critique of Athenian civics education as contained in his Socratic dial...
This thesis aims to provide an interpretation of the Gorgias such that it can genuinely be grasped a...
On considère souvent que le projet de fondation d’une rhétorique philosophique chez Platon ne s’effe...
The position of Socrates in Plato’s earlier dialogues is often seen as an anticipation of contempora...
Abstract: Recent interpretations of the opening exchange between Socrates and Gorgias in Plato&rsquo...
We often consider that the Platonic project of founding a philosophical rhetoric is carried out only...
This thesis offers Plato's readers a different approach to reading the Gorgias. Chief consideration ...
El trabajo pretende hacer un una aproximación a la relación de la retórica y la política en la obra ...
This paper claims that Socrates’ refutation of Gorgias in the eponymous dialogue is designed not to ...
A 'platonic' dialogue in which Plato and Gorgias (and later Aristophanes) dispute about the nature o...
This paper claims that Socrates’ refutation of Gorgias in the eponymous dialogue is designed not to ...
Although often dismissed as a villain, Callicles’ views about philosophy, politics, and human nature...
This is the translation and interpretation of the Gorgias' speech from Plato's dialogue Gorgias (456...
The political and cultural forces of Periclean Athens brought rhetoric to the fore as the master kno...
In the Apology, Socrates claims he is better off than others because he knows he does not know. This...
This thesis explores Plato’s critique of Athenian civics education as contained in his Socratic dial...
This thesis aims to provide an interpretation of the Gorgias such that it can genuinely be grasped a...
On considère souvent que le projet de fondation d’une rhétorique philosophique chez Platon ne s’effe...
The position of Socrates in Plato’s earlier dialogues is often seen as an anticipation of contempora...
Abstract: Recent interpretations of the opening exchange between Socrates and Gorgias in Plato&rsquo...
We often consider that the Platonic project of founding a philosophical rhetoric is carried out only...
This thesis offers Plato's readers a different approach to reading the Gorgias. Chief consideration ...
El trabajo pretende hacer un una aproximación a la relación de la retórica y la política en la obra ...
This paper claims that Socrates’ refutation of Gorgias in the eponymous dialogue is designed not to ...
A 'platonic' dialogue in which Plato and Gorgias (and later Aristophanes) dispute about the nature o...
This paper claims that Socrates’ refutation of Gorgias in the eponymous dialogue is designed not to ...
Although often dismissed as a villain, Callicles’ views about philosophy, politics, and human nature...
This is the translation and interpretation of the Gorgias' speech from Plato's dialogue Gorgias (456...
The political and cultural forces of Periclean Athens brought rhetoric to the fore as the master kno...
In the Apology, Socrates claims he is better off than others because he knows he does not know. This...
This thesis explores Plato’s critique of Athenian civics education as contained in his Socratic dial...