"Socrates innocent" Essays and Research Papers

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    famous historic figures‚ Buddha and Socrates may be known as the smartest men on earth. They have set the standards in understanding religion and common sense. Both were respected leaders who many like to think started a revolution. Writings based upon their lives used to be and still are considered the basis of life to some people. As different as they are on the outside‚ they could be exactly the same from the inside. In Plato’s writing‚ Apology‚ Socrates defends himself against the court for

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    Defining Holiness

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    mind of a philosopher. The argument presented by Socrates to Euthyphro is no different. The conversation begins on the porch of the King Archon‚ where Socrates is being accused by Meletus of being impetus or unholy. These accusations arose because Socrates has questioned the beliefs of the people of Athens pertaining to their gods. In the introduction we are introduced to Euthyphro‚ a young man who has accused his father of murder. This strikes Socrates as significantly interesting and as a result an

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    Classical

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    philosopher Socrates is portrayed in two different ways. Plato‚ being a loyal follower of Socrates‚ portrays him as being a very simple man who is always open to learning new wisdom. However‚ Aristophanes portrays him as an atheist who practices sophistry along with a number of different crimes. People question whether or not Plato exaggerated the character of Socrates in an effort to gain sympathy for him‚ while others question if Aristophanes wrote the book The Clouds to slander Socrates’ character

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    The Idea of Bodily Desire Socrates‚ in Plato’s work "Symposium"‚ introduces the ladder of love through his conversation with the God-like figure‚ Diotima. The more knowledge about love one gains‚ the higher they climb and the less they focus on physical beauty. After Socrates has explained these concepts‚ Alcibiades steps in. He is confused because he himself is in love with philosophy‚ but he is also lost in bodily desire. According to the ideology of Socrates as expressed in Plato’s work "Symposium"

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    next to each other can have completely different meanings‚ especially when we apply it individually. In the "Apology" by Plato‚ the character of Socrates is one of a man in his seventies who believes that his calling is to “discourse about virtue‚ and of those other things about which you hear [him] examining [himself] and others...” Plato describes Socrates living a philosophical or examined life which overall implies the concept of human excellence. For him‚ human excellence is examining one’s life

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    Socratic Method

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    was started by Socrates‚ a Greek Philosopher. According to the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy‚ the philosopher Socrates remains‚ as he was in his lifetime (469–399 B.C.)‚ an enigma‚ an inscrutable individual who‚ despite having written nothing‚ is considered one of the handfuls of philosophers who forever changed how philosophy itself was to be conceived. Socrates wrote nothing about his work‚ as all the information we now have are reports from some of his students. “Socrates himself never spelled

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    Plato's Pheobe

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    Phaedo: Plato Creative Writing Assignment Phaedo is a dialogue written by Plato‚ in which Socrates‚ a Philosopher‚ is in prison and soon will receive the death sentence. Two hours before his death sentence‚ Socrates is attempting to comfort his friends‚ in which he explains his philosophical standpoint on death. Socrates‚ being a philosopher of the time is not threatened by death‚ and in fact looks forward to death. To him‚ death is simply the separation of the body and the soul‚ and to his philosophical

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    Socrates - The protagonist of The Apology‚ as well as all of Plato ’s other dialogues. Socrates seems to be a very simple man‚ not having many material possessions and speaking in a plain‚ conversational manner. However‚ this seeming plainness is all a part of the ironic characteristic of Socrates ’ method. Professing his own ignorance‚ he engages in conversation with someone claiming to be an expert‚ usually in ethical matters. By asking simple questions‚ Socrates gradually reveals that his interlocutor

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    After that outburst from Thrasymachus showing pride of himself I asked Socrates what was all that about. He tells me that first I have to know who is Thrasymachus‚ and how he is portrayed in “The Republic” written by Plato. He is portrayed as a sophist and cynic who argues that people are selfish. By this argument that Thrasymachus yelled to us that “justice is in the interest of the strong and the subjects obeying the interest of the strong” he claims that whoever is at the top of the hierarchy

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    Insight of Plato's Gorgias

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    Textual Analysis Term Paper: Gorgias As history suggests‚ Plato was Socrates’ prime student. Plato’s key belief was that the ultimate reality was the notion and concepts of things. His deduction was that what we see in the physical world are simply abstract representations of universal ideas. Consequently‚ Plato supposed‚ that to correctly understand reality one must transcend the physical reality into the world of ideas‚ which is seen in Plato’s “Gorgias.” A lot of the dialects in this

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