Philosophic Classics From Plato to Derrida
46 PLATO c d e they will be delighted to hear of the ludicrous way in which you escaped from prison, dressed up in peasant’s clo ...
PHAEDO 47 72 d e 73 Plato,Phaedo, translated by F.J. Church (Pearson/Library of the Liberal Arts, 1951). PHAEDO (selections) Cha ...
48 PLATO d 74 b c And are we agreed that when knowledge comes in the following way, it is recol- lection? When a man has seen or ...
PHAEDO 49 d e 73 b Yet it was from these equal things, he said, which are different from abstract equality, that you have concei ...
50 PLATO e 76 b c d beauty, and absolute justice, and absolute holiness; in short, I repeat, to everything which we mark with th ...
PHAEDO 51 e 77 b c d Then, Simmias, he said, is not this the truth? If, as we are forever repeating, beauty, and good, and the o ...
52 PLATO c d e 79 b Yes, I will: why not? Very good, he replied. Well, said Socrates, must we not ask ourselves this question? W ...
PHAEDO 53 c d e 80 Then the soul is more like the invisible than the body; and the body is like the visible. That is necessarily ...
54 PLATO b c d e 82 called the unseen world, to dwell with the good and wise God, whither, if it be the will of God, my soul too ...
PHAEDO 55 b c d Certainly, he replied, that is so. And of these, he said, the happiest, who go to the best place, are those who ...
56 PLATO 114 e 115 b c d e 116 b c d ...A man should be of good cheer about his soul if in his life he has renounced the pleasur ...
PHAEDO 57 e 117 know are to blame. And so farewell, and try to bear what must be as lightly as you can; you know why I have come ...
58 PLATO d e 118 man with that fixed glance of his, and asked, What say you to making a libation from this draught? May I, or no ...
REPUBLIC(BOOKI) 59 Plato,Republic(Book I, 336b–342e, 347b–e; Book II, 357a–362c, 368a–376e; Book III, 412b–417b; Book IV, 427c–4 ...
60 PLATO And I was flabbergasted when I heard this, and was afraid as I looked at him, and it seemed to me that if I had not see ...
REPUBLIC(BOOKI) 61 about these things, would be banned from saying what he believes by no inconsiderable man? So it’s more like ...
62 PLATO just is something advantageous, but you’re making an addition and claiming it to be that of the stronger, while I don’t ...
REPUBLIC(BOOKI) 63 “It makes no difference, Polemarchus,” I said, “but if Thrasymachus says it this way now, let’s accept it thi ...
64 PLATO “And what about a helmsman? Is the one who’s a helmsman in the correct way a ruler of sailors or a sailor?” “A ruler of ...
REPUBLIC(BOOKI) 65 “Then no sort of knowledge considers or commands what’s advantageous for the stronger, but what’s advantageou ...
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