INDEX
Asclepius, 53, 73n36, 107n33
aske ̄si s (asceticism, training, spiritual
exercise), xxii
Aspasia, 192n33
Assembly, Athenian, 16
Athenian character, xvi, 37n19
Athenian Stranger, xiv, 63, 71n17,
72n28, 74n39
Athens in Thucydides’ History, 20–29
audience
and distancing strategy, 175
and emotional responses, 103
in Euthydemus, 91
invitation to participate, 28–31
and narrative markers, 83, 90
Socrates as character, 98–99
for Thucydides, 17, 18–23, 24, 33
aviary, image of, 151n39
balancing opposed accounts, 17, 30–31
being and becoming
in Philebus, 154–56, 167
in Protagoras, 196
belief (doxa) vs. knowledge, 6 –8, 10–11
beloved. See lover-beloved relationship
blushing, 94
Callias, 90, 94, 149n21
care for the young (paideia), 51
care of the self, xxii–xxiii
care of the soul/mind, 44, 52, 53
cause (aitia), xxvii, 131, 139, 164, 165
cave, allegory of the, 87, 187, 229
C ebes, x x v, 38n32 , 43, 112 , 201– 5, 217–18
censorship and education of guardians,
60, 74n42, 117–19, 120–21
Cephalus, xxxin16, 66, 86, 95, 186
Chaerephon, 83, 87, 99
characters in dialogues, ix, x–xi
names of, xvi–xvii, xxxin16
viewpoint characters, xii–xiii
see also names of specifi c characters, e.g.,
Glaucon
charioteer, image of, 124, 212, 221–22
Charmides, 38n30, 94
Charmides (d ia log ue)
elenchus in, 27
emotion expressed in, xxvi, 94, 95, 102
erotic dimensions, 93
medical model, 48, 66, 75n46, 80n81
narrative frame, 87–88
Socrates as character, 97, 98
chronology, compositional, xvi, 175,
189n2. See also developmentalism
chronology of dramatic events, 239
classifi cation in Philebus, 154, 163–64,
167
Clinias, 90, 93, 94
coercion in Republic, 184 – 85
cognitive powers, 6–7
comedy and tragedy in Symposium, 116 –17
Corcyran dispute in Thucydides, 22
Corinthian embassy in Thucydides, 20–
23, 24
Cratylus (dialogue), 27, 28
Critias (d ia log ue)
elenchus in, 28
and emotional responses, 94, 96, 98,
107n31
medical model, 48, 66, 80n81
Crito, 90–92, 95, 97, 98–99, 101–2, 107n33
Crito (dialogue), xxxn12, 82, 99
Critobulus, 91
cross-examination, 94. See also elenchus
(refut at ion)
Ctesippus, 90, 93, 108n34
deception. See falsehood and deception
Delphic oracle, 37n25, 39n34, 99, 137,
149n23
demonstrative strategy in Symposium,
xxviii, 175, 181–83, 188
denial of wisdom. See Socrates: admis-
sions of ignorance
developmentalism, xvi, 66, 189n2. See
also chronology, compositional
dialectic, theory of
fears of, 205
and the Good, 158
images, 206–7, 208
openness to other positions, 196
in Philebus, 153
and synoptic ability, 32–33
dialogical bondage in Theaetetus, 138 – 43
dialogue
as genre, ix–x, xviii–xix, xxxin23
as process, xxii
see also logos (d iscour se)
Diomedes and Glaukos, myth of, 113,
127n5