AUDIOBOOK

About
Plato's dialogues frequently treat several topics and show their connections to each other. Phaedrus is a model of that skill because of its seamless progression from examples of speeches about the nature of love to mythical visions of human nature and destiny to the essence of beauty and, finally, to a penetrating discussion of speaking and writing. It ends with an examination of the love of wisdom as a dialectical activity in the human mind.
Phaedrus lures Socrates outside the walls of Athens, where he seldom goes, by promising to share a new work by his friend and mentor, Lysias, a famous writer of speeches. This dialogue provides a powerful example of the dialectical writing that Plato uses to manifest ideas that are essential to human existence and to living a good life. Phaedrus shows how oral and written forms of language relate to each other and to philosophy. It simultaneously embodies the entire process in some of the greatest poetry ever written.
© Agora Publications
Phaedrus lures Socrates outside the walls of Athens, where he seldom goes, by promising to share a new work by his friend and mentor, Lysias, a famous writer of speeches. This dialogue provides a powerful example of the dialectical writing that Plato uses to manifest ideas that are essential to human existence and to living a good life. Phaedrus shows how oral and written forms of language relate to each other and to philosophy. It simultaneously embodies the entire process in some of the greatest poetry ever written.
© Agora Publications
Related Subjects
Extended Details
- SeriesPlato's Dialogues
Artists
Similar Artists
Alexander Hamilton
Allan Bloom
Aristotle
Brian Alexander
Clayborne Carson
Confucius
Edwin A. Abbott
Fareed Zakaria
Herodotus
James Legge
John Perry
John Stuart Mill
Lucius Annaeus Seneca
Lucretius
Ovid
Philip Stokes
Rene Descartes
Robert Garland
Sharon M. Kaye
Simon Blackburn
Soren Kierkegaard
Thomas More
Thucydides
Tom Griffith
Walpola Rahula
William James
Xenophon