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    Plato Apology

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    Critical Analysis of The Apology of Socrates by Plato Socrates was an orator and philosopher whose primary interests were logic‚ ethics and epistemology. In Plato’s Apology of Socrates‚ Plato recounts the speech that Socrates gave shortly before his death‚ during the trial in 399 BC in which he was charged with "corrupting the young‚ and by not believing in the gods in whom the city believes‚ also being a busybody and intervene gods business". The name of the work itself is not mean what it is

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    Apology by Plato

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    Analysis of Apology by Plato The Apology is an account by Plato of Socrates’ speech given at his trial in 399 BC. Socrates was an Athenian philosopher accused of two crimes: corrupting the youth and not believing in the gods. In Socrates’ speech‚ he explains to a jury of 501 Athenians why he is not guilty of the crimes he is accused of. He uses a variety of logical arguments to refute his charges yet in the end he is still found guilty and sentenced to death (Grube 21). Socrates’ use of

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    talking about how he teaches his class‚ by naming the different types of literature they read throughout the school year. Then he says “I always have the option and the pleasure of asking a very smart group of students a revealing question: “What would Plato say?’” The author then starts talking about how ungrateful people are during his time. People are able to communicate with people all over the word and people can fly to places saving so much time just to get to their destination. Yet‚ people are unhappy

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    Political Thinking

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    Political Thinking POL200Y1 September-17-2008 Thucydides as historian and theorist  Athens and Sparta were the superpower of Greece  Athens and Sparta led victory for Greece against Persian  Athens are sea power and Sparta is on land  After that Athens began to take power/empire over Greece  He didn’t record exactly what happened but recreated them - moments  He included his large/general judgements about human nature  About human nature  Democracy as a form of political regime

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    Plato is a man that has‚ in a way‚ been immortalized. Even though‚ he lived and died thousands of years ago‚ his thoughts and his ideas still live on today. In order to most accurately get a feel for who Plato was‚ there are many factors to be looked at. First‚ one should look at the times in which Plato lived. This includes‚ but is not limited to‚ the culture‚ the common thought‚ and any major historical happenings. Second‚ one should examine Plato’s specific surroundings and environment. However

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    Plato's Republic: Book V

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    undoubtedly The Republic it has weathered the test of time to provide us with the most influential philosophical doctrine surviving from the ancient Mediterranean. Over the years Plato has been hailed by some as an advocate of women’s rights because of some views he puts forth in The Republic. In Book V of the work Plato has Socrates‚ acting as his voice‚ engage in a discussion of the perfect state with Polemarchus‚ Adeimantus‚ Glaucon‚ and Thrasymachus. In the conversation Socrates puts forth the

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    Student Teacher

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    teachers is still the same. even in this modern era‚ teachers share a close emotional attachment with their students. The ancient history of education systems is rife with several examples of great student teacher relationships such as Socrates-PlatoPlato-Aristotle etc. It is beyond the scope of dubiety that teachers‚ since ages‚ have played a major role in the life of an individual and his/her overall upbringing. Teachers are the beacons of light that lead people to success and glory. They

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    in comparison to Plato’s Gorgias‚ based on the topics being discussed. Phaedrus touches on the studies of art‚ and how to correctly practice them‚ and the author‚ Plato also goes into depths of details about inner body studies such as the soul‚ madness and lovers. Within the text‚ Plato refers to the platonic soul‚ this concept that Plato discusses had a lasting impression throughout my reading‚ this is because if one is trying to move souls‚ one must understand the souls first‚ meaning a person needs

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    Obtaining the Truth Plato is a historical Greek philosopher and one of Socrate’s pupils. After Socrate died in 399 B.C.‚ Plato left his home in Athens and returned approximately twenty years later. “The Allegory of the Cave” is a short story filled with symbolism and metaphors that Plato had written before he died. In the story‚ Plato wrote about Socrate and his brother‚ Glaucon‚ discussing the steps to obtain the truth and why one should obtain it. In the story‚ Plato uses the prisoners as representative

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    Response Paper Looking at both Plato’s Gorgias and Plato’s Phaedrus‚ the differences are easily noticed in comparison to one another. Gorgias was a text coming from Plato when he was a younger man‚ and not as experienced‚ living in a city of war‚ these elements add a hint of aggressiveness to the reading. Whereas Phaedrus was written when Plato was an older man‚ and the city was in a time of peace‚ and the setting had taken place in the wilderness‚ these facets gave the text a more calming tone compared

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