Liverpool Classical Monthly, Band 17John Pinsent John Pinsent, 1992 |
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... Socrates . It has usually been seen as characteristic of this Socrates that he treated the proceedings at his trial with a degree of ironic disdain , so that much of what stands in the three speeches is attributable to the attitudes and ...
... Socrates . It has usually been seen as characteristic of this Socrates that he treated the proceedings at his trial with a degree of ironic disdain , so that much of what stands in the three speeches is attributable to the attitudes and ...
Seite 14
... Socrates nobly refused to offer a serious defence . The most important of these is that Socrates ' constant repetition of the need for truth combined with his own conviction of his innocence require him to defend himself : this ...
... Socrates nobly refused to offer a serious defence . The most important of these is that Socrates ' constant repetition of the need for truth combined with his own conviction of his innocence require him to defend himself : this ...
Seite 15
John Pinsent. that law and divine authority could not be in conflict : for Socrates an Antigone of the two rights reading situation could not exist . Unrealistic though this might seem , it is true that , if it were believed by Socrates ...
John Pinsent. that law and divine authority could not be in conflict : for Socrates an Antigone of the two rights reading situation could not exist . Unrealistic though this might seem , it is true that , if it were believed by Socrates ...
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