Audiolibro: Phaedrus
- Download 01 - "My dear Phaedrus, whence come you..." audio
- Download 02 - "What an incomprehensible being you are..." audio
- Download 03 - "Now, Socrates, what do you think?" audio
- Download 04 - "And now, dear Phaedrus, I shall pause..." audio
- Download 05 - "Your love of discourse, Phaedrus, is superhuman..." audio
- Download 06 - "I might tell of many other noble deeds..." audio
- Download 07 - "Thus far I have been speaking..." audio
- Download 08 - "And so the beloved, who, like a god..." audio
- Download 09 - "Shall we discuss the rules of writing...?" audio
- Download 10 - "Suppose that you read me the first words..." audio
- Download 11 - "Leave the unimportant..." audio
- Download 12 - "Oratory is the art of enchanting the soul..." audio
- Download 13 - "Enough appears to have been said..." audio
- Download 14 - "And now, Phaedrus, having agreed..." audio
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“For there is no light of justice or temperance, or any of the higher ideas which are precious to souls, in the earthly copies of them: they are seen through a glass, dimly…”
Socrates and his earnest friend Phaedrus, enjoying the Athenian equivalent of a lunchtime stroll in the park, exchange views on love and on the power of words, spoken and written.
Phaedrus is the most enchanting of Plato’s Erotic dialogues (capitalised in honour of the god). The barefoot philosopher urges an eager young acquaintance – who has allowed his lover’s oratorical skills to impress him overmuch – to re-examine the text of Lysias’s speech in the light of his own exalted (and Platonic) vision of Love.
Not long ago this early example of literary dismantling was itself deconstructed by a contemporary sage - Jacques Derrida.
The present reader tries to present Socrates as he conceivably was: the chortling, pot-bellied ex-soldier, a flirtatious yet charismatic talker with a serious passion for Truth. (Introduction by Martin Geeson)
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