Xenophon's Socratic Works:
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Elektronisch E-Book |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Milton
Taylor & Francis Group
2021
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Schriftenreihe: | Routledge Monographs in Classical Studies
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Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | BSB01 BSB01 |
Beschreibung: | 1 Online-Ressource (343 Seiten) |
ISBN: | 9781000382259 |
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505 | 8 | |a Intro -- Half Title -- Series Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Dedication -- Contents -- Tables -- List of abbreviations -- Works of Xenophon -- Miscellaneous -- Introduction -- From Xenophon or Plato to Xenophon and Plato -- An intertextual Socrates -- The life of Xenophon -- Preview -- Notes -- 1. Approaching the Memorabilia -- Building for variety and range -- The literary context for the Memorabilia -- Courtroom oratory -- Ion of Chios -- Aesop -- Wisdom literature -- Developments within the Socratic circle -- Isocrates' Antidosis -- Old and new -- Xenophon's narrator -- Xenophon's narrators and other narrators -- Xenophon's half-credible narrator -- Putting the narrator to work -- The structure of the Memorabilia -- From defense to recollection -- Not just repetition, but amplification -- Outlining the Memorabilia -- Conclusion -- Notes -- 2. Defending Socrates -- Starting with Xenophon -- Starting with the Memorabilia -- Xenophon's wonder at the charges (Mem. 1.1.1) -- Impiety (Mem. 1.1.2-20) -- Socratic orthopraxy (Mem. 1.1.2) -- The daimonion (Mem. 1.1.2-1.1.5) -- Divination and human knowledge (Mem. 1.1.6-9) -- The public man (Mem. 1.1.10) -- Presocratic madness (Mem. 1.1.11-16) -- Open evidence about Socrates' piety (Mem. 1.1.17-19) -- Corruption (Mem. 1.2) -- Character as a defense against corruption (Mem. 1.2.1-8) -- Xenophon vs. Plato on corruption -- Socrates' way of life (Mem. 1.2.4-8) -- Polycrates and Xenophon's accuser -- Reconstructing Polycrates -- From rhetorical accusers to the historical Meletus -- Condemning the laws and the lot (Mem. 1.2.9-11) -- Alcibiades and Critias (Mem. 1.2.12-48) -- Pairing off Alcibiades and Critias -- What Alcibiades and Critias wanted and what they got -- Socrates' success and its limits -- Teaching skill in speech -- Critias, lust, and the art of words (Mem. 1.2.29-39) | |
505 | 8 | |a Alcibiades, Pericles, and the legitimacy of law (Mem. 1.2.39-47) -- Socrates' true associates (Mem. 1.2.48) -- Mad relatives, and the value of expertise (Mem. 1.2.49-55) -- Poetry and the common man (Mem. 1.2.56-61) -- Concluding the defense (Mem. 1.2.62) -- Notes -- 3. Xenophon's Apology -- Reading Xenophon's Apology -- From suicide by jury to martyrdom -- What Socrates avoids -- What Socrates gains -- Apology and Memorabilia -- Memorabilia 4.8 and the Apology -- Memorabilia 1.1.-2 and the Apology -- Xenophon and Plato -- Targeting Plato -- Religious orthopraxy and the daimonion -- The oracle stories and Socrates' mission -- The historical oracle -- The interrogation of Meletus -- The penalty phase -- Five comparative claims -- The historical trial -- Notes -- 4. The moral psychology of Xenophon's Socrates -- Enkrateia as a guarantee against wrongdoing (Mem. 1.2.1-8) -- Hunger is the best sauce (Mem. 1.3.5-8) -- Enkrateia, the foundation of virtue (Mem. 1.5) -- The greatest pleasures (Mem. 1.6) -- Aristippus at the crossroads (Mem. 2.1) -- The return of Aristippus (Mem. 3.8) -- Akrasia, sophrosunē, and wisdom (Mem. 3.9.1-5) -- Enkrateia, akrasia, and dialectic (Mem. 4.5) -- Enkrateia and freedom -- Weakness of will? -- Dialectic to the rescue -- Aristotle on Socrates and weakness of will -- Enkrateia, sophrosunē, and wisdom -- Socrates, moderate hedonist? -- Xenophon's Socrates on moral psychology: conclusion -- Xenophon and Plato -- Non-rational desires -- The role of knowledge -- Notes -- 5. Xenophon's Symposium -- Character, sexual morality, and irony -- Outline -- Chapter 1 -- Chapter 2 -- Chapter 3 -- Chapter 4 -- Chapter 5 -- Chapter 6 -- Chapter 7 -- Chapter 8 -- Chapter 9 -- Socrates vs. Antisthenes -- Xenophon's sympotic defense of Socrates -- Socrates vs. the Syracusan -- Socrates vs. Lycon -- Eros -- Callias and Autolycus -- Symposium 8 | |
505 | 8 | |a From Pausanias to Callias -- Socratic erotics in Symposium 8 -- Sex and Socrates -- The irony of Xenophon's Symposium -- Notes -- 6. Xenophon's Oeconomicus -- Approaching the Oeconomicus -- From oikonomia to the Socratic secret to success (Oec. 1-3) -- Socrates on farming (Oec. 4-5) -- Introducing Ischomachus (Oec. 6 and 7) -- Ischomachus and wife (Oeconomicus 7-10) -- Aspasia and Ischomachus -- Socrates and Ischomachus (Oeconomicus 11) -- The overseer (Oeconomicus 12-14) -- Farming (Oeconomicus 15-20) -- Divine leadership (Oeconomicus 21) -- History and the Oeconomicus -- Ischomachus and Chrysilla: the historical evidence -- The historical evidence and the dialogue -- Reading as Critobulus -- Notes -- Conclusion -- Xenophon and Plato -- Reading Xenophon -- Xenophon at Scillus -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Bibliographies of Xenophon's Socrates -- Works Cited -- INDICES. | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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author | Johnson, David M. 1966- |
author_GND | (DE-588)1162846534 |
author_facet | Johnson, David M. 1966- |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Johnson, David M. 1966- |
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bvnumber | BV048934896 |
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contents | Intro -- Half Title -- Series Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Dedication -- Contents -- Tables -- List of abbreviations -- Works of Xenophon -- Miscellaneous -- Introduction -- From Xenophon or Plato to Xenophon and Plato -- An intertextual Socrates -- The life of Xenophon -- Preview -- Notes -- 1. Approaching the Memorabilia -- Building for variety and range -- The literary context for the Memorabilia -- Courtroom oratory -- Ion of Chios -- Aesop -- Wisdom literature -- Developments within the Socratic circle -- Isocrates' Antidosis -- Old and new -- Xenophon's narrator -- Xenophon's narrators and other narrators -- Xenophon's half-credible narrator -- Putting the narrator to work -- The structure of the Memorabilia -- From defense to recollection -- Not just repetition, but amplification -- Outlining the Memorabilia -- Conclusion -- Notes -- 2. Defending Socrates -- Starting with Xenophon -- Starting with the Memorabilia -- Xenophon's wonder at the charges (Mem. 1.1.1) -- Impiety (Mem. 1.1.2-20) -- Socratic orthopraxy (Mem. 1.1.2) -- The daimonion (Mem. 1.1.2-1.1.5) -- Divination and human knowledge (Mem. 1.1.6-9) -- The public man (Mem. 1.1.10) -- Presocratic madness (Mem. 1.1.11-16) -- Open evidence about Socrates' piety (Mem. 1.1.17-19) -- Corruption (Mem. 1.2) -- Character as a defense against corruption (Mem. 1.2.1-8) -- Xenophon vs. Plato on corruption -- Socrates' way of life (Mem. 1.2.4-8) -- Polycrates and Xenophon's accuser -- Reconstructing Polycrates -- From rhetorical accusers to the historical Meletus -- Condemning the laws and the lot (Mem. 1.2.9-11) -- Alcibiades and Critias (Mem. 1.2.12-48) -- Pairing off Alcibiades and Critias -- What Alcibiades and Critias wanted and what they got -- Socrates' success and its limits -- Teaching skill in speech -- Critias, lust, and the art of words (Mem. 1.2.29-39) Alcibiades, Pericles, and the legitimacy of law (Mem. 1.2.39-47) -- Socrates' true associates (Mem. 1.2.48) -- Mad relatives, and the value of expertise (Mem. 1.2.49-55) -- Poetry and the common man (Mem. 1.2.56-61) -- Concluding the defense (Mem. 1.2.62) -- Notes -- 3. Xenophon's Apology -- Reading Xenophon's Apology -- From suicide by jury to martyrdom -- What Socrates avoids -- What Socrates gains -- Apology and Memorabilia -- Memorabilia 4.8 and the Apology -- Memorabilia 1.1.-2 and the Apology -- Xenophon and Plato -- Targeting Plato -- Religious orthopraxy and the daimonion -- The oracle stories and Socrates' mission -- The historical oracle -- The interrogation of Meletus -- The penalty phase -- Five comparative claims -- The historical trial -- Notes -- 4. The moral psychology of Xenophon's Socrates -- Enkrateia as a guarantee against wrongdoing (Mem. 1.2.1-8) -- Hunger is the best sauce (Mem. 1.3.5-8) -- Enkrateia, the foundation of virtue (Mem. 1.5) -- The greatest pleasures (Mem. 1.6) -- Aristippus at the crossroads (Mem. 2.1) -- The return of Aristippus (Mem. 3.8) -- Akrasia, sophrosunē, and wisdom (Mem. 3.9.1-5) -- Enkrateia, akrasia, and dialectic (Mem. 4.5) -- Enkrateia and freedom -- Weakness of will? -- Dialectic to the rescue -- Aristotle on Socrates and weakness of will -- Enkrateia, sophrosunē, and wisdom -- Socrates, moderate hedonist? -- Xenophon's Socrates on moral psychology: conclusion -- Xenophon and Plato -- Non-rational desires -- The role of knowledge -- Notes -- 5. Xenophon's Symposium -- Character, sexual morality, and irony -- Outline -- Chapter 1 -- Chapter 2 -- Chapter 3 -- Chapter 4 -- Chapter 5 -- Chapter 6 -- Chapter 7 -- Chapter 8 -- Chapter 9 -- Socrates vs. Antisthenes -- Xenophon's sympotic defense of Socrates -- Socrates vs. the Syracusan -- Socrates vs. Lycon -- Eros -- Callias and Autolycus -- Symposium 8 From Pausanias to Callias -- Socratic erotics in Symposium 8 -- Sex and Socrates -- The irony of Xenophon's Symposium -- Notes -- 6. Xenophon's Oeconomicus -- Approaching the Oeconomicus -- From oikonomia to the Socratic secret to success (Oec. 1-3) -- Socrates on farming (Oec. 4-5) -- Introducing Ischomachus (Oec. 6 and 7) -- Ischomachus and wife (Oeconomicus 7-10) -- Aspasia and Ischomachus -- Socrates and Ischomachus (Oeconomicus 11) -- The overseer (Oeconomicus 12-14) -- Farming (Oeconomicus 15-20) -- Divine leadership (Oeconomicus 21) -- History and the Oeconomicus -- Ischomachus and Chrysilla: the historical evidence -- The historical evidence and the dialogue -- Reading as Critobulus -- Notes -- Conclusion -- Xenophon and Plato -- Reading Xenophon -- Xenophon at Scillus -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Bibliographies of Xenophon's Socrates -- Works Cited -- INDICES. |
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discipline | Philologie / Byzantinistik / Neulatein |
discipline_str_mv | Philologie / Byzantinistik / Neulatein |
format | Electronic eBook |
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Approaching the Memorabilia -- Building for variety and range -- The literary context for the Memorabilia -- Courtroom oratory -- Ion of Chios -- Aesop -- Wisdom literature -- Developments within the Socratic circle -- Isocrates' Antidosis -- Old and new -- Xenophon's narrator -- Xenophon's narrators and other narrators -- Xenophon's half-credible narrator -- Putting the narrator to work -- The structure of the Memorabilia -- From defense to recollection -- Not just repetition, but amplification -- Outlining the Memorabilia -- Conclusion -- Notes -- 2. 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illustrated | Not Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-03T21:58:07Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T09:50:20Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781000382259 |
language | English |
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spelling | Johnson, David M. 1966- Verfasser (DE-588)1162846534 aut Xenophon's Socratic Works Milton Taylor & Francis Group 2021 ©2021 1 Online-Ressource (343 Seiten) txt rdacontent c rdamedia cr rdacarrier Routledge Monographs in Classical Studies Intro -- Half Title -- Series Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Dedication -- Contents -- Tables -- List of abbreviations -- Works of Xenophon -- Miscellaneous -- Introduction -- From Xenophon or Plato to Xenophon and Plato -- An intertextual Socrates -- The life of Xenophon -- Preview -- Notes -- 1. Approaching the Memorabilia -- Building for variety and range -- The literary context for the Memorabilia -- Courtroom oratory -- Ion of Chios -- Aesop -- Wisdom literature -- Developments within the Socratic circle -- Isocrates' Antidosis -- Old and new -- Xenophon's narrator -- Xenophon's narrators and other narrators -- Xenophon's half-credible narrator -- Putting the narrator to work -- The structure of the Memorabilia -- From defense to recollection -- Not just repetition, but amplification -- Outlining the Memorabilia -- Conclusion -- Notes -- 2. Defending Socrates -- Starting with Xenophon -- Starting with the Memorabilia -- Xenophon's wonder at the charges (Mem. 1.1.1) -- Impiety (Mem. 1.1.2-20) -- Socratic orthopraxy (Mem. 1.1.2) -- The daimonion (Mem. 1.1.2-1.1.5) -- Divination and human knowledge (Mem. 1.1.6-9) -- The public man (Mem. 1.1.10) -- Presocratic madness (Mem. 1.1.11-16) -- Open evidence about Socrates' piety (Mem. 1.1.17-19) -- Corruption (Mem. 1.2) -- Character as a defense against corruption (Mem. 1.2.1-8) -- Xenophon vs. Plato on corruption -- Socrates' way of life (Mem. 1.2.4-8) -- Polycrates and Xenophon's accuser -- Reconstructing Polycrates -- From rhetorical accusers to the historical Meletus -- Condemning the laws and the lot (Mem. 1.2.9-11) -- Alcibiades and Critias (Mem. 1.2.12-48) -- Pairing off Alcibiades and Critias -- What Alcibiades and Critias wanted and what they got -- Socrates' success and its limits -- Teaching skill in speech -- Critias, lust, and the art of words (Mem. 1.2.29-39) Alcibiades, Pericles, and the legitimacy of law (Mem. 1.2.39-47) -- Socrates' true associates (Mem. 1.2.48) -- Mad relatives, and the value of expertise (Mem. 1.2.49-55) -- Poetry and the common man (Mem. 1.2.56-61) -- Concluding the defense (Mem. 1.2.62) -- Notes -- 3. Xenophon's Apology -- Reading Xenophon's Apology -- From suicide by jury to martyrdom -- What Socrates avoids -- What Socrates gains -- Apology and Memorabilia -- Memorabilia 4.8 and the Apology -- Memorabilia 1.1.-2 and the Apology -- Xenophon and Plato -- Targeting Plato -- Religious orthopraxy and the daimonion -- The oracle stories and Socrates' mission -- The historical oracle -- The interrogation of Meletus -- The penalty phase -- Five comparative claims -- The historical trial -- Notes -- 4. The moral psychology of Xenophon's Socrates -- Enkrateia as a guarantee against wrongdoing (Mem. 1.2.1-8) -- Hunger is the best sauce (Mem. 1.3.5-8) -- Enkrateia, the foundation of virtue (Mem. 1.5) -- The greatest pleasures (Mem. 1.6) -- Aristippus at the crossroads (Mem. 2.1) -- The return of Aristippus (Mem. 3.8) -- Akrasia, sophrosunē, and wisdom (Mem. 3.9.1-5) -- Enkrateia, akrasia, and dialectic (Mem. 4.5) -- Enkrateia and freedom -- Weakness of will? -- Dialectic to the rescue -- Aristotle on Socrates and weakness of will -- Enkrateia, sophrosunē, and wisdom -- Socrates, moderate hedonist? -- Xenophon's Socrates on moral psychology: conclusion -- Xenophon and Plato -- Non-rational desires -- The role of knowledge -- Notes -- 5. Xenophon's Symposium -- Character, sexual morality, and irony -- Outline -- Chapter 1 -- Chapter 2 -- Chapter 3 -- Chapter 4 -- Chapter 5 -- Chapter 6 -- Chapter 7 -- Chapter 8 -- Chapter 9 -- Socrates vs. Antisthenes -- Xenophon's sympotic defense of Socrates -- Socrates vs. the Syracusan -- Socrates vs. Lycon -- Eros -- Callias and Autolycus -- Symposium 8 From Pausanias to Callias -- Socratic erotics in Symposium 8 -- Sex and Socrates -- The irony of Xenophon's Symposium -- Notes -- 6. Xenophon's Oeconomicus -- Approaching the Oeconomicus -- From oikonomia to the Socratic secret to success (Oec. 1-3) -- Socrates on farming (Oec. 4-5) -- Introducing Ischomachus (Oec. 6 and 7) -- Ischomachus and wife (Oeconomicus 7-10) -- Aspasia and Ischomachus -- Socrates and Ischomachus (Oeconomicus 11) -- The overseer (Oeconomicus 12-14) -- Farming (Oeconomicus 15-20) -- Divine leadership (Oeconomicus 21) -- History and the Oeconomicus -- Ischomachus and Chrysilla: the historical evidence -- The historical evidence and the dialogue -- Reading as Critobulus -- Notes -- Conclusion -- Xenophon and Plato -- Reading Xenophon -- Xenophon at Scillus -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Bibliographies of Xenophon's Socrates -- Works Cited -- INDICES. Xenophon v430-v354 (DE-588)118635808 gnd rswk-swf Philosophy, Ancient Athens (Greece)-Intellectual life Sokratik (DE-588)4470314-4 gnd rswk-swf Electronic books Xenophon v430-v354 (DE-588)118635808 p Sokratik (DE-588)4470314-4 s DE-604 Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe Johnson, David M. Xenophon's Socratic Works Milton : Taylor & Francis Group,c2021 9780367472047 |
spellingShingle | Johnson, David M. 1966- Xenophon's Socratic Works Intro -- Half Title -- Series Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Dedication -- Contents -- Tables -- List of abbreviations -- Works of Xenophon -- Miscellaneous -- Introduction -- From Xenophon or Plato to Xenophon and Plato -- An intertextual Socrates -- The life of Xenophon -- Preview -- Notes -- 1. Approaching the Memorabilia -- Building for variety and range -- The literary context for the Memorabilia -- Courtroom oratory -- Ion of Chios -- Aesop -- Wisdom literature -- Developments within the Socratic circle -- Isocrates' Antidosis -- Old and new -- Xenophon's narrator -- Xenophon's narrators and other narrators -- Xenophon's half-credible narrator -- Putting the narrator to work -- The structure of the Memorabilia -- From defense to recollection -- Not just repetition, but amplification -- Outlining the Memorabilia -- Conclusion -- Notes -- 2. Defending Socrates -- Starting with Xenophon -- Starting with the Memorabilia -- Xenophon's wonder at the charges (Mem. 1.1.1) -- Impiety (Mem. 1.1.2-20) -- Socratic orthopraxy (Mem. 1.1.2) -- The daimonion (Mem. 1.1.2-1.1.5) -- Divination and human knowledge (Mem. 1.1.6-9) -- The public man (Mem. 1.1.10) -- Presocratic madness (Mem. 1.1.11-16) -- Open evidence about Socrates' piety (Mem. 1.1.17-19) -- Corruption (Mem. 1.2) -- Character as a defense against corruption (Mem. 1.2.1-8) -- Xenophon vs. Plato on corruption -- Socrates' way of life (Mem. 1.2.4-8) -- Polycrates and Xenophon's accuser -- Reconstructing Polycrates -- From rhetorical accusers to the historical Meletus -- Condemning the laws and the lot (Mem. 1.2.9-11) -- Alcibiades and Critias (Mem. 1.2.12-48) -- Pairing off Alcibiades and Critias -- What Alcibiades and Critias wanted and what they got -- Socrates' success and its limits -- Teaching skill in speech -- Critias, lust, and the art of words (Mem. 1.2.29-39) Alcibiades, Pericles, and the legitimacy of law (Mem. 1.2.39-47) -- Socrates' true associates (Mem. 1.2.48) -- Mad relatives, and the value of expertise (Mem. 1.2.49-55) -- Poetry and the common man (Mem. 1.2.56-61) -- Concluding the defense (Mem. 1.2.62) -- Notes -- 3. Xenophon's Apology -- Reading Xenophon's Apology -- From suicide by jury to martyrdom -- What Socrates avoids -- What Socrates gains -- Apology and Memorabilia -- Memorabilia 4.8 and the Apology -- Memorabilia 1.1.-2 and the Apology -- Xenophon and Plato -- Targeting Plato -- Religious orthopraxy and the daimonion -- The oracle stories and Socrates' mission -- The historical oracle -- The interrogation of Meletus -- The penalty phase -- Five comparative claims -- The historical trial -- Notes -- 4. The moral psychology of Xenophon's Socrates -- Enkrateia as a guarantee against wrongdoing (Mem. 1.2.1-8) -- Hunger is the best sauce (Mem. 1.3.5-8) -- Enkrateia, the foundation of virtue (Mem. 1.5) -- The greatest pleasures (Mem. 1.6) -- Aristippus at the crossroads (Mem. 2.1) -- The return of Aristippus (Mem. 3.8) -- Akrasia, sophrosunē, and wisdom (Mem. 3.9.1-5) -- Enkrateia, akrasia, and dialectic (Mem. 4.5) -- Enkrateia and freedom -- Weakness of will? -- Dialectic to the rescue -- Aristotle on Socrates and weakness of will -- Enkrateia, sophrosunē, and wisdom -- Socrates, moderate hedonist? -- Xenophon's Socrates on moral psychology: conclusion -- Xenophon and Plato -- Non-rational desires -- The role of knowledge -- Notes -- 5. Xenophon's Symposium -- Character, sexual morality, and irony -- Outline -- Chapter 1 -- Chapter 2 -- Chapter 3 -- Chapter 4 -- Chapter 5 -- Chapter 6 -- Chapter 7 -- Chapter 8 -- Chapter 9 -- Socrates vs. Antisthenes -- Xenophon's sympotic defense of Socrates -- Socrates vs. the Syracusan -- Socrates vs. Lycon -- Eros -- Callias and Autolycus -- Symposium 8 From Pausanias to Callias -- Socratic erotics in Symposium 8 -- Sex and Socrates -- The irony of Xenophon's Symposium -- Notes -- 6. Xenophon's Oeconomicus -- Approaching the Oeconomicus -- From oikonomia to the Socratic secret to success (Oec. 1-3) -- Socrates on farming (Oec. 4-5) -- Introducing Ischomachus (Oec. 6 and 7) -- Ischomachus and wife (Oeconomicus 7-10) -- Aspasia and Ischomachus -- Socrates and Ischomachus (Oeconomicus 11) -- The overseer (Oeconomicus 12-14) -- Farming (Oeconomicus 15-20) -- Divine leadership (Oeconomicus 21) -- History and the Oeconomicus -- Ischomachus and Chrysilla: the historical evidence -- The historical evidence and the dialogue -- Reading as Critobulus -- Notes -- Conclusion -- Xenophon and Plato -- Reading Xenophon -- Xenophon at Scillus -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Bibliographies of Xenophon's Socrates -- Works Cited -- INDICES. Xenophon v430-v354 (DE-588)118635808 gnd Philosophy, Ancient Athens (Greece)-Intellectual life Sokratik (DE-588)4470314-4 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)118635808 (DE-588)4470314-4 |
title | Xenophon's Socratic Works |
title_auth | Xenophon's Socratic Works |
title_exact_search | Xenophon's Socratic Works |
title_exact_search_txtP | Xenophon's Socratic Works |
title_full | Xenophon's Socratic Works |
title_fullStr | Xenophon's Socratic Works |
title_full_unstemmed | Xenophon's Socratic Works |
title_short | Xenophon's Socratic Works |
title_sort | xenophon s socratic works |
topic | Xenophon v430-v354 (DE-588)118635808 gnd Philosophy, Ancient Athens (Greece)-Intellectual life Sokratik (DE-588)4470314-4 gnd |
topic_facet | Xenophon v430-v354 Philosophy, Ancient Athens (Greece)-Intellectual life Sokratik |
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