The Socratic Dialogues: Late Period: Volume 2: The Laws

· W. F. Howes Limited · ບັນຍາຍໂດຍ Laurence Kennedy ແລະ Hayward B. Morse
ປຶ້ມສຽງ
14 ຊົ່ວໂມງ 9 ນາທີ
ສະບັບເຕັມ
ມີສິດ
ຕ້ອງການຕົວຢ່າງ 1 ຊົ່ວໂມງ 25 ນາທີ ຟຣີບໍ? ຟັງໄດ້ທຸກເວລາ,​ ເຖິງແມ່ນໃນເວລາອອບລາຍຢູ່ກໍຕາມ. 
ເພີ່ມ

ກ່ຽວກັບປຶ້ມອ່ານອອກສຽງ

The Laws is the longest of Plato's Dialogues and actually doesn't feature Socrates at all - the principal figure taking the lead is the ‘Athenian Stranger' who engages two older men in the discussion, Cleinias (from Crete) and Megillus (from Sparta).

The Dialogue is set in Crete, and the three men embark on a pilgrimage from Knossus to the cave of Dicte, where, legend reports, Zeus was born. The topic under examination is the making of laws appropriate for a well-ordered city: having considered this in The Republic many years earlier, Plato is now taking a less idealistic view and presenting more practical and earthbound proposals, based on law rather than the philosopher-king. It is significant that each of the participants comes from a city with a different system of government: a democracy (Athenian Stranger), a monarchy (Crete) and an oligarchy (Sparta).

The Laws is divided into 12 books. Though Socrates is not involved, it can be counted a Socratic Dialogue in terms of form and structure. The Athenian Stranger is played by Laurence Kennedy, with Hayward Morse as Cleinias and Sam Dale as Megillus. The translation is by Benjamin Jowett.

ໃຫ້ຄະແນນປຶ້ມສຽງນີ້

ບອກພວກເຮົາວ່າທ່ານຄິດແນວໃດ.

ຂໍ້ມູນການຟັງ

ສະມາດໂຟນ ແລະ ແທັບເລັດ
ຕິດຕັ້ງ ແອັບ Google Play Books ສຳລັບ Android ແລະ iPad/iPhone. ມັນຊິ້ງຂໍ້ມູນໂດຍອັດຕະໂນມັດກັບບັນຊີຂອງທ່ານ ແລະ ອະນຸຍາດໃຫ້ທ່ານອ່ານທາງອອນລາຍ ຫຼື ແບບອອບລາຍໄດ້ ບໍ່ວ່າທ່ານຈະຢູ່ໃສ.
ແລັບທັອບ ແລະ ຄອມພິວເຕີ
ທ່ານສາມາດອ່ານປຶ້ມທີ່ຊື້ຜ່ານ Google Play ໂດຍໃຊ້ໂປຣແກຣມທ່ອງເວັບຂອງຄອມພິວເຕີໄດ້.