1.
I remembered reading somewhere that it was the last rays of the sun catching Mount Hymettos that told Socrates the time had come to drink hemlock and die
2.
If you decide to use Socrates, many plugins will be included, but you can install any plugins you think will be a plus for your site
3.
And in my opinion, Socrates will most likely take care of all of your needs, and place you light years ahead of where I was at this same stage you find yourself
4.
Plato left us a detailed description of the death of Socrates
5.
hat, talking to two twenty-ish hot bodies that thought he was Socrates himself
6.
becomes man but by the community's virtues (Socrates)
7.
Socrates had already made the
8.
Socrates left nothing written to us
9.
Written or not-written, Socrates kept his
10.
Cicero said that Socrates “brought philosophy
11.
is said that Zantipa, the wife of Socrates,
12.
think now to Socrates
13.
The great Socrates, to whom, together with his student
14.
Greek philosopher, pupil of Socrates and teacher of Aristotle
15.
Undoubtedly one of Western Civilization"s most important philosophers (especially in his „Dialogues, in which he quoted time and again the same Socrates who left us nothing in writing)
16.
The soldier"s name: Socrates
17.
The only quibble I have with Socrates, as expressed by Plato, is that Socrates said, in a great expression of self-effacement, that he only knew that he knew nothing
18.
Fancies himself a philosopher, due to the fact that he can quote Socrates
19.
Inasmuch as Socrates left no writings, I tend to be skeptical
20.
West would be more accurate if he professed to being able to quote Plato quoting Socrates
21.
Well now, any self-respecting eighth grader should be able to quote Plato quoting Socrates
22.
Try as I might, I can never remember that she was the wife of Socrates
23.
at Bunker Hill, shared the prison of Socrates or stood
24.
Ultimately, Socrates was tried for corrupting the youth and believing in one god who did good, certainly a divinity different than the gods of Athens
25.
Socrates urged his fellow Athenians to consider the thought that life is worth living only in contemplation of beauty
26.
Socrates and his followers taught that contemplation of beauty could inspire a knowledge of goodness and truth
27.
In Book VII of the Republic, Plato has Socrates spell out an allegory
28.
- In philosophical terms, love is a search for truth (Socrates, Plato,
29.
, when Socrates said to his fol owers: "Know Thyself," I am
30.
In the Symposium, Socrates introduces Diotima of Mantineia, a wise and respected woman, with whom he discusses immortality and !ove
31.
Socrates (469 - 399 BC) said thought is best when the mind is gathered into itself, and is
32.
He had heard the phrase ‘sitting at the feet of a teacher’ as when they spoke at the club of Socrates or Aristotle
33.
during the mentioning of names such as Plato, Socrates, or
34.
Socrates said that conscience was the inner warning voice of God
35.
Socrates, the famous Greek philosopher had a liability too
36.
However, Socrates chose another direction to
37.
“If you remember your history correctly, Socrates was killed for his beliefs,”
38.
Socrates called it his daimon
39.
But what was it in a religious point of view? The city of wise men like Socrates and Plato,�the city of Solon, and Pericles, and Demosthenes,-the city of AEschylus, Sophocles, Euripides, and Thucydides,�the city of mind, and intellect, and art, and taste,�this city was "wholly given to idolatry
40.
A follower of Socrates or Plato might have talked well and eloquently on many subjects, but he could have never answered the jailor's question, "What must I do to be saved?" (Acts 16:30)
41.
Socrates (469 – 399 BC) was a Greek philosopher whose method of inquiry (the Socratic method) was based on debating moral issues with those around him: he systematically questioned his pupils and cross-examined them to expose inconsistencies and errors
42.
Socrates was convinced that one could act only on the basis of what is true
43.
And so was Socrates poisoned, allegedly for
44.
The Greek philosopher Socrates was reportedly born around 470 BCE
45.
Socrates on page 402 of Plato:The Five Great Dialogues are, I think, representative of the same
46.
pages 50-51 in "The Apology" dialogue where Socrates tells about having first experienced the
47.
Notice that Socrates is not reported to have said the oracle (i
48.
” Although I have not yet figured out what Socrates meant by “shadows,"
49.
possibly Socrates) are the only ones I have ever heard or read about having undergone a spiritual
50.
We are not talking about the immortality of the global I, nor of the soul’s immortality as invented by Socrates and Plato, where the body is only a prison that we must free ourselves of
51.
Socrates introduces humility for the first time in the history of Western thought, that he masterfully expresses in the phrase: “I know that I don’t know”
52.
I think of the obtuseness of the judges who condemn Socrates to death with the accusation that he has corrupted the young people of the city
53.
In an account found in the writings of Plato there was an interview that took place with Socrates just prior to his death
54.
Socrates was quoted as saying, “Knowledge is simply recollection, if true, also necessarily implies a previous time in which we learn that which we now recollect
55.
Socrates said it this way: “Seem the man you wish to be
56.
Socrates, along with other guests, was invited to a banquet
57.
A person at the level of reason is a walking Socrates
58.
Owing to “electromagnetic dispolarities” and “gravitational discretenesses”, Formo-images of all poems of Homer and Ovidius, Shakespeare and Petrarch, or discourses of Socrates, Seneca, Cicero, [Heinrich Cornelius] Agrippa and many other authors, who have subjectively shaped some SFUURMM-Forms in particular words and sentences, continue to arouse, in Self-Consciousnesses of “people” that live now, some delight and profound feelings (with allowance for completely new SFUURMM-Forms!), just like those of the contemporaries of these “ancient” authors
59.
Simply because the oldest saved written text happened to be written by a schizophrenic, one-sided, detached ass: who was ignored in his day … who had once been a student of Plato… who had once known Socrates personally
60.
Socrates himself was a lowly stonemason; he was a nobody
61.
Not the supposed passionate honesty that Socrates died for and was respected for
62.
Socrates passionate? He was a boring, pompous, moralizing pest
63.
Socrates did not die for honesty
64.
Literally by their own police… Socrates was not even rich enough to be a citizen of Athens; so he was not targeted
65.
By this one public, publicized, living example of complete scorn and indifference for death and dying: Socrates became the original symbol of all Western mental courage
66.
What kind of positive example did Socrates leave behind? What kind of positive energy did he generate after he died? He left behind an example only of mental courage
67.
The rest put up cunning questions that would put Socrates in the paper-hat end of the bell curve
68.
But, as Socrates
69.
Instead of fighting corrupt authority: Socrates obeyed them
70.
The Good that was in Socrates: was poisoned so quickly, he became evil before he could become Good
71.
Why on earth would the youngest, most arrogant, most spoiled, most wealthy young aristocrats of Athens, the most lazy, bored, and stupid, useless, pampered, snobs on earth: lavish their homosexual charms and attentions on the ugliest man in Athens? Socrates was so horribly ugly: that to this day: there has been nobody born more ugly than he was
72.
You believe these fops who later became the worst republican reactionaries and who lived lives that were diametrically opposed to everything Socrates stood for and fought for: you believe they admired him for his virtues? They were so corrupt: they had no virtues
73.
After Socrates died: every single one of his young followers: went against everything he stood for
74.
Socrates killed the art of systematic critical questioning before it could be born
75.
Every idiot who has ever asked that question after they, the Athenian aristocrats, asked it idly of Socrates: does not expect to be answered
76.
Because Socrates never answered them, and because they never expected to be answered
77.
Socrates, the philosopher, was known to have said,
78.
The great philosophers Aristotle, Plato and Socrates and the famous theologians Augustine and Anselm employed their acutely developed faculties of reason and logic to try to understand cognitively and intellectually the possibility of the existence of a Creator and Supreme Being from the evidence of natural revelation
79.
The Greek philosopher Socrates (400 BC), reflecting on the visible universe, inferred that God exists as a providence, that is, as a provider, responsible for all those things in the world that cater for human needs
80.
Summary: In Pagan and Greek philosophy [Plato, Socrates and others], souls went to a
81.
But when you read materials about other historical figures, (Caesar, Socrates, Herod,
82.
Socrates drinks hemlock and died with a smile on his face because he thought he was freeing
83.
If one believes the pagan teaching of Socrates and Plato
84.
Summary: In Pagan and Greek philosophy (Plato, Socrates and others), souls went to a
85.
by the so called “church fathers” from Pagan philosophers as Socrates
86.
soul of the evil body; but it was the Greeks (Pythagoras, Socrates, Plato) who adopted
87.
Socrates drinks hemlock and died with a smile on his face because he thought he was
88.
but it was the Greeks [Pythagoras, Socrates, Plato] who adopted this
89.
Socrates drinks hemlock and died with a smile on his face because he
90.
If one believes the pagan teaching of Socrates and Plato over Christ can they truly say they are a believer? “They worship me in vain; their teachings are but rules taught by men” (Matthew 15:9 New International Version)
91.
The nearest thing I can find to the English word Hell is in Greek Mythology and Nurse Mythology (According to Socrates, Plato and other Greek philosopher), was a shadowy subterranean realm somewhere under the earth where souls went unto they could be reincarnated; but this shadowy place was far from being as terrible or as dreadful a place as today's Hell is, and "souls" would only be in it unto they were reincarnated into a new earthly bring
92.
Summary: In Pagan and Greek philosophy (Plato, Socrates and others), souls went to a place underground to "a cold and shadowy subterranean realm" unto they could be reincarnated
93.
It was brought into the church by the so called “church fathers” from Pagan philosophers as Socrates
94.
Their conception of the spirit or soul, which, according to Socrates was “indivisible and therefore could not die,” forced them to find a place for it after death
95.
Let that myth of the intermediate state be buried in the grave with Socrates, it author, and let the beautiful light of simplicity shine in our hearts from the Bible and nature, and the glory of God will be immeasurably exalted in our eyes
96.
The Unitarians reject the belief with abhorrence, and they are reckoned by some, as Socrates was reckoned by the oracle of Delphi, among the wisest of men
97.
Men, too, who live with God here are inspired with a profound moral conviction, as was Socrates, that in some way, whether it can be scientifically argued out or not, they shall live with God hereafter