A Catholic Reading of the Gorgias of Plato

Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2011 (157):6-19 (2011)
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Abstract

ExcerptSOCRATES: But if I come to my end because of a deficiency in flattering oratory, I know that you'd see me bear my death with ease. For no one who isn't totally bereft of reason and courage is afraid to die; doing what's unjust is what he's afraid of. For of all evils, the ultimate is that of arriving in Hades with one's soul stuffed full of unjust actions. Plato, Gorgias, 523d–e1 SOCRATES: Maybe you [Callicles] think this account [eschatological myth] is told as an old wives' tale, and you feel contempt for it. And it…

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