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Xenophon's Socrates

Philosophical Review 83 (3):409-413 (1974)

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  1. Leo Strauss: de Nietzsche a Platón.Oscar Mauricio Donato & Luciano Nosetto - 2014 - Bogota: Universidad Libre.
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  • Socrates and the Stoic Sage.V. Leigh Viner - 2022 - History of Philosophy Quarterly 39 (2):97-111.
    The Stoics, who advocated the extirpation of the passions, the sufficiency of virtue for happiness, and the equality of sins, embodied their radical doctrines in the figure of the sage, provoking both ancient and modern critics of Stoicism to dismiss this exemplar as an impracticable and unappealing ideal. This paper attempts to add depth and richness to an understanding of the sage by highlighting the sage's more human qualities and by examining how the Stoics’ idealized paradigm derives from, or maps (...)
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  • Review essay: Mr. Smith does not go to Washington.Bart Schultz - 2007 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 37 (3):366-386.
    A recent spate of books on the life and legacy of the political philosopher Leo Strauss, notably Steven B. Smith's Reading Leo Strauss: Politics, Philosophy, and Judaism , suggests a desperate effort to salvage Strauss and the Straussian school of political philosophy from the wreckage of American neoconservatism. Although a number of these works are quite thoughtful and helpfully counter many of the more extreme (and uglier) charges made concerning the meaning of Straussianism and its political influence, their general drift (...)
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  • Xanthippe: Shrew or Muse.Arlene Saxonhouse - 2018 - Hypatia 33 (4):610-625.
    Socrates's wife Xanthippe has entered the popular imagination as a shrewish character who dumps water on the inattentive Socrates. Such popular portrayals are intended largely to highlight what makes Socrates such an appealing character. But she also appears briefly in Plato's dialogue the Phaedo, the dialogue that takes place in Socrates's prison cell, recounts the conversation about death and immortality that took place there, and then reports the events surrounding Socrates's death after drinking the hemlock. After a review of the (...)
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  • Commentary on Saxonhouse.Mary R. Lefkowitz - 1998 - Proceedings of the Boston Area Colloquium of Ancient Philosophy 14 (1):130-138.
  • Reviving Greco‐Roman friendship: A bibliographical review.Heather Devere - 1999 - Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 2 (4):149-187.
  • Big Boys And Little Boys: Justice And Law In Xenophon’s Cyropaedia and Memorabilia.Gabriel Danzig - 2009 - Polis 26 (2):271-295.
    Xenophon’s anecdote concerning the exchange of clothes between a big boy and a little boy in Cyropaedia offers a valuable framework for understanding his conception of justice and the problematics of administering it. Interpreters have erred by assuming that Cyrus’ teacher, as well as Socrates in Memorabilia, simply identifies the just with the lawful. Rather than identifying the two, both characters argue that the law is just; but they differ widely in their explanations of what makes the law just. For (...)
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