The Death of Socrates

Classical Quarterly 23 (01):25- (1973)
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Abstract

The scene at the end of the Phaedo, in which Plato describes how Socrates dies by poisoning from hemlock, is moving and impressive. It gives us the sense of witnessing directly an actual event, accurately and vividly described, the death of the historical Socrates. There are, however, certain curious features in the scene, and in the effects of the hemlock on Socrates, as Plato presents them. In the Phaedo hemlock has only one primary effect: it produces first heaviness and then numbness in the body

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Citations of this work

A Cock for Asclepius.Glenn W. Most - 1993 - Classical Quarterly 43 (01):96-.
A Cock for Asclepius.Glenn W. Most - 1993 - Classical Quarterly 43 (1):96-111.
Good life and good death in the Socratic literature of the fourth century BCE.Vladislav Suvák - 2021 - Ethics and Bioethics (in Central Europe) 11 (1-2):1-13.

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