Matches in Harvard for { <http://id.lib.harvard.edu/aleph/008800211/catalog> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 26 of
26
with 100 items per page.
- catalog contributor b12338452.
- catalog created "c2001.".
- catalog date "2001".
- catalog date "c2001.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "c2001.".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references (p. [276]-278) and index.".
- catalog description "Phaedo -- The Drama and Dramatic Movement -- Elements of the overall drama -- The dramatic movement of the narrated happening as a whole -- Music and Story-telling -- Socrates the musician (59c8-61d2) -- Mythologizing on death (61d2-62a2) -- Defense for the Philosophic Life -- The first explanation of the lover-of-wisdom's wanting to die (623a2-63b5) -- Socrates's defense of his life (63b5-69e5) -- A hint concerning the discussion to come (59c8-69a5) -- The summons to argument (69e6-70c3) -- First Argument for Immortality -- The first part of the first argument (70c3-72e2) -- The second part of the first argument (72e2-77b1) -- The completion of the first argument (77b1-77d5) -- Soothing the Fear of Death -- A childish fear -- Soothing talk -- The Second Argument, and a Story -- The second argument (78b4-80e2) -- The story after the second argument (80e2-84b8) -- A Pause in the Argument (84b8-91c6) -- The swan-song of the servant of Apollo -- The objections stated -- Misology -- Reply to Simmias (91c6-95a6) -- Reply to Cebes, the Third Argument -- Socrates's experience of philosophic inquiry (95a7-100b9) -- Account of the cause (100c1-105c8) -- Third argument for the soul's immortality (105c9-107b10) -- The urging to a clearer examination of the primary hypotheses -- The argument, taken literally, then reflectively -- The reflective meaning of the extended argument for immortality -- Myth and the End -- The myth (107c1-115a8) -- The journey to Hades -- The earth and its regions or places.".
- catalog extent "xix, 288 p. ;".
- catalog hasFormat "Loving and dying.".
- catalog identifier "0761820728 (pbk. : alk. paper)".
- catalog isFormatOf "Loving and dying.".
- catalog issued "2001".
- catalog issued "c2001.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Lanham, Md. : University Press of America,".
- catalog relation "Loving and dying.".
- catalog subject "184 21".
- catalog subject "B379 .G68 2001".
- catalog subject "Immortality (Philosophy)".
- catalog subject "Love.".
- catalog subject "Plato. Phaedo.".
- catalog subject "Plato. Phaedrus.".
- catalog subject "Plato. Symposium.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Phaedo -- The Drama and Dramatic Movement -- Elements of the overall drama -- The dramatic movement of the narrated happening as a whole -- Music and Story-telling -- Socrates the musician (59c8-61d2) -- Mythologizing on death (61d2-62a2) -- Defense for the Philosophic Life -- The first explanation of the lover-of-wisdom's wanting to die (623a2-63b5) -- Socrates's defense of his life (63b5-69e5) -- A hint concerning the discussion to come (59c8-69a5) -- The summons to argument (69e6-70c3) -- First Argument for Immortality -- The first part of the first argument (70c3-72e2) -- The second part of the first argument (72e2-77b1) -- The completion of the first argument (77b1-77d5) -- Soothing the Fear of Death -- A childish fear -- Soothing talk -- The Second Argument, and a Story -- The second argument (78b4-80e2) -- The story after the second argument (80e2-84b8) -- A Pause in the Argument (84b8-91c6) -- The swan-song of the servant of Apollo -- The objections stated -- Misology -- Reply to Simmias (91c6-95a6) -- Reply to Cebes, the Third Argument -- Socrates's experience of philosophic inquiry (95a7-100b9) -- Account of the cause (100c1-105c8) -- Third argument for the soul's immortality (105c9-107b10) -- The urging to a clearer examination of the primary hypotheses -- The argument, taken literally, then reflectively -- The reflective meaning of the extended argument for immortality -- Myth and the End -- The myth (107c1-115a8) -- The journey to Hades -- The earth and its regions or places.".
- catalog title "Loving and dying : a reading of Plato's Phaedo, Symposium, and Phaedrus / Richard Gotshalk.".
- catalog type "text".