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Browsing named entities in Plato, Euthyphro, Apology, Crito, Phaedo.

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For, by Dog, I fancy these bones and sinews of mine would have been in Megara or Boeotia long ago, carried thither by an opinion of what was best, if I did not think it was better and nobler to endure any penalty the city may inflict rather than to escape and run away. But it is most absurd to call things of that sort causes. If anyone were to say that I could not have done what I thought proper if I had not bones and sinews and other things that I have, he would be right. But to say that those things are the cause of my doing what I do,
For, by Dog, I fancy these bones and sinews of mine would have been in Megara or Boeotia long ago, carried thither by an opinion of what was best, if I did not think it was better and nobler to endure any penalty the city may inflict rather than to escape and run away. But it is most absurd to call things of that sort causes. If anyone were to say that I could not have done what I thought proper if I had not bones and sinews and other things that I have, he would be right. But to say that those things are the cause of my doing what I do,
“Of course.”“Observe,” he went on, “that when a man dies, the visible part of him, the body, which lies in the visible world and which we call the corpse, which is naturally subject to dissolution and decomposition, does not undergo these processes at once, but remains for a considerable time, and even for a very long time, if death takes place when the body is in good condition, and at a favorable time of the year. For when the body is shrunk and embalmed, as is done in Egypt, it remains almost entire for an incalculable time. And even if the bo
“Where then, Socrates,” said he, “shall we find a good singer of such charms, since you are leaving us?''“Hellas, Cebes,” he replied, “is a large country, in which there are many good men, and there are many foreign peoples also. You ought to search through all of them in quest of such a charmer, sparing neither money nor toil, for there is no greater need for which you could spend your money. And you must seek among yourselves, too, for perhaps you would hardly find others better able to do this than you.”“That,” said Cebes, “shall be done. But let us return to the point
when we left the prison in the evening we heard that the ship had arrived from Delos. So we agreed to come to the usual place as early in the morning as possible. And we came, and the jailer who usually answered the door came out and told us to wait and not go in until he told us. “For,” he said, “the eleven are releasing Socrates from his fetters and giving directions how he is to die today.” So after a little delay he c
EchecratesWere any foreigners there?PhaedoYes, Simmias of Thebes and Cebes and Phaedonides, and from Megara Euclides and Terpsion.EchecratesWhat? Were Aristippus and Cleombrotus there?PhaedoNo. They were said to be in Aegina.EchecratesWas anyone else there?PhaedoI think these were about all.EchecratesWell then, what was the conversation?PhaedoI will try to tell you everything from the beginning. On the previous days
EchecratesWere any foreigners there?PhaedoYes, Simmias of Thebes and Cebes and Phaedonides, and from Megara Euclides and Terpsion.EchecratesWhat? Were Aristippus and Cleombrotus there?PhaedoNo. They were said to be in Aegina.EchecratesWas anyone else there?PhaedoI think these were about all.EchecratesWell then, what was the conversation?PhaedoI will try to tell you everything from the beginning. On the previous days
youths and maidens, and saved them and himself. Now the Athenians made a vow to Apollo, as the story goes, that if they were saved they would send a mission every year to Delos. And from that time even to the present day they send it annually in honor of the god. Now it is their law that after the mission begins the city must be pure and no one may be publicly executed until the ship has gone to Delos and back; and sometimes, when contrary winds youths and maidens, and saved them and himself. Now the Athenians made a vow to Apollo, as the story goes, that if they were saved they would send a mission every year to Delos. And from that time even to the present day they send it annually in honor of the god. Now it is their law that after the mission begins the city must be pure and no one may be publicly executed until the ship has gone to Delos and back; and sometimes, when contrary winds
PhaedoIt was a matter of chance, Echecrates. It happened that the stern of the ship which the Athenians send to Delos was crowned on the day before the trial.EchecratesWhat ship is this?PhaedoThis is the ship, as the Athenians say, in which Theseus once went to Crete with the fourteen
PhaedoIt was a matter of chance, Echecrates. It happened that the stern of the ship which the Athenians send to Delos was crowned on the day before the trial.EchecratesWhat ship is this?PhaedoThis is the ship, as the Athenians say, in which Theseus once went to Crete with the fourteen
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