Ιππίας, Μείζων και Ελάσσων

audiobook

Ιππίας, Μείζων και Ελάσσων

by Plato

EL·~2 hours·8 chapters

Chapters

8 total
1

Produced by Sophia Canoni. Book provided by Iason Konstantinides

0:33
2

ΒΙΒΛΙΟΘΗΚΗ ΦΕΞΗ ΑΡΧΑΙΩΝ ΕΛΛΗΝΩΝ ΣΥΓΓΡΑΦΕΩΝ - ΠΛΑΤΩΝ ΙΠΠΙΑΣ ΜΕΙΖΩΝ ΚΑΙ ΕΛΑΣΣΩΝ - ΜΕΤΑΦΡΑΣΗ Κ. ΖΑΜΠΑ - ΕΚΔΟΣΕΙΣ ΦΕΞΗ - ΒΙΒΛΙΟΘΗΚΗ ΦΕΕΗ ΑΡΧΑΙΩΝ ΕΛΛΗΝΩΝ ΣΥΓΓΡΑΦΕΩΝ - ΠΛΑΤΩΝΟΣ - ΙΠΠΙΑΣ ΜΕΙΖΩΝ ΚΑΙ ΕΛΑΤΤΩΝ - METAΦΡAΣΙΣ ΚΥΡ. Ζ Α Μ Π Α

32:49
3

ΠΡΟΛΟΓΟΣ

2:28
4

ΠΛΑΤΩΝΟΣ ΙΠΠΙΑΣ ΜΕΙΖΩΝ - ΠΡΟΣΩΠΑ ΤΟΥ ΔΙΑΛΟΓΟΥ - ΣΩΚΡΑΤΗΣ - ΙΠΠΙΑΣ

1:12:15
5

ΠΡΟΣΩΠΑ TOΥ ΔΙΑΛΟΓΟΥ - ΕΥΔΙΚΟΣ - ΣΩΚΡΑΤΗΣ — ΙΠΠΙΑΣ

35:30
6

ΤΕΛΟΣ - ΒΙΒΛΙΟΘΗΚΗ ΦΕΞΗ ΑΡΧΑΙΩΝ ΕΛΛΗΝΩΝ ΣΥΓΓΡΑΦΕΩΝ

3:13
7

ΕΥΡΙΠΙΔΗΣ

7:16
8

ΧΡΗΜΑΤΙΣΤΗΡΙΟΝ ΤΟΥ ΒΙΒΛΙΟΥ - ΠΑΝΕΠΙΣΤΗΜΙΟΥ 36 (ΚΑΤΩ ΑΠΟ ΤΟΝ Ο.Τ.Ε.)

1:52

Description

In this classic Platonic dialogue, the sophist Ippias engages Socrates in a lively debate over the nature of beauty. Beginning with playful examples—a maiden, a gilded object, a polished spoon— Ippias attempts ever‑more refined definitions, while Socrates gently pushes the conversation toward deeper criteria such as usefulness, goodness, and the pleasure of perception. Their exchange showcases the Socratic method at work, revealing how seemingly simple concepts can unfold into intricate philosophical puzzles.

The second part, often called the “Minor” Ippias, adds the character Eudikos and turns the discussion toward truth and falsehood. Here the interlocutors examine whether the liar differs fundamentally from the truth‑teller, drawing analogies from Homer’s heroes Achilles and Odysseus. Listeners are invited into the early stages of Plato’s exploration of ethics and epistemology, experiencing the sharp wit and rigorous reasoning that characterize his early works.

Details

Language

el

Duration

~2 hours (149K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2011-01-08

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Plato

Plato

-428–-348

One of the great minds of ancient Greece, this philosopher shaped the way later generations thought about justice, knowledge, love, and the ideal society. His dialogues still feel lively today, full of argument, character, and big questions that never quite go away.

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