
Produced by Sophia Canoni. Book provided by Iason Konstantinides
ΒΙΒΛΙΟΘΗΚΗ ΦΕΞΗ ΑΡΧΑΙΩΝ ΕΛΛΗΝΩΝ ΣΥΓΓΡΑΦΕΩΝ - ΠΛΑΤΩΝ - ΝΟΜΟΙ ΚΑΙ ΕΠΙΝΟΜΙΣ - ΜΕΤΑΦΡΑΣΗ ΚΥΡ. ΖΑΜΠΑ - ΤΟΜΟΣ Δ - ΕΚΔΟΣΕΙΣ ΦΕΞΗ - ΒΙΒΛΙΟΘΗΚΗ ΦΕΞΗ ΑΡΧΑΙΩΝ ΕΛΛΗΝΩΝ ΣΥΓΓΡΑΦΕΩΝ - ΠΛΑΤΩΝΟΣ - ΝΟΜΟΙ ΚΑΙ ΕΠΙΝΟΜΙΣ - ΜΕΤΑΦΡΑΣΙΣ ΚΥΡ. ΖΑΜΠΑ - ΤΟΜΟΣ Δ.' - ΑΘΗΝΑΙΟΣ.
ΚΛΕΙΝΙΑΣ.
ΑΘΗΝΑΙΟΣ.
ΚΛΕΙΝΙΑΣ.
ΑΘΗΝΑΙΟΣ.
ΚΛΕΙΝΙΑΣ.
ΑΘΗΝΑΙΟΣ.
ΚΛΕΙΝΙΑΣ.
ΑΘΗΝΑΙΟΣ.
A lively dialogue unfolds between two thinkers as they probe the tangled relationship between human passions and the law. Through a series of probing questions, they distinguish between grief, fear, desire, pleasure and the pursuit of truth, arguing how each can spur error or virtue. Their exchange moves from abstract definitions to concrete proposals for how societies might shape rules that reflect the differing weight of these emotions.
The conversation then turns to the practical side of governance, examining how judges and legislators should treat crimes born of ignorance, reckless ambition or misguided philosophy. By categorizing offenses and suggesting graduated penalties, the authors reveal a nuanced vision of justice that balances empathy with order. Listeners will be drawn into the rhythmic back‑and‑forth of ancient Greek reasoning, gaining insight into timeless debates about what it means to act rightly in a world driven by both reason and feeling.
Language
el
Duration
~2 hours (172K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2011-05-30
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

-428–-348
A student of Socrates and teacher of Aristotle, this Athenian philosopher helped shape the way the Western world thinks about justice, knowledge, politics, and the soul. His dialogues still feel lively today because they ask big questions through conversation rather than simple answers.
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