Symposium

audiobook

Symposium

by Plato

EN·~3 hours

Chapters

Description

At a lively Athenian banquet celebrating a recent triumph, a circle of friends gathers under the warm glow of oil lamps, ready to explore love’s many faces. Socrates, ever the thoughtful guest, arrives late, his presence sparking a playful yet serious mood among the host Agathon and the other participants. The evening’s unusual agenda—speeches in honor of love—promises a blend of poetry, medicine, and philosophy, each speaker taking their turn from the reclining couches.

The dialogue quickly reveals contrasting visions of love: one championing its power to inspire courage and honor, another drawing a line between lofty, heavenly affection and more earthly desire. Through vivid mythic references and sharp observation, the speakers argue that love can shape both personal virtue and the strength of an entire community. Listeners are drawn into a timeless conversation that questions what it means to love, how love moves us, and why the ancient Greeks saw it as a force worth celebrating and scrutinizing.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~3 hours (177K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Sue Asscher, and David Widger

Release date

1999-01-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Plato

Plato

-428–-348

One of the foundational thinkers of Western philosophy, this ancient Greek writer explored justice, love, knowledge, and the ideal state through vivid dialogues that still feel alive today. His works, many featuring Socrates as a central voice, have shaped philosophy, politics, ethics, and education for more than two millennia.

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