
In this lively dramatized conversation, an Athenian visitor meets the Cretan elder Kleinias and the renowned Megillos, sparking a debate on the nature of law and civic duty. Set against the sun‑baked roads from Knossos to the sacred groves, the speakers compare their city‑states’ customs, from the rugged terrain that shapes Cretan warfare to the more settled habits of the mainland. Their exchange weaves mythic references—Zeus, Apollo, Minos—into concrete questions about why societies establish tribunals, fortifications, and training grounds.
Listeners are drawn into a vivid portrait of ancient political thought, hearing how geography, military necessity, and religious belief intertwine to justify strict regulations. The dialogue balances scholarly insight with the natural rhythm of a friendly chat, offering glimpses of humor and genuine curiosity as the participants pause beneath towering cypresses to reflect. By the end of the first act, the audience is left pondering whether peace is merely a name for an ever‑present state of readiness, and how those early ideas still echo in modern discussions of law.
Language
el
Duration
~2 hours (163K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2011-05-12
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

-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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