用Socrates造句子,“Socrates”造句

來源:國語幫 3.13W

Minor premise: Socrates is a human.

Socrates questioned such blind obedience to an ideology.

So the question is: "? "What does Socrates care about"?

From the fact that Socrates is a man and the principle that all men are mortal we can deduce that Socrates was mortal

The Delphic story for what it's worth marks a major turning point in Socrates' intellectual biography.

Socrates: A warrior is not about perfection or victory or invulnerability. He's about absolute vulnerability.

But it gets back to the question, are the reasons Socrates gives Crito for refusing to escape, the reasons he puts in the mouth of the laws of the city of Athens,? Are those Socrates' true reasons?

The particular dialogue that we're going to reading, the Phaedo, is set at the death scene of Socrates.

The gentleman may lack the speculative intelligence of a Socrates but he will possess that quality of practical rationality of practical judgment necessary for the administration of affairs.

Socrates says he will be drowned in laughter but many other people have taken this dream or this aspiration very seriously.

So even if we grant that what Socrates meant by invisible was can not be observed, we still have to say with Simmias, you know, fourth is just not true.

向人類提醒這樣一件事總難嫌其太頻吧,從前有過一個名叫蘇格拉底(Socrates)的人,在他和他那時候的法律權威以及公眾意見之間曾發生了令人難忘的衝突。

Socrates造句

Socrates presents this proposal, again, as outlandish.

He became Socrates' most illustrious student.

I think that goes well back to Socrates.

The move from the younger we could call him Aristophanic Socrates the Socrates who again investigates the things aloft and under the earth to the later what we could call platonic Socrates.

The son of a stonemason, born around 469bc, Socrates was famously odd.

The Crito, on the other hand, is a conversation between Socrates and a single individual, only one person.

Functioning as the method of moral education with its own theoretical foundation, persuasion can be traced back to Socrates.

Answers suggest Brits link happiness to bird song, knowing themselves, the environment, responsible pet ownership, contributing to society, going out into the wild and reading Socrates.

Socrates is talking to Hippias of Elis, a travelling "sophist" who sets up as a professional "wise man", taking money for lessons in private and public rhetoric, and managing public business himself.

Should Socrates be tolerated,? Would a good society tolerate Socrates?

Speaking unmorally, a clever trick? Oh, SocratesSocrates, was that perhaps your secret?

Socrates said, "That is the secret to success."

The God of Socrates was the intermediary of the transformation from polytheism to monotheism.

Buffeted by scandal and the backlash from unpopular reforms, Mr Socrates scored a considerable triumph by staying in office.

Socrates then also jumped into the river, clinging to our young people go on to the water by the first hard, young people do not understand how a family matter but irrigation water.

So this is a question that I want to continue today, to consider what the trial of Socrates means and I want to begin by going back to a problem or a paradox that I ended the class with last time.

The young man asked Socrates with puzzle why he did that, Socrates replied

The topic of the Phaedo, as I say, is set on Socrates' last day.

This seems to suggest that referring back to the Apology, that it is not Socrates, but the Athenians who innovate, who create and introduce new deities.

And Socrates, who played for the Brazil national team between 1979 and 1986, believes the 40-year-old coach is the right man to revive the five-time World Cup winners.

Socrates believes in the immortality of the soul.

Socrates turns that into the statement that justice means paying your debts and returning what is owed to you.

He talks as if he were Socrates.

It is this Socrates who is brought up on charges of corruption and impiety yet none of this quite answers the question of what is the nature of Socrates' crime.

Socrates tried to soothe us, true enough.

When Socrates finally stood up to face his charges in front of his fellow citizens in a religious court in the Athenian agora, he articulated one of the great pities of human society.

That incident that Socrates tells here represents what one could call " the famous Socratic turn Socrates' second sailing so to speak.

Socrates: what a fine thing to say, Hippias! It's very indicative of your own wisdom, and of what a difference there is between people nowadays and the ancients.

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