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Socrates

A Man for Our Times

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Acclaimed historian and best-selling author Paul Johnson's books have been translated into dozens of languages. In Socrates: A Man for Our Times, Johnson draws from little-known resources to construct a fascinating account of one of history's greatest thinkers. Socrates transcended class limitations in Athens during the fifth century B.C. to develop ideas that still shape the way we think about the human body and soul, including the workings of the human mind.
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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Paul Johnson's engaging extended essay on Socrates might be better called "Socrates, A Man of His Time." Johnson spends much worthy effort placing Socrates in the fifth-century Athens that is his proper place. Ancient Athens, like Socrates, is subject to interpretation, and Johnson presents it as a British gentlemen's club utopia in which rhetoric sparkles, friends are important, homosexual desire is tolerated (but rarely acted upon), and women are admired but excluded. John Curless's rich voice and upper-class British accent add to the world Johnson conjures. His Greek pronunciation is perfect--English, but not too much so. Johnson truly admires his Socrates (as he reviles Plato), and his affection gives the narrative life. F.C. (c) AudioFile 2012, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 22, 2011
      In this brisk account of Socrates’ life, ideas, and era, written to be useful for contemporary readers, Johnson (Churchill) chronicles the rise and fall of Athens under Pericles and his successors, establishing both the context of Socrates’ influence and his motivations. “He saw that science, or the investigation of the external world, was for him, at least, unprofitable. But the investigation of the internal world of man was something he could do and wanted to do,” writes Johnson. Because Socrates himself did not record his thoughts, Johnson does well to summarize the writings of the philosopher’s admirers, acolytes, and rivals. The summary of the Socratic dialogue of Laches provides an admirably concise view of the philosopher’s methods and rhetorical tactics in exploring courage, moral purity, and mortality. Likewise, Johnson is able to deftly explain how Socrates’ dedication to Athenian ideals helped seal his fate as Athens spiraled into political and military decline and he was tried and convicted of “corrupting the young” of the city-state. In the end, when he drank hemlock under a death sentence, it was “his determination to uphold the dignity and sovereignty of Athenian law by submitting to it” that accounted for the end of a remarkable life whose influence remains central to the foundations of Western thought.

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  • English

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