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4. How Socrates Benefited in Regard to Family and Friends
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents ix
- Introduction 1
-
Part One: Socrates’s Innocence of the Injustices for Which He Was Executed
- 1. Socrates Was Not Guilty of Impiety or Disbelief as Regards the Gods of Athens 11
- 2. Socrates Was Not Guilty of Corrupting the Young 23
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Part Two: Socrates’s Active Justice, as Benefiter of Others
- 3. How Socrates Benefited through His Piety and His Self-Mastery 45
- 4. How Socrates Benefited in Regard to Family and Friends 80
- 5. How Socrates Benefited Those Reaching for the Noble/Beautiful (Kalon) 112
- 6. Socrates as Beneficial Tutor 164
- Xenophon’s Conclusion 211
- Notes 217
- Works Cited 265
- Index of Names 281
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents ix
- Introduction 1
-
Part One: Socrates’s Innocence of the Injustices for Which He Was Executed
- 1. Socrates Was Not Guilty of Impiety or Disbelief as Regards the Gods of Athens 11
- 2. Socrates Was Not Guilty of Corrupting the Young 23
-
Part Two: Socrates’s Active Justice, as Benefiter of Others
- 3. How Socrates Benefited through His Piety and His Self-Mastery 45
- 4. How Socrates Benefited in Regard to Family and Friends 80
- 5. How Socrates Benefited Those Reaching for the Noble/Beautiful (Kalon) 112
- 6. Socrates as Beneficial Tutor 164
- Xenophon’s Conclusion 211
- Notes 217
- Works Cited 265
- Index of Names 281