Crito : Justice, Duty, And Civil Disobedience - Socrates' Reflections From His Prison Cell
(2025)
By: Plato

Fiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : The Library of Alexandria, 2025
Made available through hoopla
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource

ISBN/ISSN
9781806292370 MWT18744181, 1806292378 18744181
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

What if obeying an unjust verdict were the highest act of justice? Plato's Crito captures the quiet hours before Socrates drinks the hemlock, revealing a razor-sharp debate about legal obedience, moral duty, and the price of integrity. This modern translation restores the dialogue's urgency and clarity, inviting readers to weigh Socrates' radical resolve against Crito's heartfelt pleas. What You'll Explore in This Edition: - Law vs. Conscience - Why Socrates claims fleeing Athens would harm the very soul Crito hopes to save. - The Social Contract, Ancient-Style - A concise primer on the obligations between citizen and state centuries before Rousseau. - Civil Disobedience Re-examined - Fresh commentary linking the dialogue to Thoreau, Gandhi, King, and modern protest movements. - Guided Reading Tools - Section summaries, key Greek terms, and critical-thinking prompts ideal for study groups and classrooms. - The Prison Trilogy Complete - Cross-references to Apology and Phaedo show the full arc of Socrates' final days. Whether you're a student of philosophy, a defender of justice, or a seeker of moral clarity, Crito challenges you to decide when breaking the law becomes a deeper betrayal-and when obedience itself is the ultimate form of resistance

Mode of access: World Wide Web

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