Plato's Apology of Socrates

A Literary and Philosophical Study with a Running Commentary. Edited and Completed from the Papers of the Late E. de Strycker, S.J.

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There have been many recent studies on the Apology. This book differs from them in that it attempts a synthesis of philosophical and literary approaches. A great deal of attention is paid to the philosophical and religious views that are present—often implicitly—in the text; they are much closer to the philosophy of Plato's main works than is usually assumed. But the Apology is also analysed as a rhetorical text: its close relationship with fourth-century rhetorical theory and practice is highlighted.
The analyses of the various parts of the speech are followed by a detailed line-by-line commentary.
The work was started by E. de Strycker, S.J.; after his death, it was revised and completed by S.R. Slings.

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Preliminary Material
Pages: i–xvii
Introduction
Pages: 1–25
The Exordium
Pages: 27–40
Proposition
Pages: 41–47
The Narration
Pages: 59–82
Answer to a First Objection
Pages: 127–149
Answer to a Second Objection
Pages: 151–175
Peroration
Pages: 177–183
Second Speech
Pages: 185–200
Third Speech
Pages: 201–239
Commentary
Pages: 241–397
Index locorum
Pages: 399–401
Index verborum
Pages: 403–404
E. de Strycker, S.J. was Professor of Classics at the Universitary Faculties Saint-Ignatius at Antwerp until his death in 1978.
S.R. Slings is Professor of Greek at the Free University at Amsterdam.
'This English-language "supplement" to Burnet's 1924 Oxford commentary on the Apology, aimed at "students and scholars with a good working knowledge of Greek" is continental scholarship at its best...serious Greekless investigators into Socrates will need to consult this volume as carfully as the comparable work of Brickhouse and Smith.'
Carl W. Conrad, Religious Studies Review, 1995.
'...it will serve as a valuable groundwork for future studies of the dialogue.'
Robin Waterfield, The Classical Review, 1996.
'This is not popularisation but an important work of research, its importance reinforced by the distinction of the two scholars cheifly concerned...this book contains some of the most valuabel work published on Plato's Ap. for many years. Among other good things, it lays out with a clarity far beyond even Burnet, and with impressive detail, the rhetorical stucture of the first speech; it trenchantly rejects scholarly excesses such as J. Coulter's surprisingly popular theory that Plato's Ap. imitates Gorgias' Palamedes; it offers textual suggestions all worth consideration and some convincing; and on numerous, diverse points such as the relation of Socrates' political views to his accusers' motives, and the meaning of terms used in the exordium, it weds deep learning to sound judgment. Truly no serious student of Plato's Apology of Socrates can afford to neglect this book.’
M.C. Stokes, Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie, 1996.
All those of graduate level and above interested in Greek philosophy, history and literature.
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