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How to Talk about Love: An Ancient Guide for Modern Lovers

AUTHOR D'Angour, Armand; D'Angour, Armand; D'Angour, Armand et al.
PUBLISHER Princeton University Press (01/28/2025)
PRODUCT TYPE Hardcover (Hardcover)

Description

Explore the nature of love in this charming new translation of selections from Plato's great dramatic work, the Symposium

What is love? In poetry, songs, fiction, movies, psychology, and philosophy, love has been described, admired, lamented, and dissected in endless ways. Is love based on physical attraction? Does it bring out our better selves? How does it relate to sex? Is love divine? Plato's Symposium is one of the oldest, most influential, and most profound explorations of such questions--it is even the source of the idea of "Platonic love." How to Talk about Love introduces and presents the key passages and central ideas of Plato's philosophical dialogue in a lively and highly readable new translation, which also features the original Greek on facing pages.

The Symposium is set at a fictional drinking party during which prominent Athenians engage in a friendly competition by delivering improvised speeches in praise of Eros, the Greek god of love and sex. The aristocrat Phaedrus, the legal expert Pausanias, the physician Eryximachus, the comic playwright Aristophanes, and the tragic poet Agathon--each by turn celebrates different aspects of love before Socrates proposes not to praise love but to tell the truth about it. In the final speech, the politician and libertine Alcibiades argues that Socrates himself is the epitome of love.

Deftly capturing the essence and spirit of Plato's masterpiece, How to Talk about Love makes the Symposium more accessible and enjoyable than ever before.

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Product Format
Product Details
ISBN-13: 9780691256887
ISBN-10: 0691256888
Binding: Hardback or Cased Book (Sewn)
Content Language: English
More Product Details
Page Count: 208
Carton Quantity: 48
Product Dimensions: 4.57 x 1.02 x 6.77 inches
Weight: 0.60 pound(s)
Feature Codes: Bibliography, Price on Product, Bilingual
Country of Origin: US
Subject Information
BISAC Categories
Philosophy | History & Surveys - Ancient & Classical
Philosophy | Social
Philosophy | Emotions
Dewey Decimal: 184
Library of Congress Control Number: 2024019964
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
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Explore the nature of love in this charming new translation of selections from Plato's great dramatic work, the Symposium

What is love? In poetry, songs, fiction, movies, psychology, and philosophy, love has been described, admired, lamented, and dissected in endless ways. Is love based on physical attraction? Does it bring out our better selves? How does it relate to sex? Is love divine? Plato's Symposium is one of the oldest, most influential, and most profound explorations of such questions--it is even the source of the idea of "Platonic love." How to Talk about Love introduces and presents the key passages and central ideas of Plato's philosophical dialogue in a lively and highly readable new translation, which also features the original Greek on facing pages.

The Symposium is set at a fictional drinking party during which prominent Athenians engage in a friendly competition by delivering improvised speeches in praise of Eros, the Greek god of love and sex. The aristocrat Phaedrus, the legal expert Pausanias, the physician Eryximachus, the comic playwright Aristophanes, and the tragic poet Agathon--each by turn celebrates different aspects of love before Socrates proposes not to praise love but to tell the truth about it. In the final speech, the politician and libertine Alcibiades argues that Socrates himself is the epitome of love.

Deftly capturing the essence and spirit of Plato's masterpiece, How to Talk about Love makes the Symposium more accessible and enjoyable than ever before.

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Hardcover