Phaedo
アテネの刑務所の牢屋で静かな朝,知恵と苛立ちな質問で知られる男が死ぬ準備をしている.彼はソクラテスです.そして,この日の出来事,彼の忠誠な弟子プラトンがフェドの対話で記録したもので,死,人間の魂,そして哲学的生活の目的について深く瞑想するよう誘います. この交流は単なる歴史的な記述ではなく,恐怖ではなく,知的勇気,そしておそらく解放感をもって死に直面すべき理由の鮮明な議論として機能しています. その古代の宣言は,今も響き続け,存在,意識,そして,身体の必然的な衰退に何があるかを考えるために,私たちの信念を考慮するよう促し,人生における究極の疑問に悩む誰にとっても,説得力のある聴き方となる.
Enjoyed Phaedo? A few ways to support us
Audible & Amazon links are affiliate; we may earn a small commission at no extra cost.
About this production
Human narration by a volunteer reader from LibriVox.org, the public-domain audiobook project. LibriVox volunteers record literary works whose copyright has expired in the United States, releasing the resulting recordings into the public domain.
Phaedo by Plato. The underlying text is in the U.S. public domain. We do not republish any modern copyrighted edition, translation, or commentary.
The 4K cinematic visuals accompanying this audiobook are generated by an AI image model from prompts derived from the source text. No copyrighted photos, paintings, or stock footage are used. AI generation is disclosed on every video on our YouTube channel as required by YouTube's altered/synthetic content policy.
English subtitles are transcribed from the LibriVox recording with OpenAI Whisper. Translations into the 11 other supported languages are produced by Meta's NLLB-200 neural translation model. No human translator's copyrighted translation is used.
Questions about sourcing or rights? See our DMCA & Sourcing policy or contact us.
Enjoyed this audiobook?
If you'd like to own a copy of Phaedo or hear a professionally produced edition, the links below help support free audiobook production at no extra cost to you.
As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases. Audible / print links are affiliate.