It is clear that many of these events and people can be explained with Platonic by learning various events and people involved in the Peloponnesus War and the Theban Theater Antigone. In the Republic, Plato conveyed his philosophical reflections on democracy, justice and education in society through his main character Socrates. When Socrates met people who had many enlightenments of his time, he asked them questions about rhetoric of society and humanity.
In this article I will look into the Socratic argument of the Phaedo and Plato in the Republic of Plato in detail. First, I will first analyze the debate of human morality between the Republic, Socrates and the Glaucon. Discussion first defines a good community ethics and continues to apply this definition to humans. Then I will analyze Socrates' assertions about the immortality of the soul, the faedo. - Confusion confusion bothers everyone in the world. Everyday people are suffering from confusion, so they can not fully accept what the world has to offer. Simply put, the confusion is "the state of psychological insecurity about time, place, direction of human injury". It is obvious that many things will lead to confusion and confusion.
The Republic of Plato adopted a series of dialogues between the first person narrator (Socrates, Plato's teacher) and various reality characters. Perhaps the most famous part of the Republic 'Fable of the Cave' is the dialogue between Socrates and Platon's brother Glaucon. In this section, Socrates tries to explain how people acquire knowledge and wisdom, and "through the metaphor," the essential form of goodness of perception "(paragraphs 31, 10). He was confined to Glaucon in the complete darkness trapped in the cave since birth and they can not move their bodies or move their heads to see what is in front of them We asked to imagine the group bundled in. Anywhere outside the wall, such walls are the only ones they know about life.