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Socrates
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Socrates stands as one of the most examined figures in Western intellectual history, and essays about him appear across philosophy, classics, and literature courses alike. Because Socrates left no writings of his own, students engage with him almost entirely through the dialogues of Plato — including the Republic, the Euthyphro, and the Apology — making the relationship between author and subject a live interpretive question. Central academic tensions include the nature of knowledge versus opinion, the teachability of virtue, the meaning of piety, and how reason governs a well-lived life. These themes connect Socrates to enduring questions about truth, existence, and the obligations philosophy places on those who pursue it.

Student papers on this topic take several distinct approaches. Comparative essays place Socrates alongside figures such as Buddha, Henry David Thoreau, Immanuel Kant, and St. Augustine to test his ideas across different traditions and historical moments. Close-reading essays work through specific passages — such as the stretch of the Republic from 475a to 480a — to analyze arguments about knowledge, opinion, and the philosopher's nature. Other papers address conceptual problems directly, asking whether virtue can be taught or how Glaucon's challenge reframes justice. Some writers bring psychoanalytic perspectives to bear, examining Socratic method through a Freudian lens.

A strong essay on Socrates anchors its thesis in a specific text or argument rather than making broad claims about "ancient philosophy" in general. Evidence drawn from Platonic dialogue — tracking how Socrates actually reasons through a problem — carries more weight than paraphrase alone. The most common pitfall is conflating Socrates's own views with Plato's, so careful writers acknowledge that distinction and account for it explicitly in their analysis.

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Research Paper Doctorate
Plato\'s View of Death With Dignity vs. Sherwin B. Nuland\'s How We Die
¶ … death by Sherwin Nuland and Socrates. It has 4 sources.
Paper High School
Aristotle and Aquinas on Law, Justice, and Natural Law
This study compares the views of Aquinas and Aristotle on law and justice. As well this study compares Aquinas and Aristotle on their view of equity. Examined are concepts of the formation of laws and why laws are better formed in advance by lawmakers than formed through the process of adjudication which can be impacted by emotions and a tendency for corruption.
Essay Doctorate
An argumentative response to chapter 3 of The Shallows by Nicholas Carr
This three page paper is about the third chapter in Nicholas Carr's 2011 book "The Shallows: What the Internet is Doing to Our Brains." The Chapter is entitled "Tools of the mind," and it places the Internet within the context of other "intellectual technologies." Carr focuses on maps and clocks as other intellectual technologies that changed the ways people think and live. The paper analyzes the chapter using outside sources.
Paper High School
Knowledge and Assumptions in Plato\'s
Man's unquenchable thirst for knowledge has spurred our species' rapid ascendency within the physical realm, while guiding the refinement of our moral spectrum, but throughout history the role of assumption in shaping…
Essay Doctorate
Natural Law in Apology Crito, Plato Presents
One of the great philosophical mysteries is Socrates' refusal to save himself and his desire to accept the death sentence of the Athenian jury that condemned him. This paper examines why Socrates made such a decision in light of the later, Christian philosopher C.S.Lewis' conception of natural law, or the idea that certain principles are unbending and unchanging for all time.
Paper Masters
Plato\'s Phaedo and Stc\'s \"Christabel\" in Phaedo
In Phaedo 80ff, Socrates outlines Plato's theory of Forms, particularly attempting to prove that the eternal Forms are of divine origin. Through analogy with the living body and the dead body, Socrates in dialogue with…
Paper High School
Symposium Is One of the Most Critically
This paper is about Plato's the Symposium. The paper analyzes the various concepts of Eros, or love, as seen through the different ideologies of Greek mythology. At the end, Socrates' own opinion is analyzed, and his superior rhetorical strength is capped off by the conclusion of the Symposium with the success of Socrates' argument having gone unchallenged.
Research Paper Doctorate
Great philosophers and their major contributions
¶ … Euthyphro, Socrates meets his friend Euthyphro outside the court of justice and explains how he (Socrates) has been called there to answer charges brought by Meletus. The discussion turns to the question of piety,…
Paper High School
The scandal in philosophy
In Soccio's account of Immanuel Kant's philosophy, Immanuel Kant saw as a "Scandal in Philosophy" the basic disjunction between western philosophical schools, such that indicated both sides were in part mistaken about…
Research Paper High School
Political philosophy: core concepts and theories
Euthyphro is a young man who is turning in his own father for committing the murder of a slave. Euthyphro first responds to Socrates that piety is defined as 'what he [Euthyphro] is doing in a tautological fashion (Ross…