is one of the best-known dialogues of Plato's middle period, along with the Republic and the Symposium. The philosophical subject of the dialogue is the immortality of the soul.
English-language translations of el:Φαίδων include:
- Dialogue of the Immortality of the Soul, trans. by Lewis Theobald (1713) (transcription project)
- Phaedo, trans. by Unknown (1777) (transcription project)
- The Phaedo , trans. by Thomas Taylor (1804) (transcription project)
- Phaedo, trans. by Thomas Robert Jolliffe (1813)
- Phaedon: or, A dialogue on the immortality of the soul, trans. by Unknown, from the French of Anne Dacier (1835) (transcription project)
- Phaedo, trans. by C. S. Stanford (1835) (transcription project)
- Phaedo, trans. by Henry Cary (1854) (transcription project)
- Phaedo, trans. by Georgiana Chatterton (1862) (transcription project)
- Phaedo, trans. by William Whewell (1859) (transcription project)
- Phaedo, trans. by William Whewell (2nd ed.) (1860) (transcription project)
- Phaedo, trans. by Edward Meredith Cope (1875) (transcription project)
- Phaedo, trans. by F. J. Church (1st ed.) (1880) (transcription project)
- Phaedo, trans. by F. J. Church (2nd ed.) (1920) (transcription project)
- Parts of Phaedo, trans. by Ellen Francis Mason (1887) (transcription project)
- Phaedo, trans. by A. E. Blagrave & C. S. Fearenside (1890) (transcription project)
- Phaedo, trans. by Thomas Taylor & Floyer Sydenham, and revised by Thomas W. Rolleston (1892) (transcription project)
- Phaedo, trans. by Benjamin Jowett (1892) (transcription project)
- Part of the Phaedo, trans. by Charles Haines Keene (1895) (transcription project)
- Closing Scene of Phaedo, trans. by Paul Elmer More (1899) (transcription project)
- Phaedo, trans. by J. A. Stewart (1905) (transcription project)
- Phaedo, trans. by H. N. Fowler (1913) (transcription project)
Retrieved from "https://en.wikisource.org/w/index.php?title=Phaedo&oldid=13318820"
