A Note on Plato's “Cyclical Argument” in the Phaedo

Dialogue 5 (2):237-238 (1966)
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Abstract

The so-called ‘cyclical argument’ for immortality in the Phaedo represents an endeavour to give philosophical respectability to the ancient religious doctrine of the cycle or wheel of rebirth. According to this, the soul is reincarnated after the death of its body and a short period in the ‘other world’ in a purely disembodied state. Socrates sets himself the task of proving that a soul animating a new body must previously have animated another body whose death antedates the life of the new body.

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Citations of this work

Castañeda on Phaedo 102b-d.Jonathan Barnes - 1978 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 8 (1):55-57.
Critical notice. [REVIEW]Jonathan Barnes - 1978 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 8 (2):397-419.

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