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About The Book
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Along with the Republic and the Symposium Platos Phaedo is one of the three important works of ancient Greek philosophy. The discussion is given from the viewpoint of Phaedo of Elis a pupil of Socrates who was there when he died. The debate from that day is related by Phaedo to the Pythagorean philosopher Echecrates. The Cyclical Argument also known as the Opposites Argument argues that since Forms are timeless and unchangeable and since the soul continuously sustains life it must not expire and is thus ineluctably imperishable. The soul must be the indestructible opposite of the body since the latter is mortal and prone to physical death. Plato then offers the comparison of cold and fire. According to the Theory of Recollection humans are born with some non-empirical information which implies that the soul existed before birth to store that knowledge. Another explanation of the notion may be found in Platos Meno albeit Socrates makes less strong claims in Meno than he does in Phaedo. The Affinity Argument demonstrates how things that are unseen eternal and incorporeal differ from those that are visible mortal and corporeal. Since the soul is a component of the Form of Life by nature it is immortal and cannot pass away.