Connections with Plato’s Symposium and Dionysian Rituals within the Context of Imitating God’s Immortality

Connections with Plato’s Symposium and Dionysian Rituals within the Context of Imitating God’s Immortality

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  • Anderson, D. E. (1993). The Masks of Dionysos: A Commentary on Plato’s Symposium. Albany, SUNY Press.
  • Anton, J. P. (1962). Some Dionysian References in the Platonic Dialogues. The Classical Journal, (58), s. 55-49.
  • Bacon, H. H. (1959, Yaz). Socrates Crowned. The Virginia Quarterly Review, 430-415 ,)3(35.
  • Benitez, E. (2007). Philosophy, Myth and Plato’s Two-World Eorld View. The Europeon Legacy, 242-225 ,)2(12.
  • Bradshaw, D. (1998). The Argument of the Digression in the Theaetetus. Ancient Philosophy, (68 -61 ,)18.
  • Bretlinger, J. (1970). The Symposium of Plato. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press.
  • Burkert, W. (1987). Ancient Mystery Cults. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
  • Cooper, J. (Ed.) (1997). The Complete Works of Plato. Cambridge: Hackett Publishing Company Cornford, F. (1912). From Religion to Philosophy. New York: Harper& Row.
  • Deutsch, H. (1969). A Psychoanalytic Study of the Myth of Dionysus and Apollo: Two Variants of the Son-Mother Relationship. New York: International Universities Press.
  • Eliade, M. (2003). Dinler Tarihine Giriş. İstanbul: Kabalcı Yayınları.
  • Evans, A. (1988). The God of Extasy:Sex-roles and the Madness of Dionysos. New York: St. Martin’s Press.
  • Hooper, A. (2013). The Memory of Virtue: Achieving Immortality in Plato’s symposium. Classical Quarterly.
  • 557-543 ,)2(63. Lânnström, A. (2011). Socrates, the Philosopher in the Theaetetus Digression (172c–177c), and the Ideal of Homoiôsis theôi. Apeiron, 130-111 ,)2(44.
  • Larson, J. (2007). Ancient Greek Cults, A Guide. New York: Routledge. Nails, D. (15-12 ,2008 Mart). Aim-inhibited Erôs in Plato’s Symposium. Evanston, Illionis, Northwestern University. http://web.nmsu.edu/~philosophia/Debra%20Nails.PDF Erişim tarihi: 1 Mart 2016
  • Nye, A. (2015). Socrates and Diotima, Sexuality, Religion and the Nature of Divinity. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Sedley, D. (1999). The Ideal of Godlikeness. G. Fine (Ed.), Plato II, Ethics, Politics, Religion, and the Soul içinde (s. 328-309). New York: Oxford University Press.
  • Sheffield, F. (2006). Plato’s Symposium: The Ethics of Desire. New York: Oxford University Press.
  • Sourvinou-Inwood, C. (2005). Hylas, the nymphs, Dionysos and others: Myth, Ritual, Ethnicity. Stockholm: Paul Åströms.
  • Svavarsson, S. H. (2015). On Happiness and Godlikeness before Socrates. O. Rabbas, E. K. Emilsson, H. Fossheim,
  • M. Tuominen (Ed.), The Quest for the Good Life: Ancient Philosophers on Happiness içinde (s. 48-28). New York: Oxford University Press.