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Brief summary Symposium by Plato is a philosophical work that explores the nature of love and desire through a series of speeches at a drinking party. It examines different perspectives on love and its origin.
It depicts a friendly contest of extemporaneous speeches given by a group of notable Athenian men attending a banquet. The men include the philosopher Socrates, the general and statesman Alcibiades, and the comic playwright Aristophanes. The panegyrics are to be given in praise of Eros, the god of love and sex.
A symposium in Greek, literally means a drinking party. But Platos Symposium takes the occasion of a drinking party first to praise Love and then to define it. It is a philosophical dialogue, in which meaning is created in the exchange of words between the participants. Each person in turn makes a speech.
Symposium (Plato) The front page of the 1513 editio princeps of the Symposium AuthorPlato Original title ό Language Ancient Greek Genre philosophy, Platonic dialogue5 more rows
In ancient Greece, a symposium could be attended by 14 to 30 wealthy men from the aristocracy, called Symposiasts. They used to gather together, have dinner, drink wine and talk about topics they were interested in.

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A symposium was a social gathering in ancient Greece. At symposia, male citizens would gather for dinner, drinking, conversation, music, and entertainment. They would engage in jokes and games, recite poetry, and watch professional musicians and dancers.
A symposium is literally a drinking together--in other words a drinking party. In Athens, in Platos day, symposia were strictly stag affairs. As a rule, they consisted of a fairly lavish, semi-formal banquet followed by ceremonial toasts and bouts of drinking. Wives were excluded.

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