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  • [Name]: Phaedrus of Myrrhinus, son of Pythocles
    [Speaker]: Phaedrus, Symposium
    [Mentioned]: Protagoras; Epigram 4
    [Notes]:

  • [Name]: Aristodemus of Cydathenaeum
    [Speaker]: Symposium
    [Mentioned]:
    [Notes]:

  • [Name]: Apollodorus of Phalerum
    [Speaker]: Symposium
    [Mentioned]: Apology, Phaedo
    [Notes]:

  • [Name]: Dionysodorus of Chios and Thurii
    [Speaker]: Euthydemus
    [Mentioned]:
    [Notes]:

  • [Name]: Aristophanes of Cydathenaeum, son of Philippus
    [Speaker]: Symposium
    [Mentioned]: Apology; Epigram 18
    [Notes]:

  • [Name]: Nicias of Cydantidae, son of Niceratus
    [Speaker]: Laches
    [Mentioned]: Gorgias, Republic, Theages
    [Notes]:

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About This Tool

Ancient Greek philosophy reached its climax in the sixth and fourth centuries BC. Plato’s thirty dialogues are the most characteristic form of prose. This style records the conversation between the parties. The 89 interlocutors recorded in the random tool included a list of widely quoted, alluded to, and called speakers.

The speakers in the generator are so dramatic, they don’t speak, but their conversations are presented in books like Plato’s. Their speeches focused on Socrates’s thoughts, life, and conversations before his death, and the questions they addressed epitomized the philosophy and methods of Socrates and Plato.

Click the "Display All Items" button and you will get a list of speakers in Plato's dialogues.

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