Menexenus

This article is about the person. For Plato's dialogue, see Menexenus (dialogue).

Menexenus (/ˌməˈnɛksənəs/; Greek: Μενέξενоς) was one of the three sons of Socrates and Xanthippe. His two brothers were Lamprocles and Sophroniscus. Menexenus is not to be confused with the character of the same name who appears in Plato's dialogues Menexenus and Lysis. Socrates' sons Menexenus and Sophroniscus were still children at the time of their father's trial and death,[1] one of them small enough to be held in his mother's arms.[2] As there was an ancient Greek tradition of naming the first son after his grandfather, Menexenus was probably the youngest of the three. According to Aristotle, Socrates' descendants all turned out to be unremarkable: "silly and dull".[3]

References

  1. Plato, Apology 34d, Phaedo 116b.
  2. Plato, Phaedo, 60a.
  3. Aristotle. Rhetoric, 1390b30–32.
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