{
  "creator": [
    "Mulvey, Ben"
  ],
  "date": [
    "2005-11-30"
  ],
  "description": [
    "In his Gorgias Plato has Socrates explain that his philosophical  discussion concerns “a matter in which even a man of slight intelligence  must take the profoundest of interest–namely, what course of life is  best.”  In the Apology Socrates justifies his mission by claiming “life  without this sort of examination is not worth living.”  Thus, there is  little doubt that from its earliest recorded history the discipline of  philosophy has been deeply concerned with how people are to best live  their lives.  This is also the concern of the nascent philosophical  counseling movement, of which Lou Marinoff is a leading light."
  ],
  "format": [
    "text/html"
  ],
  "identifier": [
    "https://ejop.psychopen.eu/index.php/ejop/article/view/378",
    "10.5964/ejop.v1i4.378"
  ],
  "language": [
    "eng"
  ],
  "publisher": [
    "PsychOpen GOLD / Leibniz Institut for Psychology (ZPID)"
  ],
  "relation": [
    "https://ejop.psychopen.eu/index.php/ejop/article/view/378/378.html"
  ],
  "rights": [
    "https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0"
  ],
  "source": [
    "Europe’s Journal of Psychology; Vol. 1 No. 4 (2005)",
    "1841-0413"
  ],
  "title": [
    "The Therapy for the Sane"
  ],
  "type": [
    "info:eu-repo/semantics/article",
    "info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion"
  ]
}