Symposium
Symposium is a term with several related meanings. In classical usage, a symposium (from Greek symposion, “drinking together”) was a structured social gathering in ancient Greece, held after a banquet. Participants reclined on couches, sipped wine, and engaged in conversation, music, poetry, or philosophical debate. The form often centered on a single host, a symposium leader, and it could feature toasts and performances. Notable literary references include Plato's dialogue The Symposium, which portrays a sequence of speakers presenting speeches on the nature of love within such a setting. In some city-states, participation was restricted by gender and status, reflecting the social norms of the era.
In modern usage, a symposium is a formal meeting or conference devoted to a specific subject, usually
Differences from a conference: symposia are typically smaller and more specialized, focused on scholarly discussion and
The term also appears in non-academic contexts to describe cultural or intellectual gatherings, but the central