In several places I have made it clear that the purpose of these threads is not to argue for atheism, but to demonstrate that poverty of the sort of arguments that are involved. — Banno
There is a huge divide in my country between pro-choicers and Christians. — Gregory
How about you, @Apollodorus? — Valentinus
All he really has proven is that they should continue the discipline of dialectic. — Gary M Washburn
That's my point. — Gregory
"Jesus is coming out of the sky on a white horse. I KNOW this is true") — Gregory
God forbid anyone should open their mind completely up, and thereby have full capacity to use it. — Yohan
What is the point? — SteveMinjares
"Which one can you name of the divinities in heaven as the author and cause of this, whose light makes our vision see best and visible things to be seen?” “Why, the one that you too and other people mean for your question evidently refers to the Sun” (508a)
After over two thousand years of Plato scholarship a great deal of disagreement remains. — Fooloso4
Nothing changes when you repeat your opinions about what you believe the poets believed yet again. — Fooloso4
It is not talk about something that is a reality, it is talk about a hypothetical. — Fooloso4
Yes, he is talking about reality. — Fooloso4
But you now confirm that the Forms are hypothetical. — Fooloso4
The beings are hypothetical. — Fooloso4
With fanatical frequency you have returned to that question. — Fooloso4
Right, we have discussed this. — Fooloso4
A theology of false speeches — Fooloso4
The failure of the argument is the result of the limits of argument. No argument can determine the fate of the soul. — Fooloso4
Then the soul is immortal.”
“Yes.”
“Very well,” said he. “Shall we say then that this is proved?”
“Yes, and very satisfactorily, Socrates (105e).
As it is, however, since the soul is evidently immortal ...
However, since the soul turns out to be immortal ...
mention of charms and incantation occurs several times throughout the dialogue. — Fooloso4
It is because the arguments fail that he used myths to persuade, charms and incantations. — Fooloso4
There is a need to sing such things to oneself [as to soothe oneself] wherefore I myself have been prolonging my story for long
One must chant such things to oneself (no mention of "charms" or "incantations")
The second allows the dialogues to open up, to give a view of a complex terrain of interrelated questions and problems, or in some cases leading the reader into a labyrinth, and in all cases aporia. — Fooloso4
That may very well be what religious people believe. — Fooloso4
Perhaps the true form of speech about the gods is that they do not exist. — Fooloso4
Investigate the truth of beings through speech. A speech about beings is not the reality of beings. — Fooloso4
Yes, he is talking about reality — Fooloso4
And it could be a wrong opinion. Without knowledge we cannot determine whether it is right or wrong. — Fooloso4
His makes his characters speak. — Fooloso4
The dialogues raise questions about the gods that are never resolved. The gods are absent from the discussion of what you call metaphysical reality in the Republic. — Fooloso4
Where in the dialogue does it say that the sun is a god? — Fooloso4
“Which one can you name of the divinities in heaven as the author and cause of this, whose light makes our vision see best and visible things to be seen?” “Why, the one that you too and other people mean for your question evidently refers to the Sun.” “Is not this, then, the relation of vision to that divinity?” (Rep 508a).
“This [the Sun], then, you must understand that I meant by the offspring of the Good which the Good begot to stand in a proportion with itself: as the Good is in the intelligible region to reason and the objects of reason, so is this [the Sun] in the visible world to vision and the objects of vision.” (Rep 508b - c ).
Socrates and Adeimantus are not agreeing to what the gods actually are or even if they are but rather to what the stories of the gods, that is, what the theology should be if the city is to be just. — Fooloso4
kinda like feminists getting government to pass wage gap legislation even though wage gap is a myth hah — MikeListeral
As it stands, both sides of the spectrum are loony, and it's best to not associate with them. — darthbarracuda
it does not follow that in making the gods the poets did something other than create them. — Fooloso4
Once again, follow the argument. The true form must come later, much later, when philosophy is introduced to those who are old enough and mature enough and properly suited to it. — Fooloso4
No, the onus is on you to read the dialogue. It is clear from the context. — Fooloso4
Once again, a hypothetical is not a reality. — Fooloso4
So I thought I must take refuge in discussions and investigate the truth of beings by means of accounts [logoi] … — Fooloso4
On each occasion I put down as hypothesis whatever account I judge to be mightiest; and whatever seems to me to be consonant with this, I put down as being true, both about cause and about all the rest, while what isn’t, I put down as not true.” (99d-100a) — Fooloso4
Belief in a metaphysical reality is an opinion. — Fooloso4
The dialogues are not about Plato's or Socrates' opinions, they are about the critical examination of our own opinions. — Fooloso4
Plato creates distance between himself and the dialogues. He never says anything in the dialogue. — Fooloso4
To assume that what Socrates says in the dialogues is either a record of what he man's beliefs or a reflection of Plato's own beliefs is an assumption without support. — Fooloso4
Which one can you name of the divinities in heaven as the author and cause of this, whose light makes our vision see best and visible things to be seen?” “Why, the one that you too and other people mean for your question evidently refers to the Sun.” “Is not this, then, the relation of vision to that divinity?(Rep 508a).
This [the Sun], then, you must understand that I meant by the offspring of the Good which the Good begot to stand in a proportion with itself: as the Good is in the intelligible region to reason and the objects of reason, so is this [the Sun] in the visible world to vision and the objects of vision. (Rep 508b - c ).
- L. Strauss, On Plato’s RepublicSocrates and Adeimantus … surely agree as to this, that the gods are superhuman beings, that they are of superhuman goodness or perfection (381c1 - 3). That the God is good is even the thesis of the first theological law. From this it follows that the God is not the cause of all things but only the good ones. This amounts to saying that the God is just: the first theological law applies to the God the result of the conversation with Polemarchus according to which justice consists in helping friends, i.e. sensible men and is not harming anyone … the other theological law asserts the simplicity of the God and is to some extent a mere corollary of the first” (98-99) … those who have come to accept that theology are best prepared for accepting the doctrine of ideas … (121)
- L. Strauss, Farabi's Plato, 391The identification of the heavenly bodies with God is said to have been the esoteric teaching of Avicenna
It is your assumption that incantations and charms are lies. — Fooloso4
“Whether or not the soul has been shown to be immortal is a basic question of my essay. I show how and why each of the arguments fail. It is because the arguments fail that he used myths to persuade, charms and incantations.” — Fooloso4
“Then the soul is immortal.”
“Yes.”
“Very well,” said he. “Shall we say then that this is proved?”
“Yes, and very satisfactorily, Socrates.”
“There is a need to sing such things to oneself [as to soothe oneself] wherefore I myself have been prolonging my story for long [presumably, to overcome his own fear]”.
People are "taken in" by their own greed. If they wouldn't be so greedy, they wouldn't settle for buying cheap low quality export stuff (from China or anywhere else). — baker
The question is whether or not the soul is immortal. — Fooloso4
"Then the soul is immortal.”
“Yes.”
“Very well,” said he. “Shall we say then that this is proved?”
“Yes, and very satisfactorily, Socrates.”
... since the soul turns out to be immortal ... these are the reasons why a man should be confident about his own soul ....
This is not a proof it is an assertion. — Fooloso4
Your objection was to the terms 'incantations' and 'charms'. — Fooloso4
Of course no one tells you lies and at the same time tells you that they are lies! — Fooloso4
Of course the stories are made with the intent that they be believed. That does not mean the person who makes the stories believes that what he makes up comes to life like Pinocchio. — Fooloso4
Do speeches have a double form, the one true, the other false? Must they [children] be educated in both but first in the false? — Fooloso4
do some research on what the term 'atheist' meant as it was used then. — Fooloso4
Socrates does not explicitly deny the existence of gods, — Fooloso4
When it comes to making images of gods they do. Or do you think the gods they tell stories about actually existed? — Fooloso4
The hyperuranion beings if only believed and not known are not metaphysical realities but hypothetical. — Fooloso4
If the soul is not like those examples then the argument still fails because the cases used in the argument are not comparable. — Fooloso4
[105c]“What causes the body in which it is to be alive?”
“The soul,” he replied.
[105d] “Is this always the case?”
“Yes,” said he, “of course.”
“Then if the soul takes possession of anything it always brings life to it?”
“Certainly,” he said.
“Is there anything that is the opposite of life?”
“Yes,” said he.
“What?”
“Death.”
“Now the soul, as we have agreed before, will never admit the opposite of that which it brings with it.”
“Decidedly not,” said Cebes.
“Then what do we now call that which does not admit the idea of the even?”
“Uneven,” said he.
“And those which do not admit justice and music?”
[105e] “Unjust,” he replied, “and unmusical.”
“Well then what do we call that which does not admit death?”
“Deathless or immortal,” he said.
“And the soul does not admit death?”
“No.”
“Then the soul is immortal.”
“Yes.”
“Very well,” said he. “Shall we say then that this is proved?”
“Yes, and very satisfactorily, Socrates.”
If you want to quibble over the difference between 'again and again' and 'repeat' then go ahead. — Fooloso4
According to Liddell and Scott:
2 sing as an incantation, ἃ αἱ Σειρῆνες ἐπῇδον τῷ Ὀδυσσεῖ X.Mem.2.6.11; χρὴ τὰ τοιαῦτα ὥσπερ ἐπᾴδειν ἑαυτῷ Pl.Phd.114d, cf. 77e; ἐ. ἡμῖν αὐτοῖς τοῦτον τὸν λόγον Id.R.608a; ἐ. τινί sing to one so as to charm or soothe him, Id.Phdr.267d, Lg.812c, al.:—Pass., Porph.Chr.35: abs., use charms or incantations, Pl.Tht.157c; ἐπαείδων by means of charms, A.Ag.1021 (lyr.), cf. Pl.Lg.773d, Tht.149d. — Fooloso4
You must sing to him every day until you drive it [the fear] away
You might presume so, but in making stories about the gods does not entail the existence of gods. — Fooloso4
And Plato's philosophy is not Greek religion. Your failure to see the difference is why you cannot understand Plato's philosophy and see only religion. — Fooloso4
Right, there you go again, ignoring the text. (26c) — Fooloso4
Like the poets, he is a maker of images without originals. Or do you think the Olympian gods or any other gods they made actually existed? — Fooloso4
the Fascist promises social programs, and thats all the Social Democrat is interested in. He wants a share in the exploitation and the plunder. The Social Democrat wants higher wages and wants to tax billionaires to fund those programs, but this keeps these billionaires in place. — Albero
Isn't it just as plausible to say that the soul, which is immortal, is withdrawn from the body at death, meaning that, the body is what perishes? — Wayfarer
In their Introduction, Sedley & Long say:
“… in this concluding moment Socrates and his companions are in no doubt as to what it amounts to: soul must leave the body and go to Hades.” — Apollodorus
The main proof now ensues at 105c - d. Another member of the same class is soul: it always imports life to what it occupies, and is itself incapable of being dead. This is already enough to show that it is “deathless” or “immortal” (105e), in the strong sense that its death is as impossible as an even trio or a hot snowball …
The point of the argument’s continuation at 105e - 107a … is to establish a strictly supplementary point, one that at last puts to work the ‘retreat or perish’ principle … the snowball can (a) retreat from the heat or (b) stay and melt, but cannot (c) stay and become a hot snowball.
Soul, however, is a special exception. If upon the approach of death it were (b) to perish, it would also (c) take on the opposite property to the one it bears, that is, become a dead soul. Therefore in the special case of soul, perishing is ruled out, and on the approach of death there is only one thing left for it to do: it retreats …
It is a direct quote. Here's another translation:
... and he ought to repeat such things to himself as if they were magic charms ... — Fooloso4
speech about gods, that is, theologia, will be the creation of the founders of the city — Fooloso4
He replaces the gods with the Good. He does not call the Good a god. — Fooloso4
I don't have to insist on it, just read the Apology. I've already cited the relevant passages. — Fooloso4