Please quote where I said that. — Fooloso4
As usual, you make a claim, then deny having made it, keep asking when you made it, and then you accuse others of repeating themselves when they show you that you actually made it!
Anyway, this is your statement:
If the whole includes bad things then the Good cannot be the cause or the explanation of the whole.
As an explanation it is, as he says, naive and perhaps foolish — Fooloso4
And I also explained to you that evil does not exist as a substance or property but as an absence of substance, form, and goodness. That's why it is experienced as evil or bad. This is what evil is, the
absence of good.
And, of course, evil can also be excess, not only privation, as pointed out by Aristotle and others.
So, I don't think it is as "naive and foolish" as you claim. In fact, there are many theories of evil none of which are 100% satisfactory. All of them have their limitations. Plato's isn't any worse than others.
If you don't like Plato, you are free to invent your own system. But from what I see you can't even find evidence for your claim that Plato was an atheist. Yours is an unfounded fringe position.
The mainstream position is that Platonism is a form of metaphysical idealism.
You have chosen to take the fringe position according to which Socrates and Plato were secret teachers of “atheism”. Nothing wrong with this, but you have failed to establish your position as I said you would from the start.
You have used Socrates’ trial in an attempt to show he was an atheist.
But the fact of the matter is that Socrates was not tried for atheism but for “impiety” or “irreverence” on the grounds that he “introduced new deities”. Hence, not atheism but at the most religious reform.
As Plato was not tried for anything, the strategy you adopted in his case was that he was teaching atheism secretly for fear of being take to court like Socrates.
In support of your theory, you cited Clement of Alexandria and Ibn Sina who, apparently, believed that Plato and/or the Greeks in general, concealed secrets in their writings.
You also cited Leibniz. But Leibniz actually classified Plato as an idealist which contradicts your argument.
Ibn Sina may have said that Plato and Aristotle were teaching secrets. But these secrets need not have been atheism.
“Secrets” could mean a number of things, e.g., knowledge unknown to the general public, allegorical passages referring to metaphysical realities, etc.
If the Church Fathers thought that Plato taught atheism, it is unlikely they would have chosen Platonic philosophy in support of their own teachings. In fact, Plato was regarded as a type of Ur-Christian.
Certainly, every moderately well-educated person in antiquity would have said that Plato’s teachings are about “becoming as godlike as possible”. Plato taught that man can become godlike by living a virtuous or righteous life:
“Therefore we ought to try to escape from earth to the dwelling of the Gods as quickly as we can; and to escape is
to become like God, so far as this is possible; and to become like God is to become righteous and holy and wise” (Theaethetus 176a – b).
https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.01.0172%3Atext%3DTheaet.%3Asection%3D176b
This became a central teaching of the Christian Gospels:
“But as many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God” (John 1:12).
“He called them gods, unto whom the word of God came” (John 10:35).
“The people who are right with God will shine like the sun in their Father's kingdom” (Matthew 13: 43).
“So
try to be like God, because you are his own dear children” (Ephesians 5:1).
In fact, we find that Plato’s disciple Aristotle was appointed head of the philosophical Academy of Macedon under King Philip II and tutor to his son Alexander.
Taking Plato’s teachings somewhat too literally, Phillip had already announced his wish to be treated as godlike or
isotheos. Alexander himself followed in his father’s steps and declared himself a God: following his conquest of Egypt, he adopted the pharaonic title of “Son of God Re” and became “Son of Zeus” to the Greeks.
But Alexander was also a great promoter of Greek culture, including philosophy, which he propagated from Egypt to Persia and India, and so were his successors like Ptolemy Soter, the founder of the great library of Alexandria (Egypt) where the works of Plato and Aristotle held a place of honor. Under official state patronage, Platonism became the dominant philosophical school. And this would hardly have happened had Plato been a teacher of atheism.
In short, this is how Platonism was seen by Platonists and scholars from antiquity into the 19th century.
In the 1800’s under the influence of “enlightenment” ideas, liberalism, and "humanism", new schools of thought emerged, in particular, Christian Socialism and Fabian Socialism that began to “reinterpret” Plato in line with their political agendas.
The Fabians were particularly influential in leading universities like the London School of Economics and Political Science, Cambridge, and Oxford, where they sought to deconstruct Platonism as far as they could.
Judging by your posts, I had long suspected that you have been influenced by the Fabian Socialist authors of the 1930’s and, by your admission, Leo Strauss and Jacob Klein who started they career in the 1930’s.
I have shown that Strauss was an advocate of esotericism with close links to Fabian Socialism which explains your otherwise inexplicable fringe position.
"After receiving a Rockefeller Fellowship in 1932, Strauss left his position at the Higher Institute for Jewish Studies in Berlin for Paris,” after which he made his way to the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE) which had been founded by the Fabians and was funded by Rockefeller foundations.
“Some time during 1934, R. H. Tawney, at that time professor of economic history at the London School of Economics and at the very height of his academic fame and intellectual powers, took pity on an unknown, unemployed German-Jewish scholar, one recently exiled from his land of birth, and much in need of professional patronage and institutional preferment. His name was Leo Strauss.” - S. J. D. Green, “The Tawney-Strauss Connection: On Historicism and Values in the History of Political Ideas”, The Journal of Modern History Vol. 67, No. 2 (Jun., 1995), pp. 255-277 (23 pages) The University of Chicago Press
https://www.jstor.org/stable/2125059
Tawney was a member of the Fabian Society executive committee and Strauss became a close friend of his.
"Strauss moved in 1937 to the United States, under the patronage of Harold Laski"
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leo_Strauss
Laski was a notorious Marxist and leading member of the Fabian Society executive committee, who frequently moved between the LSE and Rockefeller-funded US universities like Harvard and Columbia which had become centers of Fabian Socialism (which prompted David Rockefeller himself to write a thesis on Fabianism).
"Laski was one of Britain's most influential intellectual spokesmen for Communism in the interwar years".
"Laski returned to England in 1920 and began teaching government at the London School of Economics (LSE)"
And, "Strauss's closest friend was Jacob Klein" -
Wikipedia
And now to Strauss’s teachings:
"Turning to the context of Strauss’s claims about esotericism helps to unravel a number of other important themes in his work, including what he calls the “theologico-political predicament of modernity,” the quarrel between the ancients and the moderns, and the relation between revelation and philosophy (what Strauss also calls “Jerusalem and Athens”)"
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/strauss-leo/#Cont
"In the late 1930s his [Strauss'] research focused on the rediscovery of esoteric writing, thereby a new illumination of Plato and Aristotle, retracing their interpretation through medieval Islamic and Jewish philosophy, and encouraging the application of those ideas to contemporary political theory."
Together with Fabian Socialists like Walter Lippmann, Strauss became a major influence on the intellectual classes of the time. However, his views were highly controversial from the start:
"Strauss's works were highly controversial during his own lifetime ... Strauss offered a deliberately provocative account of what might be called the "modernity problem" that had been widely debated in prewar European circles, but which was still relatively unknown to Americans of that era ...."
https://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/25/books/chapters/0625-1st-smith.html
If we add other writers like Bertrand Russell, G E Moore, G L Dickinson, R Crossman, etc., we can clearly see an anti-Platonist movement led by liberals, Christian Socialists and Fabian Socialists with a political agenda.
So, “Christian Socialism”, "Fabian Socialism", strange “reinterpretations” of Platonism, appeal to “puzzles” concerning analysis, "esotericism", “secret atheism”, etc., etc. All 1930’s politically-motivated, pseudoscientific gobbledygook.