When I say that Christianity changed everything, I mean that the imposition of Christianity as the official religion of the Empire and the destruction of pagan temples and later the fight against heresies had a detrimental effect on the kind of freedom of thought that had characterized places like Athens or Alexandria — Olivier5
It is a matter of his intention not of what the outcome might be. He thought he would prevail against his father. — Fooloso4
It seems to me that the reality is that the world's largest nation is going to be a dominant player on the world stage. That said, there are threats to the stability of China which may reduce it's influence. — Foghorn
Christianity, of course. It changed everything. — Olivier5
Euthyphro was going to prosecute his father. If he was found guilty he would have been sentenced to death. — Fooloso4
That is not at all obvious. No doubt his students read the dialogue but I suspect they had a wider audience. I think he wrote for posterity. — Fooloso4
When I first read the Euthyphro, I had already read the Republic and other dialogues, so I was familiar with the forms, etc. ... But I never took the "aporia" as a big deal at all. — Apollodorus
So, it reaches an impasse. It seems you now agree with @Banno and I that at least one dialogue ends in aporia. — Fooloso4
The oppression and injustice does require people to make a stand but dangers of political conflict, and nuclear threats make the conflicts even more ominous. It all feels like such a dangerous juggling act. — Jack Cummins
What happened to the Greeks? Have the Greeks lost their touch or is the Greek genius lying dormant waiting to be rekindled? — TheMadFool
The premise is that filial piety is more important than civic piety. Without filial piety there will be no civic piety. — Fooloso4
In that case would someone advanced in wisdom prosecute his father for something that may not even warrant serious punishment? — Fooloso4
It was not a simple case of murder. — Fooloso4
You misrepresent what I said — Fooloso4
I think you are using the wrong translation.
Socrates says:
“… when death attacks the human being, the mortal part of him dies, it seems, whereas the immortal part departs intact and undestroyed, and is gone, having retreated from death […] And so, more surely than anything, Cebes, soul is immortal and imperishable, and all our souls really will exist in Hades” 106e -107a
Cebes replies :
“For my part, Socrates, I’ve nothing else to say against this, nor can I doubt the arguments in any way”. 107a
Simmias agrees, but still has some doubts:
“… I’m compelled still to keep some doubt in my mind about what has been said” 107b
Socrates has the final word:
“As it is, however, since the soul is evidently immortal, it could have no means of safety or of escaping evils, other than becoming both as good and as wise as possible”
Concerning the myth he tells of Hades, Socrates says:
“… since the soul turns out to be immortal, I think that for someone who believes this to be so it is both fitting and worth the risk – for fair is the risk – to insist that either what I have said or something like it is true concerning our souls and their dwelling places” 114d
For some strange reason you keep leaving out "However, since the soul turns out to be immortal". — Apollodorus
@Apollodorus asked why you ignore the fact that the text has S saying immortality was shown.
You responded that you ignore it because he didn't show it. wtf? — frank
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. Thus, at the very close of the defence of immortality, at the point where argument reaches its limit, and is about to give way to eschatological myth, Socrates is seen yet again reaffirming the Hades mythology” p. xxxiii — Apollodorus
I almost forgot how powerful Plato's and Aristotle's ideas were - they were probably expanded or tweaked to adapt them to regional conceptual paradigms but still remained recongizable as Platonic or Aristotelian. — TheMadFool
The war on terrorism involved America having control of the Middle East, and I believe that we are now moving into the possibility of power over China. Of course, it is easy to see oppression in other nations, but I think that an underlying aspect behind the scenes of politics, and manufactured news, is the fight for oil, which is running out rapidly. — Jack Cummins
Since he was challenging existing ideas in a philosophy that preceded him, he should be more correctly described as an anti-philosopher. He struck the first blow on the Athenian weltanschauung - the rest is history! — TheMadFool
Plato is not a 'realist' or an 'idealist' or a 'materialist' or 'naturalist' and not a Platonist. — Fooloso4
It is not intended to be the final interpretation, but rather, to turn your attention to the texts themselves. — Fooloso4
Plato does not provide answers that foreclose further inquiry but instead opens up the problems to in order to provoke further inquiry. — Fooloso4
Euthyphro despite his high opinion of himself is not advanced in wisdom and so should not do what he intends to do. — Fooloso4
But, I am not really sure, because I don't always know where to get reliable news, as I am sure that there is so much going on behind the scenes of news headlines and stories. — Jack Cummins
For the most part, he understands it pretty well, because he understands the author.
it's about turning inward. — frank
For the second time: of course it does. Who said it didn't? All I am saying is that you grossly misunderstand this metaphysical message. — Olivier5
Socrates calls himself a midwife and a physician of the soul. He acknowledges that both have knowledge. Like the sophists he has knowledge of how to argue using reason and rhetoric, — Fooloso4
Well, it has to be admitted that, the Chinese communists have rescued many millions from an ancient rural life which so many willingly abandoned. — Foghorn
You take Socrates' irony and false praise at first degree. That's quite foolish in my opinion. — Olivier5
Having said that, I don't read Plato to worry about this or that character. I read him to see if he, Plato, has got any metaphysical thoughts to share — Apollodorus
Plato's main concern was not to criticize religion but to convey a metaphysical message — Apollodorus
As for the anti-materialists, they may have no interest in Euthyphro or his father. They may read Plato to gain spiritual knowledge. — Apollodorus
Yes, imho, the biggest under reported story of the 20th century is the urbanization of humanity. More and more people are being born in to life almost completely cut off from nature. — Foghorn
I have a bit of a warped view on this, as I live in Florida, where the population has grown 7X during my lifetime. The population of the United States has doubled in my lifetime. More people = more problems. I'm a woods hermit, it just ain't for me. — Foghorn
Because he saw what was coming viz. nobody really knows anything at all! Even if he'd stayed long enough for Socrates to finish what was essentially Socrates talking to himself using hapless randoms from the Athenian citizenry as foils he would've learned absolutely nothing, nada, zip, zero! — TheMadFool
One guy on NPR suggested America should have the goal of having a population of a billion people by century's end, just for this reason. — Foghorn
This emphasis on oneself I don't see in the passage you quote above. — baker
Can you provide some reference for this? Because it seems to be an awfully modern, self-helpy idea. — baker