but if if he had asked Socrates "define justice", I bet Socrates would have struggled too. — Olivier5
Terms like "idea" and "paradeigma" would evoke the concept of "Forms" in the mind of those familiar with Platonic thought. Fooloso4 has already admitted this. — Apollodorus
What is of particular interest is that Socrates (at 6e) says: — Apollodorus
As may be clearly seen, Socrates uses the terms ἰδέα idea and παραδείγμα paradeigma and, significantly, says that he wishes to fix his eye upon it and use it as a standard of reference in deciding what is pious or impious. — Apollodorus
... he wishes to fix his eye upon it and use it as a standard of reference in deciding what is pious or impious. — Apollodorus
IMO it would be irrational to dispute this. — Apollodorus
Socrates certainly describes the Forms as causes in the Phaedo. — Apollodorus
If then one wished to know the cause of each thing, why it comes to be or perishes or exists, one had to find what was the best way for it to be, or to be acted upon, or to act. On these premises then it befitted a man to investigate only, about this and other things, what is best.” (97b-d)
So I thought I must take refuge in discussions and investigate the truth of beings by means of accounts [logoi] … 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)
“I am going to try to show you the kind of cause with which I have concerned myself. I turn back to those oft-mentioned things and proceed from them. I assume the existence of a Beautiful, itself by itself, of a Good and a Great and all the rest. If you grant me these and agree that they
exist, I hope to show you the cause as a result, and to find the soul to be immortal.
I no longer understand or recognize those other sophisticated causes, and if someone tells me that a thing is beautiful because it has a bright color or shape or any such thing, I ignore these other reasons—for all these confuse me—but I simply, naively and perhaps foolishly cling to this, that nothing else makes it beautiful other than the presence of, or the sharing in, or however you may describe its relationship to that Beautiful we mentioned, for I will not insist on the precise nature of the relationship, but that all beautiful things are beautiful by the Beautiful. That, I think, is the safest answer I can give myself or anyone else.” (100c-e)
“Tell me again from the beginning and do not answer in the words of the question, but do as do. I say that beyond that safe answer, which I spoke of first, I see another safe answer. If you should ask me what, coming into a body, makes it hot, my reply would not be that safe and ignorant one, that it is heat, but our present argument provides a more sophisticated answer, namely, fire, and if you ask me what, on coming into a body, makes it sick, I will not say sickness but fever. Nor, if asked the presence of what in a number makes it odd, I will not say oddness but oneness, and so with other things.” (105b-c)
Socrates calls the Forms hypothesis in the Phaedo.
— Fooloso4
He doesn't call them that in the Euthyphro though. — Apollodorus
The fact is that the Platonic Forms were simply a way of expressing abstract nouns in the same way Goddess Dike represented Justice before Plato. — Apollodorus
The term "pattern" (paradeigma) refers to Platonic Forms which, as you yourself admitted, were known to Plato and his immediate disciples at the time he wrote the Euthyphro. — Apollodorus
But I believe it to be true. — Apollodorus
Socrates in Euthyphro does not just want to know what the Form of Piety is; he also believes that there is such a thing as Piety that is the instrumental cause of the piety in pious things [see 6D 10 – 11 — Apollodorus
that eidos itself by which all the pious things are pious
... it is by one idea that the impious things are impious and the pious things pious.
... this idea itself is, so that by gazing at it and using it as a pattern, I may declare that whatever is like it, among the things that you or anyone else may do, is pious, and whatever is not like it is not. (6e)
These two qualities would have made him pretty average. — frank
Not only that, but it seems rather weird not to discuss it when Socrates and Euthyphro discuss it from one end of the dialogue to the other. — Apollodorus
Here's Dr William Lane Craig (one of the more competent).
Dr. Craig:
For those that aren't familiar with it, the question is: does God will something because it is good, or is something good because God wills it? — Tom Storm
We already know that. — Apollodorus
You said the point is not to show that belief in God in not necessary for being good, even though the OP states this to be "the question that engendered this post": — Apollodorus
You said it is to "discuss the dialogue" and that the dilemma "is not part of the dialogue": — Apollodorus
obsessing about the alleged "five-year gap" — Apollodorus
knowing badly, Socrates, how the divine is disposed concerning the pious and impious. (4 d-e)
When you are philosophizing you have to descend into primeval chaos and feel at home there. (Culture and Value)
The Euthyphro dilemma isn't in Euthyphro? — frank
So can you state very briefly and as clearly as possible what the true point of the thread is? — Apollodorus
The discussion can only move in circles from this point and IMHO is a waste of time and space.
— Apollodorus
And yet you will continue to post. Please prove me wrong. — Fooloso4
Fooloso4 has failed to prove his case on the basis of the dialogue. — Apollodorus
The discussion can only move in circles from this point and IMHO is a waste of time and space. — Apollodorus
Euthyphro’s behavior can at the most show that religious belief (religion-based virtue) may lead to undesirable results when improperly understood and or applied. It doesn’t show that religion-based virtue in general is bad.
IMHO you have failed to demonstrate your case. — Apollodorus
The central question of the dialogue is about men not gods.What should guide Euthyphro’s actions, and how are we to judge Socrates’? Is piety simply a matter of doing what we are told a god or gods want from us, or is it part of the larger question of the just, noble, and good? . — Fooloso4
Socrates' education of Euthyphro begins when he points beyond Euthyphro's circular claim. He replaces the idea that what is loved by the gods is what is pious with the idea that the pious is what is just. (11e) — Fooloso4
It would seem more helpful to simply say "I have no evidence, it's just a working hypothesis" or something to that effect. Why can't you do that? — Apollodorus
In this case I think Plato leads to reader to ask further questions about Euthyphro's intentions — Fooloso4
So why does he prosecute his father rather than appeal to the exegete to interpret? Euthyphro does, after all, claim it is a matter of purification and piety. Perhaps it has something to do with the exegetes being officially recognized authorities on such matters and Euthyphro being laughed at for his professed knowledge of the gods and piety. And perhaps it also has to do with the private activity of conferring with the exegete versus a public trial in which Euthyphro can display his knowledge of divine things. — Fooloso4
A bit of emotional intelligence says: if you want others to listen to you, be a listener. I've found that to be true, haven't you? — frank
I gave some some suggestions as to what the relevance might be.Fooloso4 What would be the relevance of the Naxos reference? — Olivier5
How about starting a thread on it and get Amity to delete all comments that we choose to disagree with? :grin:
— Apollodorus
Again with this. Boring crap :yawn:
Deletions can only be done by a moderator who judges any full-of-shit posts flagged.
I am not the only one but guess I am now on the tag team's 'hit list'.
Unfortunately, I can't flag this off topic post but I will do others...and this should disappear. — Amity
Euthyphro’s lawsuit is made stranger yet by the realization that he is prosecuting his father for events that must have taken place at least five years earlier; Athens lost possession of the island of Naxos in 404, at the conclusion of the Peloponnesian War. Socrates was tried in 399. Bearing in mind the absence of temporal and spatial contiguity with the polluting event, it is hard to escape the inference that something else led Euthyphro to open up this can of worms ...
Like Meletus, Euthyphro is resurrecting old grudges to support his ambitions and prospects. He is impiously digging up matters from the past for his selfish advantage.
Euthyphro being real or not is a meaningless detail which makes no difference whatsoever to the philosophical meaning of the story. — Olivier5
No offense, but Umberto Eco said somewhere that there can be such a thing as over-interpretation. — Olivier5
A text is an open-ended universe where the interpreter can discover infinite interconnections.
Language is unable to grasp a unique and preexisting meaning — on the contrary, language’s duty is to show that what we can speak of is only the coincidence of the opposites.
Language (and authors’) fate is nevertheless redeemed by the pneumatic reader who, being able to realize and to show that Being is drift, corrects the error of the author-Demiurge and understands what the hylics (those who thinks that texts can have a definite meaning) are condemned to ignore.
Language mirrors the inadequacy of thought: our being-in-the world is nothing else than being incapable of finding any transcendental meaning.
Language (and authors’) fate is nevertheless redeemed by the pneumatic reader who, being able to realize and to show that Being is drift, corrects the error of the author-Demiurge and understands what the hylics (those who thinks that texts can have a definite meaning) are condemned to ignore.
To salvage the text — that is, to transform it from an illusion of meaning to the awareness that meaning is infinite — the reader must suspect that every line of it conceals another secret meaning;
words, instead of saying, hide the untold; the glory of the reader is to discover that texts can say everything, except what their author wanted them to mean; as soon as a pretended meaning is
allegedly discovered, we are sure that it is not the real one; the real one is the further one and so on and so forth; the hylics — the losers — are those who end the process by saying “I understood.”
The Real Reader is the one who understands that the secret of a text is its emptyness.
What would be the relevance of the Naxos reference? — Olivier5
(4d)it was no matter even if he should die.
... the Bible, including the Old Testament and The New Testament ... — Jack Cummins
I remember - a long time ago - trying to figure out what position, if any, I had re analytic v continental philosophy. — Amity
Analytic philosophy: "You must think like us because that is what 'thinking' is". — Cuthbert
I've already done so. — Apollodorus
