But Euthyphro is not defending social norms. One of the ironies of the dialogue is that Euthyphro's acting on what he is convinced he knows regarding what the gods want is destructive of social norms. Prosecuting your own father is contrary to social norms. — Fooloso4
Are such characters wise? They defend social norms, the status quo, the taboos, and as such, they ensure for themselves a measure of safety and wellbeing. So in that sense, they are wise. But on the other hand, social norms do not form a consistent, non-contradictory system, so anybody defending those norms is bound to run into a problem eventually, a problem that cannot be navigated without incurring damage to oneself or others. — baker
Of course, such things are consistent with their pantheism.The emphasis in the Euthyphro is on being of service to the divine.
According to Plato, the inner self is divine.
The goal of philosophy is to make the soul godlike. — Apollodorus
Leads to utter nonsense, meaningless language use, equivocation fallacies, and inevitable self-contradiction and/or outright incoherence. — creativesoul
But what I'm saying is that some of your formulations (e.g. "On a personal level, piety is being good to one's own self, the inner divine intelligence", "In philosophical (Platonic) life, piety is practicing philosophy whose aim is to "become as godlike as possible" = "serving one's own God", i.e., one's own self") sound more like narcissistic self-aggrandizement — baker
I showed my son this thread and he laughed at how your challengers don't actually respond to your comments as given. That is what is funny. — Valentinus
Leads to utter nonsense, meaningless language use, equivocation fallacies, and inevitable self-contradiction and/or outright incoherence.
— creativesoul
In other words, it leads to typical troll behavior. — Olivier5
Unfortunately, the misrepresentations and lies continue. Such blatant dishonesty:
https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/comment/555262
I will leave it stand. As an example.
My concern is that it will not stop - not particularly from the point of view of being a 'target' - but that any further threads concerning Plato's Dialogues will suffer the same fate.
I prefer now to read and consider any Dialogue in peace.
Hope that others continue in good spirit... — Amity
Sorry to hear of your experience.Once a conversation is centered upon contempt for the participants, it reminds me of why I dropped out of high school. — Valentinus
It's about language games. — frank
Care to elaborate? — creativesoul
Leads to utter nonsense, meaningless language use, equivocation fallacies, and inevitable self-contradiction and/or outright incoherence.
— creativesoul
In other words, it leads to typical troll behavior. — Olivier5
Yes, so the dilemma could be interpreted this way: did the gods invent the language game associated with piety, or are they just playing it? — frank
This thread is about the Greek arguments concernng the origins of piety, goodness, and justice... isn't it? — creativesoul
This thread is about the Greek arguments concerning the origins of piety, goodness, and justice... isn't it? — creativesoul
What Socrates tries to get Euthyphro to see is that piety without regard to goodness and justice leads to impiety. — Fooloso4
I have always understood the problem to be an issue for divine command theory — creativesoul
Yes, so the dilemma could be interpreted this way: did the gods invent the language game associated with piety, or are they just playing it? — frank
How would that work if we also hold that "God is everything?" — creativesoul
Socrates' answer introducing the just as the whole of piety and impiety seems to unnecessarily multiply entities. — creativesoul
If God is everything, what sense does it make to talk about whether God invented anything at all? That was the point. — creativesoul
The question I asked remains however. If God is everything, what sense does it make to talk about whether God invented anything at all? That was the point. — creativesoul
1. To the Platonists, God, Ultimate Reality or Universal Consciousness is everything. Philosophy of the monistic idealist type is what explains reality for them. — Apollodorus
This seems too tangential to the OP though, — creativesoul
For a proper understanding of the dialogue I think it is essential to take into consideration the author's own views as reflected in other writings... — Apollodorus
Other writing by Plato, or other writings by others interpreting Plato — creativesoul
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