So which is it? Did he say it or not? Could it be that he said it and did not say it because he said it in an earlier edition? — Fooloso4
The fact is that like most words, pseudos can have different meaning depending on the context. This may be inconvenient to you but that's your problem. — Apollodorus
Why were America’s top bankers and industrialists sponsoring anti-Platonist academics? — Apollodorus
Gerson contends that Platonism identifies philosophy with a distinct subject matter, namely, the intelligible world and seeks to show that the Naturalist rejection of Platonism entails the elimination of a distinct subject matter for philosophy.
His myths do not reveal the truth, they provide something he thinks it is beneficial for them to believe is true. But what they may believe to be true is not the same as what is true. — Fooloso4
the truth is he (Socrates) does know that he does not know that there is a transcendent realm of truth — Fooloso4
The Bailly dictionary uses French terms not available to Plato. Referring to them to resolve the matter is pointless and bizarre. — Valentinus
I think it's part of the much broader 'culture war' between scientific secularism and religious belief, — Wayfarer
We see the history of philosophy as the development of Platonism (with a few interesting outliers), followed in the seventeenth century by the beginning of efforts to find some common ground between Platonism and Naturalism, followed in the eighteenth century and then ever after, by the growing dominance of Naturalism ....
I have argued in this book that Proclus's praise of Plotinus as leading the way in the exegesis of the Platonic revelation is essentially correct. Although this is a view shared by scholars of Platonism and by Platonists, too, well into the nineteenth century, it is a view that is today, especially in the English-speaking world, mostly either ridiculed or ignored .... some few scholars have inferred from this fact that the dialogues must therefore not be philosophical writings at all
In what I said there is an implication which I would like to make explicit: Plato never wrote a system of philosophy
I don't think Platonists can afford to be mere passive observers. — Apollodorus
Why were America’s top bankers and industrialists sponsoring anti-Platonist academics? — Apollodorus
I'm not at all convinced by that line of argument. As I said before, I think it's part of the much broader 'culture war' between scientific secularism and religious belief, or even anything that can be so construed. Lloyd Gerson analyses that in his work on 'Platonism and Naturalism': — Wayfarer
What Apollodorus is proposing is a cultural war against what allows us to have this conversation. — Valentinus
do you include the rhetoric being used by Apollodorus as part of a larger story or reject it? — Valentinus
Karl Popper accused Plato of trying to base religion on a noble lie as well.
Right. You will get back to me.
Whatever. — Valentinus
On the one hand I have cited five contemporary translations that say "lie"
On the other Lee who says it is ambiguous and we should keep in mind that it also means lie. — Fooloso4
I can see his point — Wayfarer
↪Apollodorus
Your account has a frothy fever reminiscent of The Protocols of the Elders of Zion. — Valentinus
That's an argument ad populum. — Apollodorus
Regarding the “noble lie” theory, it is just a theory, typically advanced by those who believe in political propaganda like Strauss and his followers. — Apollodorus
As already noted, the phrase “noble lie” seems to be a (deliberate) mistranslation of the Greek original and it clearly distorts Plato’s intention. — Apollodorus
Philosophy has to grant that revelation is possible. But to grant that revelation is possible means to grant that the philosophic life is not necessarily, not evidently, the right life. Philosophy, the life devoted to the quest for evident knowledge available to man as man, would rest on an unevident, arbitrary, or blind decision. This would merely confirm the thesis of faith, that there is no possibility of consistency, of a consistent and thoroughly sincere life, without belief in revelation. The mere fact that philosophy and revelation cannot refute each other would constitute the refutation of philosophy by revelation. (NRH, p. 75) — Leo Strauss
Let's be clear about what he is claiming: — Fooloso4
Let me explain: as political scientists we are interested in political phenomena. But we must also be interested, simultaneously, in the political as political
that there is an anti-Platonist movement led by academics with a political agenda. — Apollodorus
Even Lee acknowledges not only that it can be understood in this way but that this should be kept in mind. — Fooloso4
Platonism is a battlefield for leftists and rightists? That doesn't sound very likely. — frank
But I think the objection is that you're coming across as a conspiracy theorist. — Wayfarer
That's an argument ad populum.
— Apollodorus
Have you forgotten your own claims?
Regarding the “noble lie” theory, it is just a theory, typically advanced by those who believe in political propaganda like Strauss and his followers.
— Apollodorus — Fooloso4
Morosophos’ argument may be “ad populum”, but the “populum” he cites are respected scholars, interpreters and translators. — Leghorn
Your argument, however, is purely ad hominem: anyone who thinks Plato believed the rulers ought to lie to the people is an anti-Platonist or Straussian, or pro-tyrannical. — Leghorn
Yet there is a problem in the interpretation of Strauss’ thought that has been persistently
acknowledged in the literature and that goes to the heart of assessing his work:
determining his enigmatic intentions. He has been seen as an atheist, a deist believer in
natural law, a pious Jew, and an antiquarian. Was he a classicist who thought that fifth century Greek democracy was the highest form of civilization? Or a political thinker whose doctrine of natural right influenced the thinking of the neo-conservatives in the Bush administration? Or a Nietzschean engaged in an elaborate philosophical burlesque? Harry Jaffa, an American political historian, says that Strauss taught him to see that the Declaration of Independence embodied “eternal and eternally applicable truth”; Thomas Pangle, another student of Strauss, tends to see such things as more like conventions. Then there is the European Strauss, who is more concerned with problems like Zionism and the Jewish question, the legitimacy of the modern Enlightenment, the rival claims of
philosophy and revelation, and, most fundamentally, the possibility of restoring the
Socratic practice of philosophy as a way of life. To complicate matters further, there is
some textual grounding for each of these interpretations.
https://www2.grenfell.mun.ca/animus/Articles/Supplementa/Hynes4.pdf
Noble lie - Wikipedia — Apollodorus
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