Fooloso4
What is dear to (loved by) the gods is pious, and what is not dear is impious. (6e)
Is the pious loved by the gods because it is pious, or is it pious because it is loved? (10a)
But Socrates, I have no way of telling you what I have in mind. For whatever we put forward somehow always keeps going around for us and isn’t willing to stay where we place it. (11b)
… if someone has knowledge of how to say and do things gratifying to the gods by praying and sacrificing, these are the pious things. And such things preserve private families as well as the communities of cities. (14b)
Some other time, then, Socrates. For now I am in a hurry to go somewhere, and it is time for me to go away. (15e)
Apollodorus
DingoJones
Fooloso4
Anything specific or just the Euthyophro story? — DingoJones
DingoJones
Banno
Could you elaborate what is meant by “piety”? — DingoJones
Janus
Tom Storm
Fooloso4
But we might take the point that what is right and what god wants are not the very same. — Banno
DingoJones
Wayfarer
Banno
Im trying to understand what other people mean by those words... — DingoJones
Fooloso4
DingoJones
DingoJones
Then watch. Or read the texts provided and question. — Banno
Fooloso4
Janus
Fooloso4
Those are options yes, but not as expedient as just having the simple questions answered. — DingoJones
Janus
Banno
As Banno noted the dialogue ends in aporia. Most of them do. — Fooloso4
Fooloso4
DingoJones
But the thing about Plato's dialogues is that it is not about providing answers to simple questions. As Banno noted the dialogue ends in aporia. Most of them do. — Fooloso4
Fooloso4
The theistic presumption is though, that there is just one God and that that God is omniscient and omnibenevolent. — Janus
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