it is an extreme example of why piety must be tempered. In fact, it often has been, but not as the result of piety. — Fooloso4
He was impious.
— frank
This is true from the perspective of the city, but the gods of the city are not just. If the gods loved justice, however, then Socrates would be a paradigm of piety. — Fooloso4
Per Aristophanes he publicly questioned the existence of the gods. It doesn't get more impious than that — frank
Neither Aristophanes nor anyone else at that time thought to bring charges against him — Fooloso4
Socrates does not deny his impiety. His concern is not for the gods but for the city. Again, his concern if for the human things. — Fooloso4
It is the will of gods, not the will of God in the Euthyphro; and that's why the argument doesn't work in the monotheistic context. — Janus
If instead of gods we consider God then the question is whether something is beloved of God because it is just or just because it is beloved? In terms of piety the question would be: is it pious because it just or just because it is pious? If God loves the just and hates the unjust then what is pious, as what is loved by God, would be what is just. If someone like Euthyphro claims he is pious because he is doing what is beloved of God and what he does is unjust then either the unjust is beloved by God or he is not pious. In other words, the equation beloved of God = pious is insufficient without the possession of knowledge of God. — Fooloso4
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? Although it may seem that with monotheism there is no problem of conflict between gods; but the problem remains with the conflicting claims, laws, interpretations, and practices of the monotheistic religions. — Fooloso4
The argument does work in a monotheist context: — Fooloso4
So the answer revolves on the reason or reasons for which the Gods’ love the pious. — Apollodorus
Exactly — frank
The Apology doesn't contradict the historian's account. — frank
If I had one piece of advice for you, it would be this: by lifting texts out if the time and place they were written, you end up with wrong conclusions and in the process miss the genius of Plato. Take it however you like — frank
Funny coming from the guy who could not grasp the problem of attempting to apply anachronistic terminology to Plato. — Fooloso4
Although it may seem that with monotheism there is no problem of conflict between gods; but the problem remains with the conflicting claims, laws, interpretations, and practices of the monotheistic religions. — Fooloso4
Monotheism is not the insistence that God is a superior member of the set of beings hitherto designated 'the gods', although, considering the historical origins of monotheism, that is an all-to-understandable attitude. — Wayfarer
And you are wrong. You are confusing apples and oranges. — Bartricks
With this clarification in place, you might be able to make sense of my previous posts — TheMadFool
About the only modern philosophical theologian who makes this point is Paul Tillich. — Wayfarer
Virtue ethics is a normative theory. — Bartricks
Agreed but it must have a metaethics of its own i — TheMadFool
I have the suspicion, as yet unfounded, that lurking in back of many such passages is the dim apprehension of the forms, specifically, the Form of the Good, or in this case, the form of piety, although it is not spelled out here. — Wayfarer
No, that makes no sense. — Bartricks
Metaethics question: What is good/bad in virtue ethics? In other words, how do virtue ethicists distinguish good from bad? — TheMadFool
No, that's not a question in metaethics. The metaethicist wants to know what goodness itself is - what's it made of. So, not what has it. But what it is made of. — Bartricks
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