The kind of people who uses pious rhetoric to justify killing their father.
— Olivier5
Yes, but that doesn't say anything about true piety and the truly pious. — Apollodorus
I had thought Olivier5 was making a joke with "Socrates himself didn't do such a great job at this task." — Banno
It says that piety can be used to justify any crime, even the most disgusting. And that is true. — Olivier5
But let’s get back to the Platonic dialogues. As I said in my earlier post on this thread, Socrates is quizzing Euthypro about ‘the gods’ but he also asks about the ‘real form of piety’ - not what makes this or that person a pious person, but what is its essence? 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
Socrates asks:
Is the pious loved by the gods because it is pious, or is it pious because it is loved? (10a)
Euthyphro says he does not understand. Socrates says he will “try to explain it more plainly”, but what he says seems designed to confuse rather than make it clear. Or rather, it is intended to show the incoherence of the claim. It says no more than that what is loved is loved. The question of why this is loved and that is not loved is not addressed. That this is loved and not that tells us nothing about whether what is loved is best and just. — Fooloso4
Socrates now offers to show Euthyphro how he can teach Socrates about the pious. (11e) Things have indeed gone around with the need for the student to teach the teacher. Socrates proposes that the pious is what is just. (11e) — 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? — Fooloso4
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
He does ask about the 'idea' and 'eidos' of piety, that is, the Form. If the Form or Kind can be identified then it can be determined whether what Euthyphro is doing is pious. But the Form is not discovered. As with the Form of the Good and the other Forms the best we can do is discuss what we think it looks like. 'Look' is another term for Form.
See my discussion of Socrates 'second sailing' in the Phaedo thread. Socrates says he is unable to see the things themselves and resorts to speech, to hypothesis, to images of things. — Fooloso4
If we believe Socrates when he says that he is ignorant about divine things, — Fooloso4
It says that piety can be used to justify any crime, even the most disgusting. And that is true.
— Olivier5
I've already addressed that — Apollodorus
So Plato was faithfully taking dictation? No scholar believes that. — frank
We're reading Plato — frank
I'm trying to explain to you that we're reading Plato's ideas. Not Socrates'. — frank
Anyway, εἶδος eidos which Plato uses in his Theory of Forms means “that which is seen, e.g., form, image, shape but also fashion, sort, kind — Apollodorus
He does ask about the 'idea' and 'eidos' of piety, that is, the Form. If the Form or Kind can be identified then it can be determined whether what Euthyphro is doing is pious. But the Form is not discovered. As with the Form of the Good and the other Forms the best we can do is discuss what we think it looks like. 'Look' is another term for Form. — Fooloso4
Only I did not learn these things by copying and pasting from Wiki. I spent many years reading Plato, starting long before there were such things as Wiki and google. — Fooloso4
And your point is what exactly? — Apollodorus
1. The point that Euthyphro may represent an early form of the Theory of Forms has been made for many years in academic publications. That's precisely why it shouldn't be lightly dismissed. — Apollodorus
Plato has been read by millions of people worldwide. But there is no point reading Plato if you keep insisting on reading him in a narrow materialist or nihilist light. Plato was neither a materialist nor a nihilist and even less a fanatic. — Apollodorus
You sound like you are stuck in a bygone era ... — Apollodorus
... and are intellectually too set in your ways to move on. — Apollodorus
The fact is that terms like idea (“idea”), eidos (“form”), auto to (“(thing) in itself”), paradeigma (“pattern”), etc., occur time and again in Plato’s dialogues. — Apollodorus
Therefore, as a number of scholars have observed, dialogues like the Euthyphro are a possible base for identifying an “earlier Theory of Forms”. So, it isn’t anything new. — Apollodorus
I see it as broader than the forms. With Plato, we're starting to partake of the divine. — frank
I think our main difference is that you see the outcome of the dialogue as a life-long quest, searching in the darkness, so to speak, for what constitutes righteousness. — frank
Apollodorus and I are cheating because we both know quite a bit about how this will play out over the next 2400 years. — frank
If Plato and his disciples were to read the Euthyphro, would they, or would they not think of the forms when coming across words like eidos, idea, paradigma, etc.? — Apollodorus
Incidentally, your constant diatribes against monotheism in a discussion of Platonic dialogues — Apollodorus
Apart from you, I'm not aware of anyone who feels they deserve a medal for that. — Apollodorus
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