You are probably correct in a sense. But the Hellenistic weltanschauung transmitted through Plato and Aristotle survived for many centuries, influenced Alexander, Rome, Christianity, Islam, and the Renaissance, and formed the very foundations of Western civilization. Not a negligible feat it seems. — Apollodorus
He seemed to have recognized very early on that without precise definitions, there would be no clear picture of the corresponding questions and trying to find answers would be moot. — TheMadFool
His signature move was, simply put, refutation and not proof and thus, he would have little to no use for rhetoric - he wasn't trying to convince people that his ideas were right, au contraire, he was refuting theirs. — TheMadFool
However, you may remember that he did the same on the Phaedo thread. He conveniently left out the bit about immortality and when I challenged him he said it wasn't in the translation he was using. I posted several translations to show him that the missing bit should be included. I also posted the Greek text and he still denied it. IMHO something isn't right there. Either he doesn't know what he is doing or he is doing it on purpose. — Apollodorus
I almost forgot how powerful Plato's and Aristotle's ideas were - they were probably expanded or tweaked to adapt them to regional conceptual paradigms but still remained recongizable as Platonic or Aristotelian. — TheMadFool
Fooloso4 You could also stand to just be respectful and patient. You are presenting ideas about Plato that most would hold to be absurd, so if you encounter resistance, just say "thanks, but I disagree." — frank
You misrepresent what I said — Fooloso4
I think you are using the wrong translation.
Socrates says:
“… when death attacks the human being, the mortal part of him dies, it seems, whereas the immortal part departs intact and undestroyed, and is gone, having retreated from death […] And so, more surely than anything, Cebes, soul is immortal and imperishable, and all our souls really will exist in Hades” 106e -107a
Cebes replies :
“For my part, Socrates, I’ve nothing else to say against this, nor can I doubt the arguments in any way”. 107a
Simmias agrees, but still has some doubts:
“… I’m compelled still to keep some doubt in my mind about what has been said” 107b
Socrates has the final word:
“As it is, however, since the soul is evidently immortal, it could have no means of safety or of escaping evils, other than becoming both as good and as wise as possible”
Concerning the myth he tells of Hades, Socrates says:
“… since the soul turns out to be immortal, I think that for someone who believes this to be so it is both fitting and worth the risk – for fair is the risk – to insist that either what I have said or something like it is true concerning our souls and their dwelling places” 114d
For some strange reason you keep leaving out "However, since the soul turns out to be immortal". — Apollodorus
@Apollodorus asked why you ignore the fact that the text has S saying immortality was shown.
You responded that you ignore it because he didn't show it. wtf? — frank
In their Introduction, Sedley & Long say:
“… in this concluding moment Socrates and his companions are in no doubt as to what it amounts to: soul must leave the body and go to Hades. Thus, at the very close of the defence of immortality, at the point where argument reaches its limit, and is about to give way to eschatological myth, Socrates is seen yet again reaffirming the Hades mythology” p. xxxiii — Apollodorus
Platonism was far more powerful than it is often realized. It was of course heavily sponsored by Alexander and his followers. It was transmitted through Plato’s Academy which functioned from 387 BC to 529 CE and through the so-called Alexandrian School at Alexandria, Egypt, which lasted from 306 BC to 642. Other philosophical circles formed in Rhodes, Syria, and other parts of the Greek-speaking world. In Christian times Platonism was transmitted through the University of Constantinople from 425 CE into the 15th century when the capital city was taken by the Turks. But it also made its way to Italy and so it spread to the whole of the western world (as well as to the Islamic world). But very few people actually know that unless they are into Byzantine studies or related fields. — Apollodorus
Anyway, what's wrong with asking you to provide some evidence for your statements like those on Euthyphro? — Apollodorus
It was not a simple case of murder. — Fooloso4
Possibly it was not even murder, more like involuntary manslaughter or something that didn't even warrant any serious punishment. — Apollodorus
And, what would you do if your own father killed someone? — Apollodorus
The pleasure is entirely mine. I wish all "fools" were like you. But, apparently, not. — Apollodorus
What is this thing higher than the gods and to which they aspire? Maybe the cosmic nous of Anaxagoras, or Plato's eternal forms... The Christians of course have another answer. — Olivier5
In that case would someone advanced in wisdom prosecute his father for something that may not even warrant serious punishment? — Fooloso4
The premise is that filial piety is more important than civic piety. Without filial piety there will be no civic piety. — Fooloso4
By the way, one of the reasons why Platonism was so successful was that Hellenistic philosophy and culture in general stretched from the Italic peninsula (Magna Graecia) and North Africa all the way to Northwest India and it was very cosmopolitan. Many Platonist philosophers were Romans, Egyptians, Arabs, Jews, Persians, etc., not just Greeks. — Apollodorus
But if it's higher than the gods, wouldn't that make it even more unavailable to humans?
How would you explain the human knowledge of justice? — frank
What happened to the Greeks? Have the Greeks lost their touch or is the Greek genius lying dormant waiting to be rekindled? — TheMadFool
Are you saying that there is no clear correct answer as to what Euthyphro should do? — Fooloso4
So, it reaches an impasse. It seems you now agree with @Banno and I that at least one dialogue ends in aporia. — Fooloso4
When I first read the Euthyphro, I had already read the Republic and other dialogues, so I was familiar with the forms, etc. ... But I never took the "aporia" as a big deal at all. — Apollodorus
Either way, it changes nothing about the fact that the dialogue doesn't say what Euthyphro should do. — Apollodorus
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