You are reverting back to materialism, aren't you? — Apollodorus
However, as already indicated, the aporia regarding Euthyphro's court case or whatever isn't really the issue. — Apollodorus
But I think it is obvious that Plato really wrote the dialogue for his disciples, for those who knew him and his thoughts, not for the uninitiated. — Apollodorus
That is not at all obvious. No doubt his students read the dialogue but I suspect they had a wider audience. I think he wrote for posterity. — Fooloso4
I do appreciate your sense of humor but I think you are going a bit off the rails there. — Apollodorus
He may not show that what he is doing is something the Gods love. However, he thinks that they do and that suffices as far he is concerned. — Apollodorus
As for "the Gods love patricide", that is too preposterous even for you to believe it. Where on earth did you get "patricide" from? — Apollodorus
Patricide is (i) the act of killing one's father, or (ii) a person who kills his or her father or stepfather. The word patricide derives from the Latin word pater (father) and the Latin suffix -cida (cutter or killer).
What "wider audience" and "what posterity"? — Apollodorus
The dialogues were read by students of philosophy and other educated people ... — Apollodorus
It still doesn't say anywhere that Euthyphro committed patricide. — Apollodorus
Good question. I believe that after losing Constantinople (the "New Rome") and being overrun by the Turks, the next blow was Western European Enlightenment that eventually made many turn to science instead of philosophy, after which nationalism and "modernity" took over and led the struggle for independence into a new era and new weltanschauung. There are still pockets of authentic Hellenistic philosophy and spirituality, that may one day lead to a national revival. But for the most part it's all down to politics and the corrosive influence of English-based global culture spreading through the news, entertainment, and social media just like everywhere else in the world. — Apollodorus
What happened to the Greeks? — TheMadFool
Like everything, there were pros and cons with Christianity. It was more universal, less warmongering than national or city-bound religions like the Greeks' or the Jews', but also (I guess) stifling for creativity. You had to tow the one line of the one god. — Olivier5
Euthyphro was going to prosecute his father. If he was found guilty he would have been sentenced to death. — Fooloso4
Christianity, of course. It changed everything. — Olivier5
Some of the church fathers were trained as philosophers, eg St Augustine. So perhaps a bit of both. It is clear to me that monotheism responded to a demand for metaphysical clarity - it could not have been so successful without a certain predisposition to its message among Roman empire citizens (and other folks). — Olivier5
When will the world witness another such phenomenon? — TheMadFool
We must not forget that ethnic Greeks were a very small population. By contrast, the Germanic tribes that took over the West and the Slavs that took over the East of Europe were much more numerous. The Greeks had established themselves as a power through their culture and civilization that had spread far and wide. When that was destroyed by Islam, there wasn’t much they could do. In a sense, they were betrayed by the (Christian) West. — Apollodorus
It happens all the time. Ideas have their own life, they hybridize all the time. — Olivier5
It is a matter of his intention not of what the outcome might be. He thought he would prevail against his father. — Fooloso4
Well, if you take "intention" as the criterion, then I'm afraid you are demolishing your own case. — Apollodorus
When I say that Christianity changed everything, I mean that the imposition of Christianity as the official religion of the Empire and the destruction of pagan temples and later the fight against heresies had a detrimental effect on the kind of freedom of thought that had characterized places like Athens or Alexandria — Olivier5
That's probably too poetic to be entirely true — frank
If you think so then you have completely misunderstood what is at issue as I see it. But that is understandable if you start from the assumption that the dialogue is about the Forms. — Fooloso4
Christianity did not abolish philosophy. — Apollodorus
No, it just intrumentalized it, tried to control it, and thus stifled it. — Olivier5
You mean to say, we just don't live long enough to notice it. Perhaps such events can be observed at a smaller scale at human-level time (5 - 10 years max) to be noticeable. Richard Dawkins' memes come to mind. — TheMadFool
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