Apollodorus         
         
Olivier5         
         Philosophy saw its power and influence curtailed but it managed to survive. In fact, there was nothing to replace it until the arrival of science and rampant materialism. — Apollodorus
Fooloso4         
         1. The text says nothing about Euthyphro’s relationship with his father. There is no indication that he wanted to kill him. — Apollodorus
3. The fact that Euthyphro calls it “murder” is irrelevant. The only relevant thing is the court’s ruling. — Apollodorus
Fooloso4         
         It needed the one God if it was to remain one empire. — Olivier5
Origen had produced thousands of treatises and books. He had reviewed systematically all the gospels available at his time, including some now lost. For this and many other reasons, the burning of his work was a grievous loss. — Olivier5
Apollodorus         
         If he prevailed the likely outcome would be the death penalty — Fooloso4
The dialogue leaves open the question of whether he even does prosecute. — Fooloso4
With regard to the dialogue there is no relevance of a court ruling for a trial that might never occur. — Fooloso4
Fooloso4         
         If he prevailed the likely outcome would be the death penalty
— Fooloso4 [Bold added]
1. Unfortunately, that is exactly what you have zero evidence for. — Apollodorus
Precisely. So, it is all speculation. — Apollodorus
The only relevant thing is the court’s ruling.
4. My take is that, after hearing Euthyphro’s testimony, the court would have found the evidence insufficient to establish guilt beyond reasonable doubt. — Apollodorus
3. The issue of relevance was in connection with your unfounded assumption that the father would have been (a) found guilty of murder ... — Apollodorus
Apollodorus         
         The kind of Christianity that survived had a deep affinity for Platonism. Through people like Augustine, Platonism lived on for centuries. — frank
Apollodorus         
         The penalty for murder was death. Of course we have no evidence of the outcome of a trial that had not yet happened and might never have happened. — Fooloso4
Olivier5         
         
Apollodorus         
         @Fooloso4 is just saying that Euthyphro plays the role of the fool in the dialogue — Olivier5
but he does not show that what he is doing is something the gods love, unless the gods love patricide. — Fooloso4
etc. ....The penalty for murder was death. — Fooloso4
Fooloso4         
         https://www.ancientworldmagazine.com/articles/death-penalty-classical-athens/The death penalty was the most severe form of punishment in Athens and usually reserved only for the most severe offenders of the law. The death sentence was generally reserved for those who had been found guilty of intentional homicide or who had commited another grave sin.
4aSocrates: What is the charge, and what is the lawsuit about?
Euthyphro: Murder, Socrates.
Fooloso4         
         
Apollodorus         
         Most of your challenges to what I say could easily be settled if you would just read the text. — Fooloso4
Olivier5         
         3. By taking his father to court on charges of murder Euthyphro MAY cause his death, IF HIS CASE IS SUCCESSFUL, therefore he is guilty of TRYING TO BE patricide. — Apollodorus
Apollodorus         
         FIXED — Olivier5
Olivier5         
         It can't be established that he is even "trying to be patricide". You just said he was a fool who didn't know what he is doing. — Apollodorus
Apollodorus         
         
frank         
         Besides, Platonism stood at the apex of the Roman culture that Christianity adopted — Apollodorus
Valentinus         
         You are presenting ideas about Plato that most would hold to be absurd — frank
frank         
         In the academic milieu of the last 100 years or so, Fooloso4's approach to read the dialogues as not being a map to a doctrine is the commonly accepted practice — Valentinus
Apollodorus         
         Weren't the Sadducees hellenized Jews? I wonder if they would have been familiar with Plato. — frank
frank         
         Was their rejection of an immortal soul even compatible with Platonism? — Apollodorus
Fooloso4         
         In the academic milieu of the last 100 years or so, Fooloso4's approach to read the dialogues as not being a map to a doctrine is the commonly accepted practice. — Valentinus
Apollodorus         
         What Greek influence would that have been? Stoicism? — frank
frank         
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