It is nice to have some confirmation from someone familiar with the scholarship. — Fooloso4
I'm not denying your materialist interpretation, — Apollodorus
... only your claim that your interpretation is the only possible or correct one. — Apollodorus
Another point worth mentioning. Euthyphro says this happened when they were farming in Naxos. (4c) Naxos was lost in the Peloponnesian War with Sparta in 404, five years before the time of the dialogue. Why did he wait for five years to bring charges against his father? — Fooloso4
Not being able to tag a label such as "materialist" or "idealist" upon a reading is to restrain from formulating a last word that is the product of a doctrine. — Valentinus
According to some ancient authors Euthyphro is a fictitious character. Your objection may or may not be valid if there was evidence that he was a historical person. But there is none. — Apollodorus
I look forward you reading your interpretation of one of the dialogues. And by that I do not mean copy and paste from Wiki or elsewhere. — Fooloso4
I've already done so. — Apollodorus
Socrates has him say something that tells the reader that this happened five years before he was going to prosecute. — Fooloso4
Hate to butt in, buy he did that Fooloso4. You probably just missed it — frank
The reluctance to apply those labels is a well established method of current and recently past scholarship. — Valentinus
You claimed that Foolso4 was an outlier by eschewing labels such "idealist", "materialist" or what have you as adequate descriptors of the intent of the Platonic Dialogues. The reluctance to apply those labels is a well established method of current and recently past scholarship. — Valentinus
Breaking everything down into doctrines simplifies matters if the purpose is the taxonomy of writing a dictionary. But no one ever meets anything new by that method. — Valentinus
Anyway, as already indicated, the issue seems to be that Fooloso4 insists that the Euthyphro has no metaphysical content — Apollodorus
But what is "idealism"? Is it a self evident quality or a way to distinguish it from something that it is not? — Valentinus
it's just a category. — frank
That suggests that it is self evident. — Valentinus
Naxos was lost in the Peloponnesian War with Sparta in 404, five years before the time of the dialogue. — Fooloso4
The kind of Christianity that survived had a deep affinity for Platonism. Through people like Augustine, Platonism lived on for centuries.
With the rise of the Protestants, the Church became rigid and bloodthirsty. Could that be what you're thinking of? — frank
And I dare say this is exactly how "Apollodorus" uses platonism: as a mere rhetorical weapon against them materialists. He treats Plato's thought as a dead body, intrumentalized in defense of religion — Olivier5
That is your judgment of what has been claimed, not a reference to the argument made. — Valentinus
The simple fact of the matter is that I happen to know a great deal more about Plato than both of you put together. I have the degrees to back that up. I don't need a medal, I would however like you to [edit]. — Fooloso4
There is quite a bit said in the literature about Naxos and the dialogue. Euthyphro indicates that they were no longer farming there. (4c) — Fooloso4
them anti-materialists. — Apollodorus
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