The Euthyphro dilemma isn't in Euthyphro? — frank
Alright. What are some of the other possible interpretations then? — Olivier5
Euthyphro may have no agenda than to be pious. Being impious could bring disaster down upon his house, so he may want to attend to it before he embarks on a project. — frank
Think about the dilemma this way:
Do we love money because it's valuable? Or is it valuable because we love it?
Notice the unresolvable circularity? As if it might be both. — frank
But then, what is the metaphysical or moral message of that interpretation? Do all you can to cleanse yourself/your house/your city of impiety, even if you need to prosecute your own father? — Olivier5
IDK — Olivier5
In economic terms, the monetary value of anything is a complex function of desire, utility and availability, — Olivier5
knowing badly, Socrates, how the divine is disposed concerning the pious and impious. (4 d-e)
This is what the Athenians did to Socrates. The sentenced him to death to cleanse their city of his influence. We know this had a profound effect on Plato. But he would have known that the scapegoating that swept the city was coming from innocent superstition energized by the pain and dishonor of defeat. — frank
I'm talking about money itself. It's an abstraction just like piety. — frank
And according to your interpretation, Plato would have agreed with his teacher Socrates' scapegoating. — Olivier5
Unlike piety, money can be quantified, stored, stolen, changed, and exchanged against physical goods and services. I see it as a very practical thing and not an abstraction. — Olivier5
He is blindly convinced that he knows divine things and that what he is doing is right. In addition, he makes a public display of it. — Fooloso4
I never intended for the discussion of the dialogue to be proof that belief in god is not necessary for being good. — Fooloso4
It is not part of the dialogue, which is what this thread was intended to be focused on. — Fooloso4
Yes. That's the dilemma. I was starting to think you might be suffering from dementia or something (I really did). — frank
Not at all. He just would have known that Socrates was the victim of superstition. — frank
You're avoiding the question? — frank
We already know that. — Apollodorus
You said the point is not to show that belief in God in not necessary for being good, even though the OP states this to be "the question that engendered this post": — Apollodorus
You said it is to "discuss the dialogue" and that the dilemma "is not part of the dialogue": — Apollodorus
obsessing about the alleged "five-year gap" — Apollodorus
I think Euthyphro did have an agenda. He could have done what his father did and asked an exegete, an official who expounded the sacred and ancestral laws of the city. Instead he brought it to a public forum to demonstrate his own expertise in such matters. — Fooloso4
And he would have written a dialogue about it, right? Where this Euthyphro superstitious character would be a fool, unable to justify himself... — Olivier5
A means to an end. And the real absolute end, for which piety is only a means, is proposed to be justice. — Olivier5
Not only that, but it seems rather weird not to discuss it when Socrates and Euthyphro discuss it from one end of the dialogue to the other. — Apollodorus
Here's Dr William Lane Craig (one of the more competent).
Dr. Craig:
For those that aren't familiar with it, the question is: does God will something because it is good, or is something good because God wills it? — Tom Storm
These two qualities would have made him pretty average. — frank
This is what the Athenians did to Socrates. The sentenced him to death to cleanse their city of his influence. We know this had a profound effect on Plato. — frank
There's no need to villainize Euthyphro. You can if you want to, but the dialogue works fine if Euthyphro just isn't thinking things through. — frank
I think you're agreeing that he might have just been superstitious with a little consciousness of his social standing in the mix. These two qualities would have made him pretty average — frank
how do we know about the ideal of justice? — frank
But what is he talking about? Why is he saying that? — frank
By contrast, my own suggestion is far more plausible. — Apollodorus
Average, and therefore worthy of some scorn by the wise... But I think you are not picking up the clues Plato left about Euthyphro's venality and ruthless ambition. The text does not exclude ulterior motives for prosecuting his own father, and perhaps I agree with "Fooloso4" that the mention of Naxos implies some ulterior motive. — Olivier5
how do we know about the ideal of justice? — frank
You tell me. — Olivier5
By contrast, my own suggestion is far more plausible. We know that Plato believed in Ideas or Forms and in intuition (noesis) as a faculty of the soul (nous) which philosophy aimed to awaken and develop. — Apollodorus
What suggestion is that? That the moral of the dialogue is "there are forms and ideas"? — Olivier5
Socrates in Euthyphro does not just want to know what the Form of Piety is; he also believes that there is such a thing as Piety that is the instrumental cause of the piety in pious things [see 6D 10 – 11 — Apollodorus
that eidos itself by which all the pious things are pious
... it is by one idea that the impious things are impious and the pious things pious.
... this idea itself is, so that by gazing at it and using it as a pattern, I may declare that whatever is like it, among the things that you or anyone else may do, is pious, and whatever is not like it is not. (6e)
I think Plato is about to hatch some Forms which we know about from birth, but uncover through experience. — frank
But I believe it to be true. — Apollodorus
A pattern is not an instrumental cause, — Fooloso4
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