Socrates does not say he believes the sun and moon are gods, he asks whether Meletus is accusing him of not believing that they are gods as other men do. — Fooloso4
In the Republic Socrates says that the sun is the offspring of the Good. (506e) Nowhere does he refer to the Good as a god. — Fooloso4
Unfortunately, the Greeks involved in the Parthenon's "reconstruction" appear to have made a right mess of it. And Prince Charles refuses to return the marble statues. — Apollodorus
And that is why I said I suspect the answer to your question has to do with the assumptions you bring to it. — Fooloso4
What we do know is his concern for the human things - self, morals, political life. — Fooloso4
You means the reader, including me. — Fooloso4
What we do know is his concern for the human things - self, morals, political life. — Fooloso4
Examining the contrast between Plato and Diogenes, one might be inspired to stop mining Plato for traces of who Socrates was and just rely on Xenophon and Diogenes. — frank
I haven't looked at Guthrie's "Socrates" in a long time — Fooloso4
What do you think he believed? — frank
And could you explain the Euthyphro dilemma? What do you take away from it? — frank
If I remember correctly, the problem is in the relationship between God and good. I think the lesson is that it's wrong to even define "good" in relation to the gods, or even in relation to God, because it can't be logically done. And so with Plato and Aristotle there's a moving away from this, toward a pragmatic definition of "good", "that for the sake of which", in Aristotle, the end. This defines "good" in relation to what the individual person needs or wants. — Metaphysician Undercover
...as far as how Aristotle defined the good according to individual need...I would desire proof to believe it. The individual good, that is, the good for every man, is a product of the Enlightenment. — Leghorn
The problem as I understand it is with our inability to know the good itself. — Fooloso4
According to Plato In The Republic, the philosopher gets a glimpse of the good, enough to know of its existence. — Metaphysician Undercover
I guess that would depend on how you define "know". — Metaphysician Undercover
According to Plato In The Republic, the philosopher gets a glimpse of the good, enough to know of its existence. — Metaphysician Undercover
“... the good isn't being but is still beyond being, exceeding it in dignity (age) and power."(509b)
The good is what makes intelligible objects intelligible — Metaphysician Undercover
“... in applying the going up and the seeing of what's above to the soul's journey up to the intelligible place, you'll not mistake my expectation, since you desire to hear it. A god doubtless knows if it happens to be true. At all events, this is the way the phenomena look to me: in the knowable the last thing to be seen, and that with considerable effort, is the idea of the good …” (517b-c)
But Hera's bindings by her son, and Hephaestus' being cast out by his father when he was
about to help out his mother who was being beaten, and all the battles of the gods Homer
made must not be accepted in the city, whether they are made with a hidden sense or
without a hidden sense.
Republic 378d
Now I tell you that sophistry [in the original sense of practical wisdom] is an ancient art,
and those men of ancient times who practiced it, fearing the odium it involved, disguised
it in a decent dress, sometimes of poetry, as in the case of Homer, Hesiod, and Simonides.
Protagoras 316d-e (see also Euthyphro 3c; Theaetetus 152e; and Cratylus 402a-c)
Plato also suggests that Homer, Hesiod and some other early poets were covertly presenting
Heracleitean ideas about nature when they gave their genealogies of the gods and other mythical accounts. As Socrates states in the Theaetetus:
Have we not here a tradition from the ancients who hid their meaning from the common herd in poetical figures, that Ocean and [his wife, the river-goddess] Tethys, the source of all things, are flowing streams and nothing is at rest?
– Plato, Theaetetus 180c-d
In their writings the most famous philosophers of the Greeks and their prophets
made use of parables and images in which they concealed their secrets, like
Pythagoras, Socrates, and Plato.
– Avicenna, “On the Parts of Science,” 85
All ...who have spoken of divine things, both barbarians and Greeks, have veiled the first principles of things, and delivered the truth in enigmas, and symbols, and allegories, and 4 metaphors, and such like tropes.” And why should I linger over the barbarians, when I can adduce the Greeks as exceedingly addicted to the use of the method of concealment. – Clement of Alexandria, Stromata, 233-34 (5.4), 247 (5.8)
It is well known, that the ancient wise Men and Philosophers, very seldom set forth the
naked and open Truth; but exhibited it veiled or painted after various manners; by
Symbols, Hieroglyphicks, Allegories, Types, Fables, Parables, popular Discourses, and
other Images. This I pass by in general as sufficiently known.– Thomas Burnet, Archæologiæ philosophicæ, 67
The ancients distinguished the ‘exoteric’ or popular mode of exposition from the
‘esoteric’ one which is suitable for those who are seriously concerned to discover the
truth.
– G. W. Leibniz, New Essays, 260
The ancient Sages did actually say one Thing when they thought another. This appears
from that general Practice in the Greek Philosophy, of a two-fold Doctrine; the External
and the Internal; a vulgar and a secret.
– Bishop Warburton, The Divine Legislation, 2:14
But Greek "contemplation", theoria, is not mental ideation, it is the act of observing something that you actually see. — Apollodorus
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