The conceptual framework for atheism, as we know it, did not exist then. — frank
In the Phaedrus, [Plato] makes Socrates maintain that a word, “once it is written, is tossed about, alike among those who understand and those who have no business with it, and it knows not to whom to speak or not to speak” (275d9-e3).
Plato was clearly concerned not only with the state of his soul, but also with his relation to the universe at the deepest level. Plato’s metaphysics was not intended to produce merely a detached understanding of reality. His motivation in philosophy was in part to achieve a kind of understanding that would connect him (and therefore every human being) to the whole of reality – intelligibly and if possible satisfyingly. He even seems to have suffered from a version of the more characteristically Judaeo-Christian conviction that we are all miserable sinners, and to have hoped for some form of redemption from philosophy. — Thomas Nagel, Secular Philosophy and the Religious Temperament
In the Phaedrus, [Plato] makes Socrates maintain that a word, “once it is written, is tossed about, alike among those who understand and those who have no business with it, and it knows not to whom to speak or not to speak” (275d9-e3).
But this association with Christianity also colors or narrows our view of what religion is, in that depicting Plato's dialogues in those terms associates it with just the kind of dogma which Plato abhorred. — Wayfarer
His motivation in philosophy was in part to achieve a kind of understanding that would connect him (and therefore every human being) to the whole of reality – intelligibly and if possible satisfyingly. — Thomas Nagel, Secular Philosophy and the Religious Temperament
What do you make of the absence of God or gods in the discussion of the Good in the Republic. Why does Socrates say that the Good and not a god is the cause of all things? — Fooloso4
You posit a modern definition of atheism and then argue that it does not apply the charge of atheism against Socrates. — Fooloso4
But I also agree that this doesn't make him an 'atheist' in the modern sense, either. — Wayfarer
I've already told you why. Because Plato's monistic idealism believes in the Universal Consciousness, Cosmic Intellect (Nous) or Mind of God, as the cause of everything including the Gods. — Apollodorus
That's exactly what we've been trying to explain to Fooloso4. Unfortunately, he seems to think that we only do so because we are "intolerant" of his views. — Apollodorus
Because Plato's monistic idealism believes in the Universal Consciousness, Cosmic Intellect (Nous) or Mind of God, as the cause of everything including the Gods. — Apollodorus
The place of God in the Platonic system has been the subject of long controversy among scholars. Too often the tendency has been to regard the idea of God as an undigested concept in Plato's mind, an afterthought, or, at best, a symbolic expression for the idea of the good. Yet, a study of the later dialogues, notably the Philebus, shows that God plays a necessary role in the Platonic metaphysics, and one distinct from that of the ideas. In the earlier dialogues God is mentioned rather incidentally; and a student who takes up the later dialogues after he has formed his views upon the basis of the earlier ones, is liable to interpret all references to God as implied references to the ideas. But it is not a question of how far one can go in interpreting one conception in terms of another, but of what Plato himself believed; and an unprejudiced reading of the later dialogues suggests that God, in Plato's mind, stands only for Himself, and is not a name for anything else. A question of this sort cannot be settled by a mechanical comparison of words and passages; Plato is at no point explicit on the connection of God with the good; one has to steep oneself in Plato and get, if possible, the pattern, the 'feel' of his mind. Clearly, to Plato religion is a genuine personal experience; in his references to God there is a suggestion at once of reverence and of intimacy; God seems to have been for him not an abstract conception but an immediate intuition. To reduce God to the ideas is to fail to do justice to the religious nature of Plato as distinct from his detached contemplative attitude. — Rafael Demos
So in that general sense, I agree with you and Frank that Plato is not an atheist in any meaningful sense, but neither does that make him 'a theist' in today's sense. — Wayfarer
I don't necessarily agree with fooloso4's interpretation, but I also don't feel the same compulsion to take issue with it. — Wayfarer
It can be a dialogue, where different contributors advance different interpretations which are considered on their merits. — Wayfarer
That is an interpretation made in hindsight, through the lens of later interpretations and cultural syncretism. — Wayfarer
that would be a thread about 'later developments in Christian platonism', not about this particular dialogue. — Wayfarer
one has to steep oneself in Plato and get, if possible, the pattern, the 'feel' of his mind. — Rafael Demos
But true, there are several centuries between Plato and Plotinus. — frank
I take Gerson's view (and that of Platonists themselves) that there is only one Platonic or Platonist system (with some variations) stretching from Plato to the present. — Apollodorus
Although a Hegelian, Kierkegaard sided with Schleiermacher, declaring that Socratic irony pertained to an ineffable good, one that no predicates could capture. After this, the controversy died down for a time, largely because nearly everyone had become a Hegelian. In 1888, however, Friedrich Nietzsche accused Socrates and Plato of an irony that marked not a superior will to hide the truth from the many but a base fear of facing it.
I'm familiar with the view that Plato is compatible with later Platonists. Plotinus was influenced by Stoicism and Aristotle, so "compatible" definitely doesn't mean identical. — frank
Plato’s Academy functioned from 387 BC to 529 CE and its members were naturally in touch with philosophers from other Platonic schools in Alexandria and elsewhere. So, there is no reason to assume any major modification or distortion in the Platonic tradition, just as there were few changes in the religious sphere. — Apollodorus
Of course Platonists see Platonism as essentially one system. "Platonism", "Middle Platonism", "Neoplatonism", etc., are modern concepts that make no sense to Platonists, as shown by Gerson. — Apollodorus
Do you think it's possible to admire both Plato and Nietszche? — Wayfarer
I am complete skeptic when it comes to Plato (Twilight of the Idols, "What I Owe to the Ancients")
I agree with you that the dialogues stand on their own, but I don't think we can diagnose the metaphysics of either Socrates or Plato based on them. — frank
As already stated — Apollodorus
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