As to Plato, how do we diagnose his metaphysics if not based on the dialogues? — Fooloso4
My difference with "Fooloso4", although I don't think very highly of Plato or of his political ideas. — Olivier5
There is also zero evidence that "the Platonic tradition" wasn't grossly distorted by the neo-platonists. — Olivier5
So, I'd be wary of saying, or rather projecting, that Plato 'believed in God', any more than did the Buddha (who explicitly did not). But I also agree that this doesn't make him an 'atheist' in the modern sense, either. I think what it requires us to do, is considerably broaden our understanding of what constitutes the religious or spiritual life. — Wayfarer
As already stated, followers of Plato already referred to themselves as "Platonists" (Platonikoi) in antiquity and it would be absurd to claim that they were something else. Of course there were some variations according to different schools but that doesn't make the Platonism of one historical period a different system to the Platonism of other periods. — Apollodorus
And Aristotle himself is, in a way, a Platonist. The thing is, Plato had a lot of different teachings which could be interpreted in different ways. — Metaphysician Undercover
These issues were not completely resolved in Plato's times and had to be worked out later. — Apollodorus
Actually, if you look really closely, you'll see that the issues haven't been resolved yet. — Metaphysician Undercover
over-critical reading of individual dialogues independently of other dialogues — Apollodorus
.. among a few scholars... — Apollodorus
It was primarily a way of life. — Apollodorus
When I was in my early teens, no one at school spoke of “Platonism”. It was always individual authors like Plato, Aristotle, Plotinus. So, when I first read Plato’s dialogues like Timaeus, Symposium, Republic, I was unaware of the existence of a system called “Platonism”. — Apollodorus
If we insist that there were major changes, for example, from Plato to Plotinus, we should be able to show what those changes are and to what extent (if at all) they are inconsistent with (a) the text of the dialogues and (b) with how Plato was understood in the interim. — Apollodorus
And the focus of that way of life, at least within the Academy, was the positive construction of a theoretical framework on the foundation of UP. — Apollodorus
Here I briefly sketch a hypothetical reconstruction of what I shall call ‘Ur-Platonism’ (UP). This is the general philosophical position that arises from the conjunction of the negations of the philosophical positions explicitly rejected in the dialogues, that is, the philosophical positions on offer in the history of philosophy accessible to Plato himself. — Platonism Versus Naturalism, Lloyd P. Gerson, University of Toronto
Gerson may be right about Platonism being about building a theoretical construct out of "Ur-Platonism", but if he is, this shows how far the Socratic way of life is from Platonism. — Fooloso4
A position of skepticism, which rejects philosophical positions, cannot be said to provide a theoretical framework. So any supposed theoretical framework would have to come from some principles other than those found in Plato. — Metaphysician Undercover
We didn't get any education in philosophy in high school, so I wasn't exposed to Plato or Platonism until university. — Metaphysician Undercover
Something is missing there, — Apollodorus
And you are not paying attention. What Gerson is saying ... — Apollodorus
Gerson doesn’t need to name those scholars ( — Apollodorus
because we know exactly who they are. — Apollodorus
There is nothing missing. It is not a syllogism. — Fooloso4
You, on the other hand, use his criticism of those scholars to dismiss other sholars. — Fooloso4
That's what I'm saying, it isn't a syllogism because it doesn't show how you arrive at that conclusion. — Apollodorus
The fact is that Gerson is not criticizing the scholars, he simply points out that their procedure is flawed. — Apollodorus
I know enough to criticize their methodology and so does Gerson. — Apollodorus
As a matter of fact, I know far more than you think. And anti-Platonists like Dickinson, Shorey, and Crossman are rather notorious characters in the literature. — Apollodorus
That's why you deny knowing anything about them, because you don't want to be associated with their names. Subversive liberals, Christian Socialists, Fabian Socialists. It's all politically motivated, without a doubt. — Apollodorus
I deny knowing them because I have never read them and they are not cited by the scholars I do read. — Fooloso4
Their usual method is to start by taking a dialogue in isolation of other Platonic texts — Apollodorus
The dialogues form larger wholes. Two or more dialogues are tied together in various ways, by the chronology of events, such as Euthyphro and Apology or extended to include Crito and Phaedo, or by a central question such as with the trilogy Theaetetus, Sophist, and Statesman, or Phaedrus and Symposium on eros. That the dialogues are not independent, however, does not mean that they are not each wholes in themselves. — Fooloso4
Their usual method is to start by taking a dialogue in isolation of other Platonic texts, after which they use terms like "irony", "elenchos", "aporia", "skepticism", etc. to arrive at the most preposterous conclusions designed to demonize Plato and Platonists. — Apollodorus
Anyway, if you are not reading scholars like Sedley and Gerson, who are leading in the field, which scholars do you actually read then??? — Apollodorus
I'll start with Leo Strauss and Jacob Klein, both Jewish refugees from Nazi Germany. — Fooloso4
A number of controversies surround Strauss and his work. First, in recent years, Strauss has been accused of being the intellectual godfather of the neo-conservative political movement and thus of being the intellectual force behind the Bush administration’s plan to invade of Iraq. Second, no aspect of Strauss’s work is as hotly contested as his claims about esotericism.
Strauss employs the term “theological-political predicament,” to diagnose what he contends are the devastating philosophical, theological, and political consequences of the early modern attempt to separate theology from politics. However, Strauss in no way favors a return to theocracy or, like his contemporary Carl Schmitt, a turn toward political theology. Instead, Strauss attempts to recover classical political philosophy not to return to the political structures of the past but to reconsider ways in which pre-modern thinkers thought it necessary to grapple and live with the tensions, if not contradictions that, by definition, arise from human society. For Strauss, a recognition, and not a resolution, of the tensions and contradictions that define human society is the necessary starting point for philosophically reconstructing a philosophy, theology, and politics of moderation, all of which, he claims, the twentieth-century desperately needs.
Was humanity created, or do humans create themselves? In this English translation of Le Règne de l’homme, the last volume of Rémi Brague's trilogy on the philosophical development of anthropology in the West, Brague argues that with the dawn of the Enlightenment, Western societies rejected the transcendence of the past and looked instead to the progress fostered by the early modern present and the future. As scientific advances drained the cosmos of literal mystery, humanity increasingly devalued the theo-philosophical mystery of being in favor of omniscience over one’s own existence. Brague narrates the intellectual disappearance of the natural order, replaced by a universal chaos upon which only humanity can impose order; he cites the vivid histories of the nation-state, economic evolution into capitalism, and technology as the tools of this new dominion, taken up voluntarily by humans for their own end rather than accepted from the deity for a divine purpose. — The Kingdom of Man: The Genesis and Failure of the Modern Project
I have recently discovered the writings of Remi Brague, — Wayfarer
"Leo Strauss taught me that when reading a text, you must be open to the possibility that it contains different layers of meaning. All philosophical books written before the Enlightenment aim at both a wider audience and a small elite, able to understand the deeper meaning of the texts."
"... Strauss taught me to read very carefully ..."
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.