It follows that Socrates was the prototypical agnostic. — Olivier5
His defense in the Apology was his "human wisdom" his knowledge of his ignorance. — Fooloso4
The solution of this seeming contradiction could be as simple as Plato putting words in Socrates' mouth. — Olivier5
Another solution would be that Socrates, while doubting, had a sort of hunch that the good was beyond the gods and all that. — Olivier5
So on the one hand we have Socratic skepticism and on the other a mythology posing as truth. — Fooloso4
"So far, you have presented zero evidence for your claim that the Euthyphro or any other dialogue teaches "atheism".
— Apollodorus
That's because I never said that they do. You have a distorted view of what the Socratic teaching is — Fooloso4
The question is why Socrates? If this is Plato's images of the truth then why not put them in the mouth of a stranger? — Fooloso4
The trick is that we know of Socrates through Plato and a few others but not directly. Like Jesus, Socrates could have written a book, but he chose not to, and so we know of his thoughts and deeds only through others.Socratic philosophy is oriented around the question of the good. It is what is sought for. This orientation is, however, necessarily a human orientation. That is, the question of the good is the question of the human good. — Fooloso4
It is telling that you do not have enough confidence in your own arguments to let them stand, or fall, as the case may be. — Fooloso4
What I gathered from my superficial reading on the subject is the conventional wisdom that Plato went through 'phases' or 'periods' like Picasso. — Olivier5
in later dialogues he tended to be replaced by 'the stranger' ( — Olivier5
It could be that the reports by Plato are inaccurate, or it could be that Socrates himself harboured some contradictions. — Olivier5
"No writing of Plato exists or ever will exist, but those now said to be his are those of a Socrates become beautiful and new".
From these claims, the specter of a metaphysically and politically totalizing Platonism takes its shape. Now, totalization is simple; so it should be simple to present. And yet most commentators find the composition of the Eleatic dialogues – especially the Statesman – as anything but simple. They are inexplicably turgid, baffling, and even impenetrable. In my view, it is right to find elements of what has come to be known as Platonism in the Eleatic dialogues, but it is wrong to attribute them to Plato. On the contrary: in the Sophist and Statesman, Plato is presenting an explicit critique of Platonism, or more precisely a critique of those aspects of Eleatic or Megarian philosophy that have become identified with Platonism – in the modern period certainly since Hegel did so, but among the ancients as well.
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