In contrast, the assumption that Plato spent all his life writing books, and even founded a school, for no other purpose than to preach ignorance and "aporia", seems rather unfounded and far-fetched to me. — Apollodorus
The leap from language and discursive thought to direct experience is the very thing that is ignored. Although such an experience can be imagined, we should not make the mistake of imagining that it is our own experience. — Fooloso4
It seems like you want to cast the limits of our understanding, that Plato brings to our attention, to be actually some sort of catechism to something else. — Valentinus
But you can't do that hence you profess "aporia" and insist that this is all that Plato has to say .... — Apollodorus
I never said anything of the kind. — Valentinus
The inquiry does lead to aporia. — Valentinus
But you can't do that hence you profess "aporia" and insist that this is all that Plato has to say — Apollodorus
Saying that an inquiry leads to aporia is not equivalent to stating that the purpose of it has been cancelled. — Valentinus
In contrast, the assumption that Plato spent all his life writing books, and even founded a school, for no other purpose than to preach ignorance and "aporia", seems rather unfounded and far-fetched to me. — Apollodorus
It is not a matter of something preventing it, it is simply that you and I and others here have not had an experience of being dead. — Fooloso4
Our minds do not—contrary to many views currently popular—create truth. Rather, they must be conformed to the truth of things given in creation. And such conformity is possible only as the moral virtues become deeply embedded in our character, a slow and halting process. We have, he writes on one occasion, “lost the awareness of the close bond that links the knowing of truth to the condition of purity.” That is, in order to know the truth we must become persons of a certain sort. The full transformation of character that we need will, in fact, finally require the virtues of faith, hope, and love. And this transformation will not necessarily—perhaps not often—be experienced by us as easy or painless. Hence the transformation of self that we must—by God’s grace—undergo “perhaps resembles passing through something akin to dying.”
It is quite revealing that you think what Plato is doing is preaching anything at all. — Fooloso4
But at the same time, whatever philosophy we have, has to be able to accomodate the genuinely novel discoveries of science since the 17th century. So we have to thread the needle between the two extremes of dogmatic belief systems on the one hand, and scientific materialism on the other. — Wayfarer
a thorough-going secular philosophy has no imaginative domain which corresponds with 'the mystical'. — Wayfarer
The issue is, a thorough-going secular philosophy has no imaginative domain which corresponds with 'the mystical'. In a secular system, 'the mystical' is synonymous with nothing, nonsense, non-being, it's a placeholder or a frightening vacuum which the gullible seek to fill with religious beliefs. — Wayfarer
Saying that an inquiry leads to aporia does not constitute proof that Plato's statements are not in the dialogue or that he preaches atheism, skepticism, and nihilism, does it? — Apollodorus
Don't you think it's also revealing that you wish to dissociate Plato from anything religious whatever? — Wayfarer
Let us not forget that the sun is a cosmic god ... In the tenth book of the Laws Plato presents what one might call his theology and also his political doctrine regarding gods. It consists in a substitution of the gods of the cosmos [e.g. the Sun] for the gods of the city
I am speaking specifically about such things as the experience of being dead and the transcendent experience of seeing the unchanging Forms. — Fooloso4
What do you know of an imaginative domain other than what you imagine it might be? — Fooloso4
If so, I repeat my previous statement that such a view is at odds with Socrates' willingness to pursue ideas despite such difficulties. — Valentinus
I can understand if some people have an aversion toward religion or spirituality and in particular toward Plato, and I have no problem with that. But when doubt and denial become compulsive then we are dealing with a pathological condition IMHO.
In any event, "aporia" can become a debilitating fixation, it seems, that is as toxic as religious fanaticism - if not worse — Apollodorus
My position is, as I'm not wedded to physicalism, then I'm open to the possibility of higher states of being or higher knowledge, but I can't claim to know them as a matter of fact. — Wayfarer
It's true there's no certainty on the level of discursive reasoning. — Wayfarer
I think, possibly, the Platonic forms or ideas are not so remote or mysterious as many are making them out to be. — Wayfarer
One clue for me is platonism in mathematics. — Wayfarer
imagining real abstracts — Wayfarer
But the counter to that is that they are the same for all who think - they're independent of any particular mind, but can only be seen by the rational faculty. — Wayfarer
But in addition to that imaginative realm there is also in Buddhism a precise definition of degrees and kinds of knowledge — Wayfarer
Imagination opens into other domains of being — Wayfarer
Let us not forget that the sun is a cosmic god ... In the tenth book of the Laws Plato presents what one might call his theology and also his political doctrine regarding gods. It consists in a substitution of the gods of the cosmos [e.g. the Sun] for the gods of the city
- L Strauss, On Plato's Symposium, pp. 38, 277 — Apollodorus
Socrates seeks the sun in summer, when it is hardest to bear; he seeks the light of the sun at its strongest. In accordance with that he prays to the sun at the end. Let us not forget that the sun is a cosmic god
Immersed in some problem at dawn, he stood in the same spot considering it; and when he found it a tough one, he would not give it up but stood there trying. The time drew on to midday, and the men began to notice him, and said to one another in wonder: ‘Socrates has been standing there in a study ever since dawn!’ The end of it was that in the evening some of the Ionians after they had supped—
this time it was summer—brought out their mattresses and rugs and took their sleep in the cool; thus they waited to see if he would go on standing all night too. He stood till dawn came and the sun rose; then walked away, after offering a prayer to the Sun (Symp. 220c-d)
That is translated as 'wisdom', although the 'jn-' particle is an etymological cognate with the 'gn-' of gnosticism. In Buddhism, it is understood as a real, practical insight into the principle of dependent origination. — Wayfarer
I think, possibly, the Platonic forms or ideas are not so remote or mysterious as many are making them out to be. One clue for me is platonism in mathematics. — Wayfarer
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