Strauss is talking about Socrates. — Apollodorus
He conceived a thought there and stood from dawn considering it, and when he couldn't make any progress, he refused to let up but kept on standing considering. It was now already noon, and the soldiers became aware of it, and in amazement one said to another, 'Socrates has been standing there since dawn reflecting.' Finally, some of the Ionians, when it was evening, once they had dined, - it was then summer - brought out their bedding and slept in the cold while keeping watch on him, to see whether he would stand also through the night. He stood till dawn and the sun came up; and then he went away after he had prayed to the sun (220c3-d5)
That theme [contemplation in summer as distinguished from winter] is known to those who read Cicero's Republic and Laws.
In accordance with that [seeking the sun in summer] he prays to the sun at the end.
He conceived a thought there and stood from dawn considering it, and when he couldn't make any progress, he refused to let up but kept on standing considering. It was now already noon, and the soldiers became aware of it, and in amazement one said to another, 'Socrates has been standing there since dawn reflecting.' Finally, some of the Ionians, when it was evening, once they had dined, - it was then summer - brought out their bedding and slept in the cold while keeping watch on him, to see whether he would stand also through the night. He stood till dawn and the sun came up; and then he went away after he had prayed to the sun (220c3-d5)
Cicero's Republic is a dialogue in winter, where they seek the sun, and the Laws is a dialogue in summer, where they seek the shade. 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 (p. 277)
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 for the gods of the city. The impiety which is to be condemned is the impiety against the gods of the cosmos, but not the impiety against the gods of the city. We can say Plato substitutes a natural theology for a civil theology
Cicero does not discuss Socrates’ praying to the Sun. — Apollodorus
In the whole 294-page book, Strauss mentions Cicero only once, when he addresses Socrates' endurance to the heat of summer. — Apollodorus
He says:
That theme [contemplation in summer as distinguished from winter] is known to those who read Cicero's Republic and Laws. — Fooloso4
Strauss also says that "Plato substitutes a natural theology for a civil theology". — Apollodorus
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.
Of course I have read Strauss since I am quoting from his book On Plato's Symposium. — Apollodorus
... symptoms of psychological deficiency and unscholarly methodology. — Apollodorus
Cicero's Republic is a dialogue in winter, where they seek the sun, and the Laws is a dialogue in summer, where they seek the shade. 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 (p. 277)
Strauss does not discuss Cicero. — Apollodorus
That theme is known to those of you who have read Cicero's Republic and Laws. Cicero's Republic is a dialogue in winter where they seek the sun, and the Laws a dialogue in summer where they seek the shade.
What could that [contemplation is summer as distinguished from winter] possibly mean?
I have Strauss' book right in front of me. Name any page and I can quote from it any time. — Apollodorus
Prove that he doesn't say that if you can .... — Apollodorus
He says:
That theme [contemplation in summer as distinguished from winter] is known to those who read Cicero's Republic and Laws. — Fooloso4
Strauss admit that the Sun is a God and that Plato has a theology involving cosmic Gods like the Sun: — Apollodorus
Plato substitutes a natural theology for a civil theology (38)
Bullshit! You searched for statements by and about Strauss so that you could argue against them, found excerpts online, and quote them out of context. — Fooloso4
Discuss:
to consider or examine by argument, comment, etc.
Socrates could not have acted according to what Cicero says — Apollodorus
Not believing you does not make me a liar. — Fooloso4
A sunny place, surely. In summer they would seek the shade. Now this is the symbolism which Plato has used in the Laws. In the Laws the discussion is taking place on the hottest day of the year, the longest day of the year, a very hot day, and they seek the shade. Here they seek the sun. Now what is the meaning of that symbolism, the seeking of the shade and the seeking of the sun? It is not difficult to guess—because Cicero’s Laws, which we shall read afterwards, are a summer discussion. This is a winter discussion.
... We seek light, we seek knowledge; shade, we seek obscurity.
Atticus suggests that they go to an island in the river there, and they sit down there. It is a hot day, the longest day in the year; they seek the shade and they find that shade on an island. And you understood this [is an] island of contemplation.
Also while searching for info on him, I found an article on philosophical counselling. — Wayfarer
Some think that dialectic is a method that leads to knowledge of the Forms. But how can someone know this unless they have completed the journey? That it does is something we are told not something we have experienced. It is a matter of opinion. Dialectic leads to knowledge of our ignorance. It leads us to see that philosophical inquiry leads to aporia. — Fooloso4
Perhaps not deliberately. This is also how the practice of koans works. Namely, contemplating a koan is supposed to bring one's mind to a halt, from whence on one can "see things as they really are".And, having read one dialogue that allegedly leaves the reader in a state of "aporia", why read another dialogue that leaves the reader in the same "aporetic" condition?
What I fail to see is how additional aporia can resolve the initial aporia.
Or is the intention to maximize the aporetic state until all reasoning ability has been suspended? — Apollodorus
But there is still an issue of power. Defining what is real for another person is an act of power.But nor should they claim that other people's personal experience is just imagination. — Apollodorus
No. But desist from making many judgments to begin with.We should trust the experts, simply because we have nothing else to go on when it comes to making judgements in fields where we have little or no expertise.
What's the alternative? Trust no one? — Janus
Because philosophers are known for being such a happy bunch!On the other hand if someone wants to question everything and think for themselves, they will be obviously happier if they do that, no?
Not under the Socratic method.
Inherent in the Socratic method is the inequality of the teacher and the student, and the student's submission to the teacher. — baker
And therefore did Socrates deservedly execrate the man who first drew a distinction between the law of nature and the law of morals, for he justly conceived that this error is the source of most human vices (1.33).
—I think we should seek the boundaries which Socrates has laid down in relation to this question, and abide by them (1.56).
For I have never found water much colder than this, although I have seen a great number of rivers;—and I can hardly bear my foot in it when I wish to do what Socrates did in Plato’s Phædrus (2.6)
“Which one can you name of the divinities in heaven as the author and cause of this, whose light makes our vision see best and visible things to be seen?” “Why, the one that you too and other people mean for your question evidently refers to the Sun.” “Is not this, then, the relation of vision to that divinity?” (Rep 508a).
“This [the Sun], then, you must understand that I meant by the offspring of the Good which the Good begot to stand in a proportion with itself: as the Good is in the intelligible region to reason and the objects of reason, so is this [the Sun] in the visible world to vision and the objects of vision.” (Rep 508b - c ).
We find something which is almost explicitly called the theology in the second book of the Republic
Contemplation in summer distinguished from winter. What could that possibly mean? That theme is known to those of you who have read Cicero’s Republic and Laws. Cicero’s Republic is a dialogue in winter, where they seek the sun, and the Laws is a dialogue in summer, where they seek the shade. 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 (p. 277)
it's possible to be so open-minded that one's brain falls out. — baker
No. But desist from making many judgments to begin with.
Obviously, this wil make one unpopular in certain circles where having a lot of definitive opinions is required. But realistically, there are rather few things that one actually needs to have a definitive opinion about. — baker
Because philosophers are known for being such a happy bunch! — baker
But there is still an issue of power. Defining what is real for another person is an act of power.
It's not possible to do away with issues of power in interpersonal interactions of any kind, not even in philosophy. — baker
Socrates opinion about the gods is concealed because of his concern for the city and philosophy. — Fooloso4
He wants that his hearers believe he believes as they do ... — Leghorn
... while subtly expressing doubt through his questioning, to elicit those of his audience who might rise above the conventional opinion of the citizenry. — Leghorn
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