But these are Timaeus’, not Socrates’ words. — Leghorn
But your statement is unsubstantiated: since we do not know what Socrates actually said, how can you say that Plato and Xenophon didn’t faithfully portray his defense? — Leghorn
Does Plato’s portrayal contradict Xenophon’s? — Leghorn
Why would he [Socrates] spend hours in the Phaedo trying to convince people of the immortality of the soul and divine judgement in the after life, if he is an atheist? — Apollodorus
The first is that Socrates confines the possibilities of what death is to just two things, which correspond to the atheistic and theistic versions: there are no third nor fourth, etc, options available. Why does belief in god(s) require the immortality of soul? Because we wouldn’t believe in them unless we were granted the same immortality they enjoy? — Leghorn
When the question of whether or not Socrates was an atheist is raised we need to ask just what specifically it is that one thinks is being denied or affirmed. Did he believe in the gods of the city? Did he believe in one or more of the gods recognized as gods today? — Fooloso4
...in accordance with the things said... — Leghorn
For if one who arrives in Hades, released from those here who claim to be judges, will find those who are judges in truth ... — Leghorn
In the Laws, starting from 885b, Plato argues that the legislation of piety requires declaring that the soul was created prior to all other things as the explanation for natural causes. — Valentinus
So a (small) contribution provoking more clarity of purposes, no?Point! However, you're a veteran philosopher and philosophizing is second nature to you, your middle name so to speak. For beginners, on the other hand, how to do philosophy? is a skill that has a steep learning curve, especially for those self-taught. Self-help books on philosophy are just what the doctor ordered! — TheMadFool
The law is arbitrary and and does not fit with the Timaeus — Valentinus
... it defends the existence of gods by demanding a certain view of the natural world ... — Valentinus
For the result of the arguments of such people is this,—that when you and I try to prove the existence of the gods by pointing to these very objects—sun, moon, stars, and earth—as instances of deity and divinity, people who have been converted by these scientists will assert that these things are simply earth and stone, incapable of paying any heed to human affairs, and that these beliefs of ours are speciously tricked out with arguments to make them plausible. (886d-e)
[890a] is at that time authoritative, though it owes its existence to art and the laws, and not in any way to nature. All these, my friends, are views which young people imbibe from men of science, both prose-writers and poets, who maintain that the height of justice is to succeed by force; whence it comes that the young people are afflicted with a plague of impiety, as though the gods were not such as the law commands us to conceive them; and, because of this, factions also arise, when these teachers attract them towards the life that is right “according to nature,” which consists in being master over the rest in reality, instead of being a slave to others according to legal convention. — Plato, Laws 890,translated by R.G. Bury
What, then, do you think the lawgiver ought to do, seeing that these people have been armed in this way for a long time past? Should he merely stand up in the city and threaten all the people that unless they affirm that the gods exist and conceive them in their minds to be such as the law maintains2 and so likewise with regard to the beautiful and the just and all the greatest things, [890c] as many as relate to virtue and vice, that they must regard and perform these in the way prescribed by the lawgiver in his writings; and that whosoever fails to show himself obedient to the laws must either be put to death or else be punished, in one case by stripes and imprisonment, in another by degradation, in others by poverty and exile? But as to persuasion, should the lawgiver, while enacting the people's laws, refuse to blend any persuasion with his statements, and thus tame them so far as possible? [890d] — Ibid
Athenian: The sun's body is seen by everyone, its soul by no one. And the same is true of the soul of any other body, whether alive or dead, of living beings. There is, however, a strong suspicion that this class of object, which is wholly imperceptible to sense, [898e] has grown round all the senses of the body,2 and is an object of reason alone. Therefore by reason and rational thought let us grasp this fact about it,—
Clinias: What fact?
Athenian: If soul drives round the sun, we shall be tolerably sure to be right in saying that it does one of three things.
Clinias: What things?
Athenian: That either it exists everywhere inside of this apparent globular body and directs it, such as it is, just as the soul in us moves us about in all ways; or, having procured itself a body of fire or air (as some argue), it in the form of body pushes forcibly on the body from outside; [899a] or, thirdly, being itself void of body, but endowed with other surpassingly marvellous potencies, it conducts the body. — Ibid
Wherefore, as a consequence of this reasoning and design on the part of God, with a view to the generation of Time, the Sun and Moon and five other stars, which bear the appellation of “planets,” came into existence for the determining and preserving of the numbers of Time. And when God had made the bodies of each of them He placed them in the orbits along which the revolution of the Other was moving, seven orbits for the seven bodies. The Moon He placed in the first circle around the Earth, the Sun in the second above the Earth; and the Morning Star and the Star called Sacred to Hermes He placed in those circles which move in an orbit equal to the Sun in velocity, but endowed with a power contrary thereto; whence it is that the Sun and the Star of Hermes and the Morning Star regularly overtake and are overtaken by one another. As to the rest of the stars, were one to describe in detail the positions in which He set them, and all the reasons therefore, the description, though but subsidiary, would prove a heavier task than the main argument which it subserves. Later on, perhaps, at our leisure these points may receive the attention they merit. So when each of the bodies whose co-operation was required for the making of Time had arrived in its proper orbit; and when they had been generated as living creatures, having their bodies bound with living bonds, and had learnt their appointed duties … Thus He spake, and once more into the former bowl, wherein He had blended and mixed the Soul of the Universe, He poured the residue of the previous material, mixing it in somewhat the same manner, yet no longer with a uniform and invariable purity, but second and third in degree of purity. And when He had compounded the whole He divided it into souls equal in number to the stars....(38c-41d)
It sounds like what we have sorted out as materialist or not in our modern lexicon is not a deal breaker to accepting the divine for Plato. — Valentinus
If soul does drive the sun around ...
By the divine do you mean the intelligible soul? — Fooloso4
There are a couple things that stick out to me in this statement. The first is that Socrates confines the possibilities of what death is to just two things, which correspond to the atheistic and theistic versions: there are no third nor fourth, etc, options available. Why does belief in god(s) require the immortality of soul? Because we wouldn’t believe in them unless we were granted the same immortality they enjoy? — Leghorn
The Athenian says:
If soul does drive the sun around ...
Whether or not it does is an open question. In Anaxagoras' account Nous orders all things but he holds that the sun and moon are rocks. Why does the Athenian propose that the sun is driven by its own soul? Is there some concern with autonomy? Some problem with a separate Mind that imposes order? Is this related to the political order and the imposition of laws? — Fooloso4
What pertains to the ancients should be left alone and bid good-bye ... but what pertains to our new and wise men must be accused in so far as it responsible for bad things. (886d)
who maintain that the height of justice is to succeed by force — Plato, Laws 890,translated by R.G. Bury
The observation was directed toward how we are using the terms of "atheist versus theist" in my reply to Leghorn ... — Valentinus
The way we use the terms to affirm or deny what is believed by an individual to be true is going to have trouble in a land where the line between Olympian Gods and a rational Creator has not been clearly drawn. — Valentinus
...the caveat that what counts as a model of the divine will become more difficult to identify. — Valentinus
Pardon me if I don't respond to any responses for a while. I am giving my laptop to somebody else for a few weeks. I need to explore other regions of the soul. — Valentinus
However, expressions like "in accordance with the things said" may well be just a manner of speech. — Apollodorus
A sophist's notion of 'wisdom' – a syllabus of self-help nostroms.
— 180 Proof
How do you think that put-down contributes to the thread? — Athena
(1) Did you ask TheMadFool if he had perceived my reply to him as "disrespectful" and that he told you so? His reply to my reply, which I have quoted above (with a follow-up link to another reply no less), certainly suggests he didn't think I'd given offense. And nothing "negative" has followed between us from that exchange either. In any case, I'll gladly apologize to TheMadFool if he now says my reply to him (quoted above) was "disrespectful" to him. (2) So tell me, "Miss Manners", on what basis do you accuse me of this "disrespectfulness"? (3) And lastly, since mine are evident on the first several pages of this thread, where are your positive contributions to this topic? (Answering these three questions might count as you contributing something.) — 180 Proof
Socrates as many as four times reminds us that these are things only said, implying that they are not necessarily so. — Leghorn
there is no afterlife, only a dreamless sleep — Leghorn
Yet we have no memory of this before-life. — Leghorn
Socrates as many as four times reminds us that these are things only said, implying that they are not necessarily so. — Leghorn
it is like being nothing — Leghorn
Let us also think in the following way how great a hope there is that it [death] is good. — Leghorn
How else could he refer to things said than by using the verb legomai? — Apollodorus
He (almost) always starts with the current popular view of a particular topic. — Apollodorus
But he does not say "death", "dissolution", or "disappearance". If there is dreamless sleep, there must still be someone who sleeps. And someone who sleeps can wake up as explained in the Phaedo. — Apollodorus
And by the very fact that it is in a position to remember not existing in the current form, it demonstrates its previous existence. — Apollodorus
That’s exactly my point! Any resemblance to a common “manner of speech” all of those four phrases have would have to be based on the fact they share the verb legesthai, which, as you say, is a necessary ingredient in a phrase asserting that something “is said”. Therefore, these phrases were not mere manners of speech, as you suggested. — Leghorn
How does the fact that he is relating the vulgar view of the Greek afterlife explain why he so frequently reminds his listeners that the things he says are only things said? — Leghorn
But he does say this, as the ultimate sentence in his description of death as “the dreamless sleep” (40e): “For all time appears in this way indeed to be nothing more than one night.” (kai gar oudev pleiwv o pas chronos phainetai outw de einai e mia vuks). In other words, this dreamless night lasts for all time. There is no waking from it. It seems to be but one night precisely because it lasts forever. — Leghorn
And I invite all other men likewise, to the best of my power, and you particularly I invite in return, to this life and this contest, which I say is worth all other contests on this earth; and I make it a reproach to you, that you will not be able to deliver yourself when your trial comes and the judgement of which I told you just now (Gorg. 526e).
But you also, judges, must regard death hopefully and must bear in mind this one truth, that no evil can come to a good man either in life or after death, and God does not neglect him (Apol. 41c-d).
It is not that it remembers not existing, but rather that it doesn’t remember existing. — Leghorn
I simply gave “manner of speech” as an example. — Apollodorus
It is said” or “according to things said”, etc., is simply a statement of fact. He does not say “Please remember these are just things said”. — Apollodorus
If the soul is immortal and existed before, of course it cannot remember being the current person who did not exist prior to being born. But it may well have prenatal memory of itself as pure nous. It may also have latent memory of Forms, etc. — Apollodorus
but let me ask you, O Apollodorus: as an example of what, exactly, did you give “manner of speech”? That has me confused. — Leghorn
He is not speaking thusly to everyone who voted for his acquittal; only to those few who notice that, by repetition, he is reminding them of the spuriousness of the traditional tales of the afterlife. — Leghorn
Do you have prenatal memory of yourself existing as pure vous? I don’t either, and I’ve never met anyone who did. — Leghorn
He is not speaking thusly to everyone who voted for his acquittal; only to those few who notice that, by repetition, he is reminding them of the spuriousness of the traditional tales of the afterlife. — Leghorn
the best natures become exceptionally bad when they get bad instruction (491e).
but let me ask you, O Apollodorus: as an example of what, exactly, did you give “manner of speech”? That has me confused.
— Leghorn
Example of things other than "reminders". — Apollodorus
But you are not answering my question (which I have asked about three or four times): How does one speak of things said without using phrases like “as they say”, “according to things said”, etc. — Apollodorus
we are talking about Socrates’ Theory of Recollection as given in the Meno and repeated in the Phaedo (after the trial and his speech to the jury), not about you and me. — Apollodorus
Do you mean that Socrates’ frequent—I almost said “reminders”—repetitions of different phrases meaning that what was being said was only spoken of might be characterized by other phrases or words? Instead of “reminders”, might we call them “admonitions”? how about, “accidents”, or “glosses”, or “incidental comments”, or “insignificant utterances”, etc. You can call them a host of things, but if you agree they are there in the text in the frequency in which they are extant, you can’t merely dismiss them without cause. — Leghorn
How does one speak of things said without using phrases like “as they say”, “according to things said”, etc. — Apollodorus
I don’t have him around to ask about it. So if you say he tells me that I have a prenatal memory, the only one I have to question is you. — Leghorn
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.