if this Eros is not innate to the soul (having to be instilled in society), where does it start? — dani
(177d)I know nothing other than matters of eros ...
So Eros is innate to the soul, but Eros for the good is not innate to the soul because Eros is blind. — dani
... he wanted to school everybody on what he saw was the right path for the betterment of the soul? — dani
Education in music for the soul and gymnastics for the body, Socrates says, is the way to shape the guardians' character correctly and thereby prevent them from terrorizing the citizens. Thus, the guardians' education is primarily moral in nature, emphasizing the blind acceptance of beliefs and behaviors rather than the ability to think critically and independently. — Ariel Dillon
Eros, or divine madness, is a beneficial gift from the god(s); it goes on from there. — tim wood
(Phaedrus 244a)... enormous advantages now come to us through madness once it is given as a divine gift.
(277e)But the person who realises that in a written discourse on any topic there must be a great deal that is playful; that not one composition in verse or in prose that deserves to be taken seriously has yet been written ...
Eros is innate to the soul. We all know eros to the extent that we desire what we do not have. But, as the saying goes, love is blind. Philosophy is, for Socrates, erotic. The desire for wisdom. We all want for ourselves what is good, but we lack the wisdom to discern what is good. The Republic is an extended argument that attempts to persuade his listeners that justice is good for the soul and the city, that is, good for each of us and all of us.
In the Apology Socrates says that he does not know anything noble and good. (Apology 21d). And yet in the Symposium, a dialogue on eros, he claims:
I know nothing other than matters of eros ... — Fooloso4
It seems the idea of eros and the erotic are quite different in these dialogues to the carnal desire it is generally associated with in modern culture. Almost like an allegory. — Wayfarer
That's also how i understand it, but am looking for a better insight into it. — Wayfarer
If I'm way off in terms of what your asking for, maybe someone else could give a better answer. — javra
It seems the idea of eros and the erotic are quite different in these dialogues to the carnal desire it is generally associated with in modern culture. — Wayfarer
just realized, beauty, the aesthetic, too would here be classified as a form of eros and hence erotic in this sense. — javra
(265c)... in praise of your master and mine, Phaedrus, Love, the guardian of beautiful boys.
(279b)O beloved Pan and any other gods who are here, grant that I may become beautiful within, and that all my outer possessions be in friendly concord with the inner.
Twice Socrates connects the just and beautiful and good (276b, 278a) — Fooloso4
In the mystery cults of the highly syncretic Hellenistic era,[16] Pan is identified with Phanes/Protogonos, Zeus, Dionysus and Eros.[17] — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pan_(god)#Worship
So... sociopaths have no soul? — LuckyR
Are Plato's dialogues the first that deserve to be taken seriously? What does it mean to take a written work seriously? The playfulness of Plato's works has often been noted. Can a work be both playful and serious? — Fooloso4
Still, the connection between the three ideals/forms mentioned - and a person's possible attraction, hence eros, toward this nexus - is where my main interests personally are. — javra
How many, think ye, have likewise fallen into Plato’s honey head, and sweetly perished there?
Something of the same applies to the Symposium: after a profound debate on the nature of eros-love, the whole thing ends in confusion, a great deal of wine-drinking and some participants forgetting altogether what was discussed — mcdoodle
Then Socrates, having lulled them to sleep, got up and went out, and Aristodemus followed him as usual. When he got to the Lyceum he washed himself, spent the day just like any other, and having done so, he went home in the evening to rest.
... eros as an expression of a craving to beget - to become pregnant with knowledge of the good and the beautiful. Personally I really like the image of pregnancy-with-the-good — mcdoodle
I could see how that could be allegorically stated. :up: Still, technically, I will argue that sociopaths too want to be good at what they do, and so are in their own way innately attracted to the good, even though their conception of it might be easily considered perverse
Psychopaths, at least, are often described as 'soul-less' for the total inability to empathize.
Eros for the good is innate. We all desire what is good. The problem is, we do not always know what that is. — Fooloso4
Don't be shy, what do you think? — LuckyR
So that's where Plato's city-state would come in, educating its citizens on what the good is. — dani
However, the good itself can never be fully grasped because it is not only a "form," in the realm of being, but something beyond forms that actually informs all forms themselves, too. — dani
My question is: if this Eros is not innate to the soul (having to be instilled in society), where does it start? — dani
Now, as the son of Resource and Poverty, Love is in a peculiar case. First, he is ever poor, and far from tender or beautiful as most suppose him: [203d] rather is he hard and parched, shoeless and homeless; on the bare ground always he lies with no bedding, and takes his rest on doorsteps and waysides in the open air; true to his mother's nature, he ever dwells with want. But he takes after his father in scheming for all that is beautiful and good; for he is brave, strenuous and high-strung, a famous hunter, always weaving some stratagem; desirous and competent of wisdom, throughout life ensuing the truth; a master of jugglery, witchcraft, [203e] and artful speech. By birth neither immortal nor mortal, in the selfsame day he is flourishing and alive at the hour when he is abounding in resource; at another he is dying, and then reviving again by force of his father's nature: yet the resources that he gets will ever be ebbing away; so that Love is at no time either resourceless or wealthy, and furthermore, he stands midway betwixt wisdom and ignorance. The position is this: no gods ensue wisdom or desire to be made wise; — Plato, Symposium, 203b
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