Plato’s concept of necessity differs from ours. What is by necessity is without nous or intellect. Necessary causes can act contrary to intelligible causes. What is fixed and unchanging cannot serve as the cause of a world of change, contingency, and chance. It should be noted how often necessity occurs in this story. The various cases helps to give us a better sense of the scope of what necessity means and what it entails — Fooloso4
...there is really intelligence behind the scene which creates the appearance of random chance for all those being selected from, and only a distinct class of people are privy to that information. — Metaphysician Undercover
619d He was one of those who had come down from heaven, having lived his previous life in an orderly constitution, sharing in virtue through habit but without philosophy.
Generally speaking, not the least number of the people caught out in this way were souls who came from heaven, and so were untrained in sufferings. The majority of those from the earth, on the other hand, because they had suffered themselves and had seen others doing so, were in no rush to make their choices.
Unlike most souls who made their choice based upon the habits of the previous life, (620a) Odysseus now chooses a life of moderation. The suggestion seems to be that although he has chosen last he is an example of someone who has attained phronesis, someone who engaged in philosophy, consistently, in a sound manner. — Fooloso4
620d.Remembering its former sufferings, it rejected love of honor, and went around for a long time looking for the life of a private individual who did his own work, and with difficulty it found one lying offsomewhere neglected by the others. When it saw it, it said that it would have done the same even if it had drawn the first-place lot, and chose it gladly.
[emphasis added]What we call "the laws of nature" present us with one's "lot in life", the circumstances of one's being, and this is presented by Plato as random chance, with some sort of "necessity" lurking beneath it, which drives it. That sense of "necessity" is some how comparable, or related to the "necessity" which is "the means to an end", but the relation is not really intelligible to those people involved in that discussion because they have a primitive understanding about the laws of nature and determinist forces. — Metaphysician Undercover
In the eponymous dialogue Timaeus he identifies two kinds of cause, intelligence and necessity, that is, Nous and Ananke. Given the earlier emphasis in the Republic on the Forms, the introduction of ananke is both surprising and significant. Here at the end we must, by necessity, begin again. Forms and their imperfect images do not tell the whole of the story. — Fooloso4
[ emphasis added]In the Timaeus Plato presents an elaborately wrought account of the formation of the universe and an explanation of its impressive order and beauty.
The universe, he proposes, is the product of rational, purposive, and beneficent agency. It is the handiwork of a divine Craftsman (“Demiurge,” dêmiourgos, 28a6) who, imitating an unchanging and eternal model, imposes mathematical order on a preexistent chaos to generate the ordered universe (kosmos).
The governing explanatory principle of the account is teleological: the universe as a whole as well as its various parts are so arranged as to produce a vast array of good effects. For Plato this arrangement is not fortuitous, but the outcome of the deliberate intent of Intellect (nous), anthropomorphically represented by the figure of the Craftsman who plans and constructs a world that is as excellent as its nature permits it to be. — SEP - Plato's Timaeus
Plato’s concept of necessity differs from ours. What is by necessity is without nous or intellect. Necessary causes can act contrary to intelligible causes. — Fooloso4
Thus it is not possible to deceive or elude the mind of Zeus. For not even Iapetus’ son, guileful34 Prometheus, escaped his heavy wrath, but by necessity a great bond holds him down, shrewd though he be. — Hesiod, Theogony, 613, translated by Glenn W. Most
Each soul chooses a daimon and also a pattern of life. (617e) The daimon is the guardian of that life. (620d) Nothing is said about choosing a daimon, on what basis it is chosen, or how closely it reflects the soul that chooses it. — Fooloso4
“So when all the souls had chosen their lives, according to the draw they approached Lachesis in order and she gave each the spirit (daimon) they had chosen to escort them as protector through their lives and as fulfiller of their choices. — ibid. 620d
Night bore loathsome Doom and black Fate and Death, and she bore Sleep, and she gave birth to the tribe of Dreams. Second, then, gloomy Night bore Blame and painful Distress, although she had slept with none of the gods, and the Hesperides, who care for the golden, beautiful apples beyond glorious Ocean and the trees bearing this fruit. And she bore (a) Destinies and (b) pitilessly punishing Fates, (a) Clotho (Spinner) and Lachesis (Portion) and Atropos (Inflexible), who give to mortals when they are born both good and evil to have, and (b) who hold fast to the transgressions of both men and gods; and the goddesses never cease from their terrible wrath until they give evil punishment to whoever commits a crime. Deadly Night gave birth to Nemesis (Indignation) too, a woe for mortal human beings; and after her she bore Deceit and Fondness and baneful Old Age, and she bore hard-hearted Strife. — ibid. 211
I don't see where Plato's concept differs from ours. — Amity
(889b-c) Emphasis added.Fire, water, earth and air all exist by nature and chance, they say, and none of these exist by artifice. And the bodies that then come after these, those of the earth, sun, moon and stars, have come into being through these four, entirely soulless entities. They move by chance, each according to its particular power, in such a way that they come together, combining somehow with their own, hot with cold, dry with moist, soft with hard and so on for any mixture of opposites that is produced, of necessity, according to chance. In this way, based upon these processes the whole heaven has come into existence and everything under heaven, including animals and indeed all the plants too, and from these all the seasons have arisen, not through intelligence, they say, or through the agency of a god, or through artifice, but, according to them, through nature and chance.
The relationship between the choosing and the daimon seems to be an assignment by a daughter of Necessity:
“So when all the souls had chosen their lives, according to the draw they approached Lachesis in order and she gave each the spirit (daimon) they had chosen to escort them as protector through their lives and as fulfiller of their choices.
— ibid. 620d — Paine
When the souls arrived, they had to go straight to Lachesis. A sort of spokesman 29 first arranged them in ranks; then, taking lots and models of lives from the lap of Lachesis, he mounted a high platform, and said:
“The word of Lachesis, maiden daughter of Necessity! Ephemeral souls. The beginning of another death-bringing cycle for mortal-kind! Your daimon will not be assigned to you by lot; you will choose him.
The one who has the first lot will be the first to choose a life to which he will be bound by necessity.
Virtue has no master: as he honors or dishonors it, so shall each of you have more or less of it. Responsibility lies with the chooser; the god is blameless.”
After saying that, the spokesman threw the lots out among them all, and each picked up the one that fell next to him—except for Er, who was not allowed. And to the one who picked it up, it was clear what number he had drawn. After that again the spokesman placed the models of lives on the
ground before them—many more of them than those who were present.
Note 29: Prophêtês: a prophet. Here in the sense of someone who speaks on behalf of a god.
[emphasis added]620d When all the souls had chosen lives, in the same allotted order they went forward to Lachesis. She assigned to each the daimon it had chosen, as guardian of its life and fulfiller of its choices. This daimon first led the soul under the hand of Clotho as it turned the revolving spindle, thus ratifying the allotted fate it had chosen.
After receiving her touch, he led the soul to the spinning of Atropos, to make the spun fate irreversible. Then, without turning around, it went under the throne of Necessity. When it had passed through that, and when the others had also passed through, they all traveled to the plain of Lethe, through burning and choking and terrible heat, for it was empty of trees and earthly vegetation. — As above
This does not make sense to me. If people were in heaven, then they will already have been judged as good. Even if their virtue is through habit, it is part of their character, formed and informed by life experience and doesn't mean 'without philosophy'. — Amity
'untrained in sufferings' — Amity
(329e)... for they say that wealthy people have consolation in abundance.
(331b)Indeed, the possession of wealth has a major role to play in ensuring that one does not cheat or deceive someone intentionally ...
No academic philosophers required. — Amity
(64a)... all who actually engage in philosophy aright are practising nothing other than dying and being dead.
(617e)... each will have more of her or less of her, as he honours her or dishonours her.
(618e)… by looking to the nature of the soul, and calling the life that leads soul to become more unjust, the worse life, and the one that leads it to become more just, the better life. All other studies he will set aside, for we have seen that in life and after death this is the supreme choice.
(621b-c)“And that, dear Glaucon, is how the story was saved and not lost, and it may save us too if we heed its advice, and we shall safely cross over the River of Forgetfulness without defiling our soul.
(614b)Once upon a time …
… knowing things as they actually are. (595b) — Fooloso4
Because of the heat and harsh conditions of the Plain of Forgetfulness it is necessary for the souls to drink from the River of Heedlessness. (621a) In his closing comments Socrates refers to the river as the river of Forgetfulness rather than the river of Heedlessness. — Fooloso4
They camped, since evening was coming on, beside the river of forgetfulness, whose water no vessel can hold. All of them had to drink a certain measure of this water. But those not saved by wisdom drank more than the measure.
there they camped at eventide by the River of Forgetfulness,2 whose waters no vessel can contain. They were all required to drink a measure of the water, and those who were not saved by their good sense drank more than the measure, and each one as he drank forgot all things. — Perseus Tufts - Plato's Republic, Book 10, Section 621a
What is the connection between heedlessness and forgetfulness? — Fooloso4
Those who are prudent are not heedless. They are made prudent by the study and practice of philosophy. — Fooloso4
Forgetfulness is forgetting yourself. To act heedlessly is to forget yourself. — Fooloso4
we can come to know ourselves as we actually are. — Fooloso4
The mythological truth lies in recollecting and heeding the message of the story. In this way we may be saved. — Fooloso4
And then, without turning round, it went beneath the throne of Necessity, and after passing through it, when the rest had also passed through, they all made their way to the plain of Lethe through terrifying choking fire: for the place was empty of trees and anything else that grows in the earth. — ibid. 621a
From there it went, inexorably, beneath the throne of Necessity, 621A and when it had gone through, since the others had also gone through, they all proceeded to the Plain of Forgetfulness through terrible burning, stifling heat, for the place is devoid of trees or anything that springs from the earth. Evening was coming on by then, so they encamped beside the River of Heedlessness whose water no vessel can contain. Now it was necessary for all of them to drink a measure of the water, but some, who were not protected by wisdom, drank more than the measure, and as he drank, 621B each forgot everything. — translated by Horan
Edit #2 I found Horan makes the distinction: — Paine
By way of description, there is mention of the 'river of carelessness': τὸν Ἀμέλητα ποταμόν.
Ἀμέλητα (amelta) is defined as neglectful, heedless, etcetera. I will look around for a translation that expresses this distinct usage. For now, it should be noted that two different words are in play here. — Paine
No mention of a River of Heedlessness. — Amity
Why does it matter if it is the same river? — Amity
Doesn't it depend on the definition? — Amity
Hmmm. The word 'actually' bothers me. It can mean 'according to one's beliefs, views or feelings'.
There is no certainty that we can be so thoroughly objective. — Amity
What is the message from either Plato or Socrates?
To be good, to care, to think, to be wise, to be just, to study and practise philosophy? — Amity
Does knowing ourselves save us from ourselves? — Amity
If no vessel can hold the river's water, then how can it be properly measured? — Amity
What is a 'certain measure'? — Amity
To be 'saved by wisdom' or 'good sense' - does it take philosophy? — Amity
Or are some born with it? — Amity
(618 b-c)We must pay the utmost attention to how each of us will be a seeker and student who learns and finds out, from anywhere he can, who it is who will make him capable and knowledgeable enough to choose the best possible life, always and everywhere, by distinguishing between a good life and a degenerate one.
How wise is it to keep reading Plato - as opposed to any other philosophical, religious, psychological texts or works of literature? Knowledge of the sciences? — Amity
The question is why must they drink the water. — Amity
I do not think Plato uses words heedlessly or carelessly. — Fooloso4
Does knowing ourselves save us from ourselves?
— Amity
If to know yourself is to know what is and is not good for you then you are saved unless you are heedless and do things that are contrary to what is good for you. — Fooloso4
He will do all this so that he is able to make his choice reasonably, between the worse 618E life and the better one, by looking to the nature of the soul, and calling the life that leads soul to become more unjust, the worse life, and the one that leads it to become more just, the better life. All other studies he will set aside, for we have seen that in life and after death this is the supreme choice. 619A
“He must go then to Hades holding to this view with an unbreakable resolve, so that even there he would not be dazzled by wealth and other such bad influences, fall in with tyrannies and activities like that, inflict a whole host of incurable evils, and experience even greater evils himself. He would decide rather that he should always choose the life that is midway between such extremes, and flee the excesses from either direction as best he can in this life and in all that is to come, 619B for that is how a human being attains the utmost happiness.
What is a 'certain measure'?
— Amity
I am not sure. Perhaps enough so that we forget what has transpired but not so much that we forget yourself. — Fooloso4
Or are some born with it?
— Amity
Some will be born with it if they did not drink too much. — Fooloso4
[emphasis added]We must pay the utmost attention to how each of us will be a seeker and student who learns and finds out, from anywhere he can, who it is who will make him capable and knowledgeable enough to choose the best possible life, always and everywhere, by distinguishing between a good life and a degenerate one.
(618 b-c) — Fooloso4
Reading Plato need not preclude reading other things. In part it depends on what appeals and resonates with you. — Fooloso4
The question of 'drinking too much' oblivion reminds me that the mythology of Hesiod and the Orphic mysteries have the role of Lethe set over against the role of Mnemosyne (or Memory). — Paine
Mnemosyne also presided over a pool in Hades, a counterpart to the river Lethe, according to a series of 4th-century BC Greek funerary inscriptions in dactylic hexameter. Dead souls drank from Lethe so they would not remember their past lives when reincarnated. In Orphism, the initiated were taught to instead drink from the Mnemosyne, the river of memory, which would stop the transmigration of the soul [...]
Mnemosyne, on the other hand, traditionally appeared in the first few lines of many oral epic poems [8]—she appears in both the Iliad and the Odyssey, among others—as the speaker called upon her aid in accurately remembering and performing the poem they were about to recite. Mnemosyne is thought to have been given the distinction of "Titan" because memory was so important and basic to the oral culture of the Greeks that they deemed her one of the essential building blocks of civilization in their creation myth. — Wiki - Mnemosyne
Sipping the water of Mnemosyne is not given as one of the options in the Er account. That is interesting considering that Plato uses the mythos of Recollection (amnemesis) or call to mind, in different discussions of learning. That suggests to me that the role of recollection is principally the activity of the living soul. — Paine
In Plato's theory of epistemology, anamnesis (/ ˌænæmˈniːsɪs /; Ancient Greek: ἀνάμνησις) refers to the recollection of innate knowledge acquired before birth. The concept posits the claim that learning involves the act of rediscovering knowledge from within oneself...
Plato develops the theory of anamnesis in his Socratic dialogues: Meno, Phaedo, and Phaedrus. — Wiki - Anamnesis
the role of Lethe set over against the role of Mnemosyne (or Memory). — Paine
That suggests to me that the role of recollection is principally the activity of the living soul. — Paine
'Yes, and besides, Socrates,' Cebes replied, 'there's also that argument you're always putting forward, that our learning is actually nothing but recollection; according to that too, if it's true, what we are now reminded of we must have learned at some former time. (72e)
'But if that doesn't convince you, Simmias, then see whether maybe you agree if you look at it this way. Apparently you doubt whether what is called "learning" is recollection?'
'I don't doubt it,' said Simmias; 'but I do need to undergo just what the argument is about, to be "reminded"
...
'Then do we also agree on this point: that whenever knowledge comes to be present in this sort of way, it is recollection?”
(73b-d)Well now, you know what happens to lovers, whenever they see a lyre or cloak or anything else their loves are accustomed to use: they recognize the lyre, and they get in their mind, don't they, the form of the boy whose lyre it is? And that is recollection. Likewise, someone seeing Simmias is often reminded of Cebes, and there'd surely be countless other such cases.'
Each word counts. And it is why I wonder at the change from 'Heedlessness' to 'Forgetfulness'. When it seems clear that the purpose of the drinking from the river is to forget, rather than to become 'careless'. — Amity
I wonder if Plato didn't include this as an option because he was arguing against the use of poetry? — Amity
We should not forget that in the Phaedrus there is the plain of Aletheia or truth. (248b) — Fooloso4
And the almost obsessive focus on the degree of 'justice' of the sou — Amity
(357a-b)that it is better in every way to be just rather than unjust
So, it is about 'forgetfulness' not 'carelessness'. — Amity
The two words, 'forgetting' and 'carelessness' are both clearly in the account. I fault the translations that fail to convey the difference between the two. I am curious why it is ignored by many translators. The water can have two properties at the same time. — Paine
What does 'etcetera' include?By way of description, there is mention of the 'river of carelessness': τὸν Ἀμέλητα ποταμόν.
Ἀμέλητα (amelta) is defined as neglectful, heedless, etcetera. — Paine
Heedlessness is Horan's translation. Bloom translates it as carelessness. The Greek is ἀμέλητος It means, according to Liddell and Scott. An Intermediate Greek-English Lexicon, not to be cared for.
See the note in the Perseus translation you linked to:
2. In later literature it is the river that is called Lethe.
The later literature calls the river of ἀμέλητος the river of Lethe (Λήθη) — Fooloso4
In Greek mythology, Lethe (/ˈliːθiː/; Ancient Greek: Λήθη Lḗthē; Ancient Greek: [lɛ̌ːtʰɛː], Modern Greek: [ˈliθi]) was one of the rivers of the underworld of Hades. Also known as the Amelēs potamos (river of unmindfulness), the Lethe flowed around the cave of Hypnos and through the Underworld where all those who drank from it experienced complete forgetfulness. The river was often associated with Lethe, the personification of forgetfulness and oblivion, who was the daughter of Eris (Strife).
In Classical Greek, the word lethe (λήθη) literally means "forgetting", "forgetfulness".[1] — Wiki - Lethe
I fault the translations that fail to convey the difference between the two. I am curious why it is ignored by many translators. The water can have two properties at the same time.
However, I'm not clear if there are 2 different Greek words. Or if it is one Greek word with different meanings. — Amity
The name of a river. — Amity
It is two different Greek words. I meant to say that with my first comment on the passage and now realize that I did not introduce enough background to make that clear. The wiki is correct when it says: "Also known as the Amelēs potamos (river of unmindfulness)" — Paine
The name of a river.
— Amity
I wonder if this aspect is why the two separate meanings got collapsed into one (by some). The reference to the "plain of Lethe" is not given primacy over the "river of carelessness" in the text. The different meanings are related to their effects. Looking at how the mythology is developed; the mapping of the underworld follows the story of the origins of the quality being described. — Paine
I wonder if the insistence of the river with a name comes from poets such as Virgil where the role of Lethe is located in the afterlife (and pre-life) and has no role amongst the living. — Paine
[emphasis added]Lethe: The Spirit and River of Forgetfulness
Lethe has been referenced in many classical literary works. In the Odyssey, Homer describes Lethe as a river that the dead drink from to forget their former lives. The poet Virgil also mentions Lethe in his epic poem Aeneid, where he describes the river as a way for the dead to forget their past lives before being reincarnated. Additionally, in Plato’s Phaedo, Socrates describes death as a release from the body and a return to the realm of pure thought, where the soul can be purified and drink from the river of forgetfulness. [...]
The river itself is often described as having a milky-white color and is said to be shallow enough to wade through. The water is believed to have a sweet taste, and those who drink from it are said to experience complete forgetfulness. The river is also known as the “river of unmindfulness” and is believed to wash away all memories of the past. — Mythical Encyclopedia - Lethe - The Spirit and River of Forgetfulness -
We should not forget that in the Phaedrus there is the plain of Aletheia or truth. (248b) — Fooloso4
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.