Clearly, he was not such, when he denied the gods. — baker
Can you provide some reference for this? Because it seems to be an awfully modern, self-helpy idea. — baker
I think wisdom would be to be able to behave in line with social norms, but in a way that never results in damage to oneself (and ideally, others), but I don't see how this is possible. — baker
And you never heard about conflicts between parents and children about what to do and not do? — Olivier5
The dialogue is obviously intended to advise its reader, somehow. — Olivier5
Do many "regular guys" in your vicinity put their father on trial for murder? No, @Fooloso4 has the point; your criticism does not stand. — Banno
You implied that there may be an account in which Euthyphro is wise, and ought do as he intends. What is that account? — Banno
I put the start of the war before then. Maybe at the time of the destruction of the Tower of Babel. — Hanover
I'm asking what you think - not Gerson, Rabinowitz and many others. Do you think him wise? — Banno
As for the anti-materialists, they may have no interest in Euthyphro or his father. They may read Plato to gain spiritual knowledge. Therefore, they may take another lead offered by Socrates, viz., that "piety is doing service to the divine" that dwells within the soul, and accordingly turn their attention to the forms that take them to the divine above. — Apollodorus
it is striking that Socrates considers the betrayal of the the father as not warranted by the arguments presented as advancing the desires of particular gods. — Valentinus
So after reading the dialogue, do you think Euthyphro wise? — Banno
if my instincts are correct, mental and form maybe the same thing. — TheMadFool
Euthyphro despite his high opinion of himself is not advanced in wisdom and so should not do what he intends to do. .... Euthyphro, acting without the necessary knowledge of what he is doing, is ignorant of his ignorance. Socrates, knowing he does not know, would not prosecute his own father. He is aware of how corrosive this might be to the city, the family, and the hearth. — Fooloso4
In short, disharmony is the name of the game. — TheMadFool
The form of piety seems indistinguishable from the definition of piety to me. The former is what the latter describes. What, for example, is the difference between the form of a triangle and the definition of a triangle? — TheMadFool
It's simply not the case that an examined life must lead to rational conclusions. One has the option of remaining agnostic. — Banno
Of course, there are those who for reasons of personal disposition feel a need to grasp at an answer - almost any answer - in order to avoid the discomfort of uncertainty. — Banno
When we are grown up, we have personally "abolished our own childhood" so your comparison doesn't work very well. I repeat: new metaphysics often compete with old metaphysics. — Olivier5
Obviously, a new metaphysical message is always a critique of the old one. — Olivier5
Which is why I think it is safe to see all of Plato's dialogue circling around the questions of not just what is right and just for the individual man, or for the gods, but also and most importantly what is just and right for the polis. — Olivier5
the rhetoric about Russia being England's weapon on the mainland suggests a lot of resentment about the UK's stubborn refusal to yield was part of the equation. To Hitler, that probably was a betrayal of their "race" just as the declaration of war over Belgium in WW1. — Echarmion
Maybe I can take that. The end of Euthyphro is best understood as ironical, a tone frequently associated to Socrates. — Olivier5
This is the same game plan the Nazis were working. — Foghorn
The WWII story is a horror show too, so it's not for everybody... — Foghorn
Also true that for things to get done, assuming there's some kind of committee/council of gods, harmony is a must. If not, any plans they have won't see the light of day. — TheMadFool
That is in line with my understanding of Plato. Still can’t say if it *is* the case, but I’d sure like it to be. — Wayfarer
Of the moderns, Lucas, Strentenholz, Beckermeier, Gerd Muller, Kocsis Tibor, Puskas Ocsi, and many others don't believe in god. — god must be atheist
Your argument, my friend, reeks of the fallacy of "appeal to authority". In other words, no. — god must be atheist
Marx, Engels, Lenin, Stalin, Mao, never believed in gods. Sartre and Camus did not believe in gods. Russell forumated the reason why not to believe in gods, or to believe. — god must be atheist
Waitta second. You guys are talking about dougs. Diffenent subject — god must be atheist
are shit-eating gentlemen full of self-confidence. — god must be atheist
Socrates was an atheist. — god must be atheist
Psychoanalysis would simply view your arguments as a confidence in yourself. Are you Islamic or subscribe to no religion? — Gregory
Philosophy! — Gregory
I would say that the arguments against ads are stronger — TheHedoMinimalist
My own view/understanding of god is as an idea. And the only limitation on idea, or ideas that are any good, is that they be not self-contradictory. Seems to me a small requirement. — tim wood
Great! An endorser. Can you resolve the paradoxical nature of Bartricks's explanations? — tim wood
But we can use our intuitions about what it is good for us to do to gain insight into why God allows the immorality, ignorance and suffering gs of the world — Bartricks
If God can commit suicide, then all good can leave reality — Gregory