The Wiki article does not mention a similar concept in Mahayana Buddhism -- upaya, "skillful means". — baker
Morosophos’ argument may be “ad populum”, but the “populum” he cites are respected scholars, interpreters and translators. — Leghorn
Your argument, however, is purely ad hominem: anyone who thinks Plato believed the rulers ought to lie to the people is an anti-Platonist or Straussian, or pro-tyrannical. — Leghorn
But I think the objection is that you're coming across as a conspiracy theorist. — Wayfarer
Platonism is a battlefield for leftists and rightists? That doesn't sound very likely. — frank
Even Lee acknowledges not only that it can be understood in this way but that this should be kept in mind. — Fooloso4
Let's be clear about what he is claiming: — Fooloso4
Let me explain: as political scientists we are interested in political phenomena. But we must also be interested, simultaneously, in the political as political
On the one hand I have cited five contemporary translations that say "lie"
On the other Lee who says it is ambiguous and we should keep in mind that it also means lie. — Fooloso4
Karl Popper accused Plato of trying to base religion on a noble lie as well.
What Apollodorus is proposing is a cultural war against what allows us to have this conversation. — Valentinus
I think it's part of the much broader 'culture war' between scientific secularism and religious belief, — Wayfarer
We see the history of philosophy as the development of Platonism (with a few interesting outliers), followed in the seventeenth century by the beginning of efforts to find some common ground between Platonism and Naturalism, followed in the eighteenth century and then ever after, by the growing dominance of Naturalism ....
I have argued in this book that Proclus's praise of Plotinus as leading the way in the exegesis of the Platonic revelation is essentially correct. Although this is a view shared by scholars of Platonism and by Platonists, too, well into the nineteenth century, it is a view that is today, especially in the English-speaking world, mostly either ridiculed or ignored .... some few scholars have inferred from this fact that the dialogues must therefore not be philosophical writings at all
In what I said there is an implication which I would like to make explicit: Plato never wrote a system of philosophy
The Bailly dictionary uses French terms not available to Plato. Referring to them to resolve the matter is pointless and bizarre. — Valentinus
So which is it? Did he say it or not? Could it be that he said it and did not say it because he said it in an earlier edition? — Fooloso4
Your questions reveal a complete ignorance of how Ancient Greek works as a language. — Valentinus
He translates the term as 'fiction' but points to the fact that the term also means lies, fraud, and deceit. — Fooloso4
Verbs are typically given as first person singular, in the present tense. So ψεύδω, for instance, says "I lie." — Valentinus
ψεῦδος ψεύδεσθαι, 2 sans intention de tromper, erreur, Plat. Rsp. 389 b ; particul. mensonge fait avec l’intention de rassurer une armée, XÉn. Mem. 4, 2, 17 || 3 invention poétique, Pd. P. 2, 68, etc. ; Plut. M. 16 b, etc. ; au plur. Il. 21, 276 ; 23, 576 ; Od. 11, 365 ; 14, 387 ; 19, 203 ; HÉs. O. 25, 78 ; Th. 27 ; Soph. Ph. 831 ; Plat. Theæt. 173 a, etc. || 4 action déguisée, trompeuse, Od. 14, 296 ; particul. ruse de guerre, DS. 20, 17 ; Plut. Sert. 10 ;
The word ψευδομένους is a form of the verb ψεύδω. — Valentinus
LSJ
A v. ψευδής 1.2: (ψεύδω):— falsehood, lie
Bailly abrégé
3 invention poétique;
4 action déguisée, trompeuse ; particul. ruse de guerre.
This is what Lee says:
The Greek word PSEUDOS and its corresponding verb meant not only 'fiction' - stories, tales - but also 'lies' -fraud and deceit: and this ambiguity should be borne in mind. (page 114) — Fooloso4
The Greek word pseudos and its corresponding verb meant not only ‘fiction’ – stories, tales – but also ‘what is not true’ and so, in suitable contexts, ‘lies’: and this ambiguity should be born in mind (p. 387)
You seem unable to bring in an example of any kind to support Lee's interpretation. — Valentinus
That resource uses Liddell and Scott for Ancient Greek. — Valentinus
I cannot find a single entry in Liddell and Scott that even remotely supports Lee's statement. Are Liddell and Scott also "Straussians"? That means the guy was able to travel back in time. — Valentinus
Can you say that you have verified the authenticity of the translation you quoted, from your own intimacy with Plato’s Greek? — Leghorn
Prove that claim, with examples to support the opinion. — Valentinus
The Greek word pseudos and its corresponding verb meant not only ‘fiction’ – stories, tales – but also ‘what is not true’ and so, in suitable contexts, ‘lies’: and this ambiguity should be born in mind [377a] … English cannot keep the ambiguity, but the reader should remember that a single Greek word lies behind the two words used in this passage [382d]
Compare the 'edifying tale' with the Buddhist conception of Upaya — Wayfarer
You might want to deal with our ugly history and immediate problems, instead of staying within a religious fantasy. — Athena
Soon afterwards, Glaucon says, “How like a man hesitant to speak you are,” (Bloom translation), but in reading the Bloom translation, we cannot understand this response, for his translation reads “noble lie” for “gennaion ti”. He should have written instead, “noble thing”. This would have better, and more faithfully to the Greek, conveyed Socrates’ hesitancy. — Leghorn
But I wonder how much of that interpretation is being driven by your own philosophical commitments? — Wayfarer
‘Now I wonder if we could contrive one of those convenient stories we were talking about a few minutes ago, I asked, ‘some magnificent myth that would in itself carry conviction to our whole community, including, if possible, the Guardians themselves?’
‘What sort of story?’
‘Nothing new – a fairy story like those the poets tell and have persuaded people to believe about the sort of thing that often happened “once upon a time”
Does anyone know where Plato said:
"The noble lie will inform them that they are better than those they serve and it is, therefore, their responsibility to guard and protect those lesser than themselves"?
This quote is in the article, but with "citation needed." I've been searching for a few hours, and I can't find it. I emailed a professor of ancient philosophy, and he denied that Plato ever said it. This is mind boggling because hundreds of websites and articles attribute this to Plato, but none can specify where in the Republic. Perhaps we should remove it from the article? Lumentenebra (talk) 20:05, 5 March 2010 (UTC)
However, that does not make Christianity God's truth. It is not a revealed religion but the work of many minds building on stories others have told. — Athena
Christianity went through a period of clarifying its theology and rejecting anything that was pagan. That is when it went into the Dark Age. — Athena
Why single out the Christians? Because they rebelled against the law and gave us a different truth from the revealed religion the Jews followed. — Athena
To say science reemerged in a Christian society seems to deny what the rest of the world achieved and what the achievements of others has to do with the advancements that the west made. — Athena
Jews became the money dealers so Christians didn't have to get their hands dirty. You know a lot so perhaps you know of the history of which I speak? — Athena
It's not just one intellectual, it's the whole cosmopolitan intelligentsia, and the thrust of modern academia generally, particularly in the English-speaking world. — Wayfarer
This is his [Socrates'] noble lie: "a contrivance for one of those falsehoods that come into being in case of need, of which we were just now talking, some noble one...”
They are promoting Islam lite, offering a point of contact between Western culture (soap operas depicting romance, personal and family tribulations) and Muslim culture (those tribulations are effectively addressed within the Muslim religious context, wjhich can nevertheless be made to appear secular enough). — baker
Each one hopes that if he feeds the crocodile enough, the crocodile will eat him last. All of them hope that the storm will pass before their turn comes to be devoured. But I fear greatly that the storm will not pass. It will rage and it will roar ever more loudly, ever more widely.
The idea of something existing “outside of space and time” makes empiricists nervous — Wayfarer
γενναῖόν τι ἓν ψευδομένους πεῖσαι μάλιστα μὲν καὶ αὐτοὺς τοὺς ἄρχοντας, εἰ δὲ μή, τὴν ἄλλην πόλιν
Forms, ideas, numbers, principles and so on, are not 'existent things', they're not 'out there somewhere'. Rather they are better thought of as constitutive elements of reason. But they're also not simply subjective or a product of the mind — Wayfarer
Plato has been criticized for his Foundation Myth as if it were a calculated lie. That is partly because the phrase here translated ‘magnificent myth’ (p. 145) has been conventionally mistranslated ‘noble lie’; and this has given rise to the idea that Plato countenances political propaganda of the most unscrupulous kind. In fact, as Cornford points out, the myth is accepted by all three classes, Guardians included. It is meant to replace the national traditions which any community has, which are intended to express the kind of community it is, or wishes to be, its ideals, rather than to state matters of fact. And one of Plato’s criticisms of democracy was, in effect, that it was government by propaganda, telling the right lie to the people (cf. p. 263).
You will not be able, dear Glaucon, to follow me further, though on my part there will be no lack of goodwill. And, if I could, I would show you, no longer an image and symbol of my meaning, but the very truth, as it appears to me—though whether rightly or not I may not properly affirm. But that something like this is what we have to see, I must affirm. Is not that so?” “Surely.” “And may we not also declare that nothing less than the power of dialectics could reveal this, and that only to one experienced in the studies we have described, and that the thing is in no other wise possible?” “That, too,” he said, “we may properly affirm.” (533a)
I find it annoying when women seem to think so highly of themselves when in truth they don't look that great in my opinion. — TiredThinker
It's odd that people say things like, "you have the brains, use it" but never in my life (never say never) have I heard someone say, "you're beautiful, use it." — TheMadFool
Is it said that the forms are the subject of such a ‘noble lie’? If they are so central to Plato’s philosophy, that would be unlikely, wouldn’t it? — Wayfarer
The tendency to facilitate the apprehension of the idea of Good is to be found in all studies that force the soul to turn its vision round to the region where dwells the most blessed part of reality, which it is imperative that it should behold (Rep. 526e)
It [the study of geometry, etc.] would tend to draw the soul to truth, and would be productive of a philosophic attitude of mind, directing upward the faculties that now wrongly are turned earthward (527b)
It is indeed no trifling task, but very difficult to realize that there is in every soul an organ or instrument of knowledge that is purified and kindled afresh by such studies when it has been destroyed and blinded by our ordinary pursuits, a faculty whose preservation outweighs ten thousand eyes; for by it only is reality beheld. Those who share this faith will think your words superlatively true. But those who have and have had no inkling of it will naturally think them all moonshine. For they can see no other benefit from such pursuits worth mentioning (527d-e).
Is this noesis? — Shawn
that's what I thought I said. — Wayfarer
If anyone committed heresy it was the Christians! I think Christians have some gall to create a new "revealed religion" and pick and choose what they wanted from the revealed religion of Jews and then say the Muslims committed heresy because the Muslims did the same thing the Christians did. — Athena
But if you back each other against him, then verily, Allah is his Mawla (Lord, Master, Protector), and Gabriel and the righteous of the believers and the angels, moreover, are his helpers.” (Al-Tahrim 66:4)
Narrated Omar:
“Once the wives of the Prophet made a united front against the Prophet and I said to them, 'It may be if he (the Prophet) divorced you, his Lord (Allah) will give him instead of you wives better than you.' So this verse (the same as I had said) was revealed." (Sahih al-Bukhari 8.402)
So while you might want to give Christians credit for the wisdom of pagan civilizations, only by eliminating facts can this be done. — Athena
Here I think you're confusing intellect and imagination. — Wayfarer
For surely, the man whose mind is truly fixed on eternal realities has no leisure to turn his eyes downward upon the petty affairs of men, and so engaging in strife with them to be filled with envy and hate, but he fixes his gaze upon the things of the eternal and unchanging order, and seeing that they neither wrong nor are wronged by one another, but all abide in harmony as reason bids, he will endeavor to imitate them and, as far as may be, to fashion himself in their likeness and assimilate himself to them (Rep. 500b-c).