“But surely truth is also something that needs to be taken seriously. Because if we were speaking rightly just now, and a lie by its very nature is useless to gods, though useful to humans in the form of medicine, it’s clear that such a thing needs to be granted to doctors and not handled by laymen.”
“That’s clear,” he said.
“So it’s appropriate for the rulers of the city, if for anyone at all, to lie for the benefit of the city as far as either enemies or citizens are concerned, but for everyone else, such a thing is not to be touched. [389C] But we’ll declare that for a private citizen to lie to the rulers is the same thing, and a greater fault, as for a sick person not to tell the truth about the things happening to his body to a doctor, or someone in training to a trainer, or as for someone who doesn’t tell the helmsman the things that are about the ship or the sailors concerning the way he or any of his shipmates are doing.”
“Most true,” he said. [389D]
“Then if someone catches anyone else in the city lying, Any of those who are workmen for the public,
Prophet or healer of sicknesses or joiner of wood, he’ll punish him for bringing in a practice as subversive and destructive for a city as for a ship.” — Translated by Joe Sachs, Republic, 389B
According to Norman Gulley 'Plato's Theory of Knowledge', Plato introduces the theory of forms and anamnesis (Meno) because of his awareness of the limitations of the Socratic method of questioning, and in the attempt to develop a constructive theory of knowledge. — Wayfarer
Parmenides: Whereas the knowledge in our world will be knowledge of the reality in our world and it will follow again that each branch of knowledge in our world must be knowledge of some department of things that exist in our world.
Socrates: Necessarily.
Parmenides: But, as you admit, we do not possess the forms themselves, nor can they exist in our world.
Socrates: No.
Parmenides: And presumably the forms, just as they are in themselves, are known by the form of knowledge itself?
Socrates: Yes.
Parmenides: The form we do not possess.
Socrates: True.
Parmenides: Then none of the forms is known by us, since we have no part in knowledge itself.
Soc: Apparently not. — Translated by F.M. Cornford
Socrates: I admit that, Parmenides, I quite agree with what you are saying.
Parmenides: But on the other hand, if in view of these difficulties and others like them, if, a man refuses to admit that forms of things exist or to distinguish a definite form in every case, he will have nothing on which to fix his thought, so long as he will not allow that each thing has a character which is always the same, and in so doing he will completely destroy the significance of all discourse. But of that consequence I think you are only too well aware.
Socrates: True. — Ibid
I think it's important to differentiate Plato from gnosticism generally. I don't know that much about it but I do know that Plotinus was opposed to the Gnostics. — Wayfarer
No one has the right to find fault with the constitution of the world for it reveals the greatness of intelligible nature. — Ennead II 9, section 8. Translated by Joeseph Katz
That's basically the same statement as "economy needs growth". Why does capital need investment? To increase it? — Thunderballs
It's a well known "fact": economy needs growth. But what's the thought behind this? — Thunderballs
Just a passing thought; but, if intelligence is what Plato called nous, then is its modern assessment defined by psychometrics testing, as IQ? — Shawn
Why do you conceptualize this as "stupid", and not as confident? — baker
So, not "selective attention" then but traumatically induced inability to attend? — Janus
And never sleeps. — 180 Proof
That's true and yet seems paradoxical in that sleep is the very essence and condition of stupidity. Thus the common injunction "wake up to yourself". Selective attention perhaps? — Janus
What's the best way to learn philosophy?: — DesperateBeing
The primary function of psychiatric labels is that they absolve the "normal" folks from any responsibility for how they treat those on whom they pin those labels. People apparently need freedom like that. — baker
I am not familiar with that work or author, Mr. Valentinus. Is he someone worth reading? — Leghorn
And this relation with God, this more or less close union with Him, we call religion.
Yet what is religion? How does it differ from the religious sense and how are the two related? Every man's definition of religion is based upon his own inner experience of it rather upon his observation of it in others and it is impossible to define it without in one way or another experiencing it. — Unamuno, translated by Anthony Kerrigan
Have some scholars interpreted the metaphor of being led out of the darkness and opinion of the cave into the light of the natural sun as a migration after death into heaven or Hades? I am not familiar with that. — Leghorn
Time is not like a river, or, the metaphor is too narrow. — Constance
One has to step away from normalcy itself, and this is essentially the major Kierkegaardian premise, in order to receive the world in a profound and primordial way. — Constance
Viewed intellectually, the content of freedom is truth, truth makes man free. For this reason, truth is the work of freedom, and in such a way that freedom constantly brings forth truth. Obviously, I am not thinking of the cleverness of the most recent philosophy, which maintains that the necessity of thought is also its freedom, and which therefore, when it speaks about the freedom of thought, speaks only of the immanent movement of eternal thought. Such cleverness can only serve to confuse and to make the communication between men more difficult. On the other hand, what I am speaking about is very plain and simple, namely, that the truth is for the particular individual only as he himself produces it in action. If the truth is for the individual in any other way, or if he prevents the truth from being for him in that way, we have the phenomenon of the demonic. Truth has always had many loud proclaimers, but the question is whether a person will in the deepest sense acknowledge the truth, will allow it to permeate his whole being, will accept all its consequences, and not have an emergency hiding place for himself and a Judas kiss for the consequence.
In modern times, there has been enough talk about truth; now it is high time to vindicate certitude and inwardness, not in the abstract sense in which Fichte uses the word, but in an entirely concrete sense. — Kierkegaard, Concept of Anxiety, IV A404, translated by Reidar Thomte
If an observer will only pay attention to himself, he will have enough with five men, five women, and ten children for the discovery of all possible states of the human soul. What I have to say could have significance, especially for everyone who deals with children or has any relation to them. It is of infinite importance that the child be elevated by the conception of lofty inclosing reserve and saved from the misunderstood types. In an outward respect, it is easy to determine when the moment arrives that one dares to let the child walk alone, in a spiritual respect, the task is very difficult, and one cannot exempt oneself by employing a nursemaid or by buying a walker. The are is that of constantly being present, and yet not being present, so the child may be allowed to develop himself, and at the same time one still has a clear view of the development. The art is to leave the child to himself in the very highest degree and on the greatest possible scale, and to express this apparent relinquishing in such a way that, unnoticed, one is aware of everything. If only one is willing, time for this can very well be found, even though one is a royal officeholder. If one is willing, one can do all things. And the father or the educator who has done everything else for the child entrusted to him, but has failed to prevent him from becoming closed up in his reserve, has at all times incurred a great liability. — Ibid, IV 393
The work of your namesake being a prime victim. — Fooloso4
Some interpreted the Kingdom of Heaven or Kingdom of God as an internal transformation rather than the geo-political transformation envisioned in some messianic views. — Fooloso4
It's been a while since I watched those lectures, but as far as I know they never touch on this specific subject. — Tzeentch
My take on K has reason trying to deal with something entirely outside of reason because reason attempts to embody, encompass, "totalize" the world by bringing all things to heel. — Constance
Your position is that, whoever he was, he was not speaking about or from Judaism. — Valentinus
This is not my position. — Tzeentch