My point was that politics and religion were intertwined in many complex ways, including in this case. — Olivier5
Socrates' teaching was subversive. — Olivier5
They don't want him to train yet another generation of kids who would start to doubt the wisdom of their fathers and make not-so-funny revolutions. — Olivier5
As already stated — Apollodorus
I agree with you that the dialogues stand on their own, but I don't think we can diagnose the metaphysics of either Socrates or Plato based on them. — frank
Do you think it's possible to admire both Plato and Nietszche? — Wayfarer
I am complete skeptic when it comes to Plato (Twilight of the Idols, "What I Owe to the Ancients")
So, you surmise that the lesson is that nobody makes 'the rough and steep ascent' and 'sees the light' (516b)? — Wayfarer
But true, there are several centuries between Plato and Plotinus. — frank
I take Gerson's view (and that of Platonists themselves) that there is only one Platonic or Platonist system (with some variations) stretching from Plato to the present. — Apollodorus
I don't necessarily agree with fooloso4's interpretation, but I also don't feel the same compulsion to take issue with it. — Wayfarer
It can be a dialogue, where different contributors advance different interpretations which are considered on their merits. — Wayfarer
That is an interpretation made in hindsight, through the lens of later interpretations and cultural syncretism. — Wayfarer
that would be a thread about 'later developments in Christian platonism', not about this particular dialogue. — Wayfarer
one has to steep oneself in Plato and get, if possible, the pattern, the 'feel' of his mind. — Rafael Demos
Sadly, I think this once again shows how fanaticism prevents you from seeing your total lack of logic. — Apollodorus
The ultimate cause of everything is the Universal Consciousness or Cosmic Intellect (Nous). — Apollodorus
That doesn't "ban the Gods — Apollodorus
But Plato doesn’t say there should be no Gods, he only says that human misunderstandings and misrepresentations of the Gods should not be allowed. — Apollodorus
“The true quality of God we must always surely attribute to him whether we compose in epic, melic, or tragic verse.” “We must.” “And is not God of course good in reality and always to be spoken of as such?” (379a). — Apollodorus
Then is the god really good, and hence, must he be said to be so? (379a)
Think of monistic idealism, and you will see how everything makes sense. — Apollodorus
"he says it but he is hiding it" — Apollodorus
Writers in the 1930's were too heavily influenced by Marxism and Fabian Socialism to be capable of objective analysis. — Apollodorus
Their main objective was to deconstruct tradition to make place for "progress" — Apollodorus
I've already told you why. Because Plato's monistic idealism believes in the Universal Consciousness, Cosmic Intellect (Nous) or Mind of God, as the cause of everything including the Gods. — Apollodorus
In the Phaedrus, [Plato] makes Socrates maintain that a word, “once it is written, is tossed about, alike among those who understand and those who have no business with it, and it knows not to whom to speak or not to speak” (275d9-e3).
But this association with Christianity also colors or narrows our view of what religion is, in that depicting Plato's dialogues in those terms associates it with just the kind of dogma which Plato abhorred. — Wayfarer
His motivation in philosophy was in part to achieve a kind of understanding that would connect him (and therefore every human being) to the whole of reality – intelligibly and if possible satisfyingly. — Thomas Nagel, Secular Philosophy and the Religious Temperament
Again: Plato was not an atheist. Period. — frank
That's exactly what I'm saying. You can't say anything but are still talking. — Apollodorus
mysterious extensive literature" — Apollodorus
By the same token, you have demonstrated your inability to see what I and most people see, which is that Plato's writings teach a form of monistic idealism, not atheism — Apollodorus
And since you are unable or unwilling to say what the author is "hiding" — Apollodorus
Indeed, you can't say anything because according to you, "Plato says nothing and Socrates knows nothing". — Apollodorus
You haven't even shown that "in the Republic he banishes the gods from the just city and replaces them with Forms". — Apollodorus
Extensive or not, if Plato says nothing, then the literature on it can hardly be anything more than mere speculation .... — Apollodorus
feel free to provide evidence for that. — Apollodorus
Although “hidden”, it’s “all there for all to see”. — Apollodorus
But you refuse to say what it is that the author is hiding. — Apollodorus
And yet you insists that you are right and get upset when others ask you a simple question .... — Apollodorus
You cite Leibniz and Warburton as your "evidence" for Plato's teachings even though according to you, "Plato says nothing", etc., etc. — Apollodorus
So, you are not talking about your arguments but about the arguments "in the dialogues". — Apollodorus
In your opinion, what exactly do the arguments in the dialogues lead to? — Apollodorus
You seem to have some kind of fixation with "chanting incantations". — Apollodorus
The consensus as shown by mainstream sources like Wikipedia is that Plato taught monistic idealism. — Apollodorus
Who would you like me to read instead? — Apollodorus
So, we are back to square one then. If it is "there for all to see", why don't you tell us in plain English what it is? — Apollodorus
Plato never says anything. — Apollodorus
The only thing that Socrates says is that he knows nothing. — Apollodorus
If Plato says nothing and Socrates says he knows nothing, then on what basis do you claim to know that Plato doesn't teach monistic idealism? — Apollodorus
What "argument"? — Apollodorus
As I said many times before I have absolutely nothing against your interpretation. — Apollodorus
I'm simply asking you to provide some evidence to prove that your interpretation is correct. — Apollodorus
You're talking about me getting "tired" but I think it's rather you who is getting tired and it's still early in the morning. — Apollodorus
And it is incorrect to claim that Socrates was convicted of "atheism" when the charge was "introducing new deities". — Apollodorus
Monistic idealism — Apollodorus
I think the reverse is true. It is you who is not following the argument — Apollodorus
You have admittedly failed to prove your theory ... — Apollodorus
I disagree. A true zealot is always full of energy and inspiration and never tires. — Apollodorus
Why did you start this thread? — Apollodorus
He doesn't "banish the Gods" at all. He was discussing a hypothetical situation. — Apollodorus
You can't say "Plato secretly taught atheism" and at the same time claim that "he openly preached atheism in his dialogues". — Apollodorus
Plato taught monistic idealism — Apollodorus
Not at all, I demonstrated quite clearly, I think, that Plato's dialogues logically lead to monistic idealism which is the accepted scholarly position. — Apollodorus
we must follow the argument wherever, like a wind, it may lead us (Republic 394d).
The Forms are metaphysical realities in the Cosmic Intellect or Universal Consciousness (Nous). — Apollodorus
And Socrates was not accused or tried for "atheism" but for irreverence on the grounds that he was trying to introduce "new deities". — Apollodorus
His thought, just like Anaxagoras' or others', was an irruption of a more universal world view into the little parochial cultural life of Athens, an irruption made possible by contacts with the Persian empire. In the historical context, his thought was disruptive and innovative. Almost foreign. — Olivier5
No need whatsoever. — Apollodorus
What I said is that Plato never speaks in the dialogues
— Fooloso4
And that "proves" he was an atheist? By what logical reasoning??? — Apollodorus
At the point that you suggested that we're looking at Socrates rather than Plato because Plato doesn't speak much in the dialogues, I stopped paying attention to anything you said. — frank
I stopped paying attention to anything you said. — frank
