If Plato did excuse sophists and their method as simply misguided or self-delusional, great! It jibes with Socrates' pronouncement that no one is knowingly evil. — Agent Smith
This is another issue, and it really strikes at the heart of Plato's attack on sophistry. Socrates actually demonstrates that people are knowingly evil. We often do what we know is wrong. Augustine discussed this issue, as derived from Plato, at great length. Through this principle Plato demonstrates that virtue is not a form of knowledge. Since the sophists claim to teach virtue as a form of knowledge, and virtue is argued to be distinct from knowledge, sophistry is refuted in this way. — Metaphysician Undercover
This is consistent with what I posted above. The sophists' claim to be able to teach virtue is based in the assumption that they knew virtue, in order to be able to teach it. Socrates demonstrated that they really did not know virtue. So what they taught was really a form of deception, even though they truly believed that they knew virtue, and that they could teach it. — Metaphysician Undercover
How was Plato going to teach people virtue, if virtue isn't something knowable? — Agent Smith
Plato did not claim to teach virtue, the sophists did, and they charged a lot of money for it. — Metaphysician Undercover
Socrates argued that a person could know what is right, but still act contrary to this, and do what is wrong. — Metaphysician Undercover
Look at the difference between your two statements above, "virtue is not knowledge", and "virtue isn't something knowable". The first can be true while the second is false. — Metaphysician Undercover
What did Plato claim to teach with respect to morality? — Agent Smith
How do you explain Socrates' statement that no one knowingly is evil? — Agent Smith
How can we know something that isn't knowledge? — Agent Smith
I don't recall ever coming across, in Plato's writings, a place where he makes explicit claims concerning what he is teaching. — Metaphysician Undercover
persuaded by sophistry — Metaphysician Undercover
The object of knowledge, what is known, is not the subject of knowledge (the thing as it is represented within the knowledge itself). — Metaphysician Undercover
Then how do you know what he didn't teach? — Agent Smith
I'll give you an example of something that's not knowledge, the string of symbols: )^a. This is not a proposition, hence can't be knowledge. How can we know )^a? — Agent Smith
Those were my opinions — Metaphysician Undercover
Got any suggestions? — Metaphysician Undercover
None whatsoever. I thought you would know (better). It's your theory. — Agent Smith
He has made the same claim before, along with the same reluctance to actually support it. — Paine
He has made the same claim before, along with the same reluctance to actually support it. — Paine
Finally, in the Meno the question how virtue is acquired is raised by Meno, a disciple of Gorgias, and an ambitious seeker of power, wealth, and fame. Socrates’ interlocutors are usually at first quite confident about their own competence in the discussion. Nor is such confidence unreasonable. If virtue is a kind of ‘skill’ or special property that enjoys general recognition, its possessor should know and be able to give an account of his skill. As the Socrates’ examinations demonstrate, however, such self-confidence is usually misplaced and the ‘knowledge’ professed by Socrates’ conversation partners is frequently revealed to be at best an implicit familiarity, When they are confronted with their inability to explain the nature of their cherished virtue or expertise, they end up admitting their ignorance, often with considerable chagrin and anger. — https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/plato-ethics/
Evils, Theodorus, can never be done away with, for the good must always have its contrary, nor have they any place the divine world, but they must needs haunt this region of our mortal nature. That is why we should make all speed to take flight from this world to the other, and that means becoming like the divine so far as we can, and that again is to become righteous with the help of wisdom. But it is no easy matter to convince men that the reasons for avoiding wickedness and seeking after goodness are not what the world gives. The right motive is not that one should seem innocent and good--that is no better, to my thinking, than an old wives' tale--but let us state the truth in this way. In the divine there is no shadow of unrighteousness, only the perfection of righteousness, and nothing is more like the divine than any one of us who becomes as righteous as possible. It is here that a man shows his true spirit and power or lack of spirit and nothingness. For to know this is wisdom and excellence of the genuine sort; not to know it is to be manifestly blind and base. All other forms of seeming power and intelligence in the rulers of society are as mean and vulgar as the mechanic's skill in handicraft. If a man's words and deeds are unrighteous and profane, he had best not persuade himself that he is a great man because he sticks at nothing, glorifying in his shame as such men do when they fancy that others say of them, They are no fools, no useless burdens to the earth, but men of the right sort to weather the storms of public life.
Let the truth be told. They are what they fancy they are not, all the more for deceiving themselves, for they are ignorant of the very thing it most concerns them to know--the penalty of injustice. This is not, as they imagine, stripes and death, which do not always fall on the wrongdoer, but a penalty that cannot be escaped. — Plato, Theaetetus, 176a, translated by F.M. Cornford
Evils, Theodorus, can never be done away with — Plato, Theaetetus, 176a, translated by F.M. Cornford
the good must always have its contrary — Plato, Theaetetus, 176a, translated by F.M. Cornford
In the divine there is no shadow of unrighteousness, only the perfection of righteousness, and nothing is more like the divine than any one of us who becomes as righteous as possible. — Plato, Theaetetus, 176a, translated by F.M. Cornford
All other forms of seeming power and intelligence in the rulers of society are as mean and vulgar as the mechanic's skill in handicraft. — Plato, Theaetetus, 176a, translated by F.M. Cornford
deceiving themselves — Plato, Theaetetus, 176a, translated by F.M. Cornford
a penalty that cannot be escaped. — Plato, Theaetetus, 176a, translated by F.M. Cornford
Which planet? — Agent Smith
Sophistry, is it pre-philosophy or post-philosophy? — Agent Smith
The art of contradiction making, descended from an insincere kind of conceited mimicry, fo the semblance-making breed, derived from image making, distinguished as a portion, not divine but human, of production, that presents a shadow play of words---such are the blood and lineage which can, with perfect truth, be assigned to the authentic Sophist.
suffering the cost of not trying — Paine
U's explanation does not touch upon his claim regarding knowingly doing evil. — Paine
for the good must always have its contrary, — Plato, Theaetetus, 176a, translated by F.M. Cornford
The good is shown as the motivation for action, and there is really nothing which is contrary to this. — Metaphysician Undercover
In this way the good is shown to be the cause of existence. — Metaphysician Undercover
(379b)The good is not the source of everything; rather it is the cause of things that are in a good way, while it is not responsible for the bad things.
Sophistry is rather rampant in our society, because mass media and an abundance of information, has turned us all into "know-it-alls", and we will go around showing off our knowledge in subjects which we are really quite ignorant of. — Metaphysician Undercover
What is contrary to this is what prevents the fulfillment of the motivation. We seek the good but if we do not know the good then what we do may be contrary to it. This is the connection between knowledge and virtue. — Fooloso4
Remember, Plato demonstrates that the good cannot be equated with pleasure, by showing how pleasure has an opposing condition, pain, and the good cannot have such an opposite. — Metaphysician Undercover
(103b-c)“… you do not understand the difference between what is said now and what was said then, which was that an opposite thing came from an opposite thing; now we say that the
opposite itself could never become opposite to itself, neither that in us nor that in nature. Then, my friend, we were talking of things that have opposite qualities and naming these after them, but now we say that these opposites themselves, from the presence of which in them things get their name, never can tolerate the coming to be from one another."
And, we see that morality is induced through faith, rather than through knowledge — Metaphysician Undercover
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.