(Phaedo 69 b-c)… maybe this alone is the right coin for virtue, the coin for which all things must be exchanged - phronesis. Maybe this is the genuine coin for which and with which all things must be bought and sold …
(61a)...philosophy is the greatest music.
I reflected that a poet should, if he were really going to be a poet, make stories rather than arguments …
(61b)… being no teller of tales myself, I therefore used some I had ready to hand …”
(90e-91a)“Well,” he said, “first and foremost we should guard carefully against this, and never allow into our souls the notion that no arguments are sound. Instead, it is much better to accept that we are not yet in a sound condition ourselves, and that we should take courage and be eager to attain a sound condition, you and the others, for the sake of the rest of your lives, and I for the sake of death itself.
(91a).I won’t put my heart into making what I say seem to be true to those present, except as a side effect, but into making it seem to be the case to me myself as much as possible.
(91b)For I am calculating - behold how self-servingly!- that if what I’m saying happens to be true, I’m well off believing it; and if there’s nothing at all for one who’s met his end, well then, I’ll make myself so much less unpleasant with lamenting to those who are present during this time, the time before my death.
(91b-91c)You, however, if you take my advice, should pay little regard to Socrates, and much more regard to the truth, and if I actually seem to you to be saying anything true then you should agree, but if not, you should resist with every possible argument, being careful lest in my eagerness I deceive both myself and yourselves at the same time, and depart like a bee leaving my sting behind.
What do you want and expect from philosophy? — Fooloso4
Rather than this leading to nihilistic skepticism, in the absence of knowledge Socrates asks us to consider what it is that is best for us to believe as true. This not for the sake of the truth but for the sake of the soul. — Fooloso4
Socrates never abandons his pursuit of the good.It is not for him an intellectual puzzle to be solved. It is a way of life. The pursuit of the good is good not because the good is something we might discover. The pursuit of the good is ultimately not about knowing the good but about being good. — Fooloso4
I hope philosophy helps me to live less foolishly ...What do you want and expect from philosophy? — Fooloso4
[The] purpose of philosophy, especially for those who recognize that they (we) are congenitally unwise, may be (YMMV) to strive to mitigate, to minimize, the frequency & scope of (our) unwise judgments, conduct, etc via patiently habitualizing various reflective exercises (e.g. dialectics, etc.) And in so far as 'wisdom' denotes mastery over folly & stupidity (i.e. misuses & abuses, respectively, of intelligence, knowledge, judgment, etc), I translate φίλος σοφία as striving against folly & stupidity.
Socrates never abandons his pursuit of the good. It is not for him an intellectual puzzle to be solved. It is a way of life. The pursuit of the good is good not because the good is something we might discover. The pursuit of the good is ultimately not about knowing the good but about being good.
There are things that he thinks it is better to believe to be true even if they are not. The philosopher may object that she is interested in what is true, not in what seems to be true, and certainly not in making it seem to be true. But the truth is, there are things that we do not know to be true. Rather than this leading to nihilistic skepticism, in the absence of knowledge Socrates asks us to consider what it is that is best for us to believe as true. This not for the sake of the truth but for the sake of the soul.
Making philosophical music requires both reason and imagination. Both arguments and stories, including the stories we tell ourselves. Stories come to us chronologically before reasoned arguments and logically after reasoned argument comes to its end. I will end this with another question: Has the philosopher outgrown the need for stories?
become slaves to tradition — Janus
Tradition reflects survivorship bias over centuries or even millennia. People who did not keep them, did not have any progeny, and disappeared in the course of history. — Tarskian
The danger of collapse we face today is on account of overuse of resources and neglect of the biosphere — Janus
:100: :fire:... traditional tropes, such as the Biblical vision of God creating the world for the use of humanity have contributed to this looming crisis.
Our economic system is unsustainable, being predicated on endless growth, with collapse being the only alternative. Nothing to do with tradition, unless you count the tradition amongst economists of discounting ecological costs as a part of the economy. That greater disrupter of tradition, science, has been telling us how wrongheaded this economic thinking in terms of "externalities" is for more than half a century. — Janus
That is what is at stake in pretty much every election on the continent. It is not about to biosphere but about immigration. They do not want to make children but they also do not want to get replaced by people who do. — Tarskian
Making philosophical music requires both reason and imagination. — Fooloso4
But this isn't all Plato is doing. The dialogues aim at different audiences. This is the message to the skeptics. He has other things to say for people who have already started down this road and are ready to hear more. Likewise he has myths like the reincarnation story with the Homeric heroes at the end of the Republic for those who have somewhat "missed the point," but might nonetheless benefit from an edifying story. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I will end this with another question: Has the philosopher outgrown the need for stories? — Fooloso4
How does one know if one is being good if one doesn't know what is good or in what goodness consists? — Count Timothy von Icarus
(Phaedo 97b-d)If then one wished to know the cause of each thing, why it comes to be or perishes or exists, one had to find what was the best way for it to be, or to be acted upon, or to act. On these premises then it befitted a man to investigate only, about this and other things, what is best.
If we are to believe things because doing so will make us better it seems that we need some idea of what "better" consists in. — Count Timothy von Icarus
... being careful lest in my eagerness I deceive both myself and yourselves at the same time, and depart like a bee leaving my sting behind.
The dialogues aim at different audiences. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Perhaps, but when it comes to communicating with one another it seems that Plato thinks we will always need images. — Count Timothy von Icarus
The only alternative to that would be to remain or become slaves to tradition and authority ... — Janus
Just as not everyone agrees on what is the 'Greatest Music' at any given point in their lives...anathema to others. — Fooloso4
(Phaedo 97b-d)
Having some idea of what is better is not knowing what is better. It is an opinion or belief. He could be wrong:
It is the question of what is better that is at issue. It involves deliberation about opinions about what is best
I am at a loss for how the passage you cite is supposed to support your claim. — Count Timothy von Icarus
We don't. Believing one does know when he does not is a problem. — Fooloso4
The question of what is best is inextricably linked to the question of the human good. — Fooloso4
He ultimately writes off the materialists ... — Count Timothy von Icarus
(105b-c)Tell me again from the beginning and do not answer in the words of the question, but do as I do. I say that beyond that safe answer, which I spoke of first, I see another safe answer. If you should ask me what, coming into a body, makes it hot, my reply would not be that safe and ignorant one, that it is heat, but our present argument provides a more sophisticated answer, namely, fire, and if you ask me what, on coming into a body, makes it sick, I will not say sickness but fever. Nor, if asked the presence of what in a number makes it odd, I will not say oddness but oneness, and so with other things.
Ok, is everyone equally likely to be wrong? — Count Timothy von Icarus
Must we be equally skeptical of all claims about what is good? — Count Timothy von Icarus
Might we has well question if this "questioning" really has any value or if it's just a way for egg heads to waste their time? — Count Timothy von Icarus
But such deliberations never move one past a state of skeptical nescience? — Count Timothy von Icarus
What exactly is the benefit of "trying your best" to understand what justice is? — Count Timothy von Icarus
This is what is at issue in the trial of Socrates. Some think that the tension between philosophy and the city remains with us but others think the tension has or can be resolved and that reason and revelation reconciled or that the solution is political tolerance, the separation of church and state. I think tradition is important but that we are not slaves to it as long as we question its authority. Questioning its authority has become part of our tradition. — Fooloso4
Must we be equally skeptical of all claims about what is good? — Count Timothy von Icarus
It may prevent you from acting unjustly or wrongly accusing others of acting unjustly.
If someone claims to know what is the Good, do you know, can you know, that she knows what is the Good?
There seem to be many things that all (or at least most) people take to be good. Does that consensus amount to knowing what is the Good, or what goodness universally consists in, its essence?
What do you want and expect from philosophy? — Fooloso4
What exactly is the benefit of "trying your best" to understand what justice is?
— Count Timothy von Icarus
It may prevent you from acting unjustly or wrongly accusing others of acting unjustly. We act on our limited understanding. What alternative do we have? — Fooloso4
I think tradition is important but that we are not slaves to it as long as we question its authority. Questioning its authority has become part of our tradition.
— Fooloso4
I agree, but I think it depends on what is meant by "tradition". There is the philosophical tradition, then there are the changing, mostly unexamined (until they are) socio-cultural traditions that amount to dogma. — Janus
The Academy aimed to educate individuals not only in intellectual matters but also in moral virtues, aiming to cultivate wise and virtuous leaders. The Academy functioned as a community of scholars engaged in collective study and dialogue. It was not just a place for passive learning but an active intellectual community where ideas were debated and developed. — Wayfarer
Those were the times. Initially, that is one of the reasons I didn't 'take' to Plato and those that followed his tradition. Exclusive and elitist. — Amity
much can be lost by judging the past by today’s standards. — Wayfarer
there is actually quite a strong relationship between traditional philosophy and modern culture. — Wayfarer
I noticed when I studied the so-called ‘traditionalist movement’ in European philosophy, that some of it - Julius Evola being an example - was quite close to fascist in its orientation. — Wayfarer
Evola crafted a more expressly reactionary traditionalism by introducing the gendered and racial dimensions of these oppositions. To Evola, the opposite poles of the social hierarchy were also Aryan and non-Aryan, masculine and feminine, such that an ideal society would not only be theocratic, unequal and hostile to change, but also dominated by Aryan men.
Evola regarded himself as being to the political right of fascism and Nazism, both of which he saw as merely promising starts. He thought fascism represented a step backwards, in a positive sense: a retreat from the brink of mass egalitarian society. If he could only introduce spirituality into Hitler’s and Mussolini’s militarism, perhaps the rewinding of time could be accomplished, and a golden age of theocratic virtue restored. — How a mystical doctrine is reshaping the right - New Statesmen
But Pythagoras was the first person who invented the term
Philosophy, and who called himself a philosopher; when he was conversing
at Sicyon with Leon, who was tyrant of the Sicyonians or of the
Phliasians (as Heraclides Ponticus relates in the book which he wrote
about a dead woman); for he said that no man ought to be called wise,
but only God. For formerly what is now called philosophy (φιλοσοφία) was
called wisdom (σοφία), and they who professed it were called wise men
(σοφοὶ), as being endowed with great acuteness and accuracy of mind; but
now he who embraces wisdom is called a philosopher (φιλόσοφος).
If someone claims to know what is the Good, do you know, can you know, that she knows what is the Good?
I know that if she's a mortal, then she cannot "know" ... — 180 Proof
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