• 180 Proof
    15.3k
    I despair of the American situation. And can only hope that Trump doesn't win again. It doesn't bear thinking about...Amity
    It doesn't, but the thought haunts me.

    It's strange but when I read 'Socratic philosopher', I was thinking of Stoicism. I wouldn't say I am a 'Stoic philosopher' but I adopted the perspective.Amity
    Maybe that's because Stoicism is, putting it simplistically, the Socratic method applied covertly (or strategically) to practical / political life. 'Radically moderate' yet effective. Unapplied, however, elenchus is mostly therapeutic (e.g. (late) Wittgenstein).
  • Fooloso4
    6k
    To question is also to challenge the status quo.Amity

    That is true. Socrates does question in order to challenge.

    In the interpretive tradition of the Midrash, questioning is a mode of understanding. This may come as a surprise to those who have been taught not to question scripture.

    The Stoics revered Socrates, but that Socrates wasn't the Socrates of Plato.

    From Cicero:

    But Socrates was the first who brought down philosophy from the heavens, placed it in cities, introduced it into families, and obliged it to examine into life and morals, and good and evil. And his different methods of discussing questions, together with the variety of his topics, and the greatness of his abilities, being immortalized by the memory and writings of Plato, gave rise to many sects of philosophers of different sentiments, of all which I have principally adhered to that one which, in my opinion, Socrates himself followed; and argue so as to conceal my own opinion ...
    (Tusculan Disputations, Book V, IV)
  • Fooloso4
    6k
    Whose words are they? Second-hand Socrates? Who is the audience and how will they be persuaded by whatever message the author is attempting to convey.Amity

    Some of the myths are probably Plato's own, but Socrates credits the ancients of different cultures. Some take themes, such as the afterlife and recollection, which Socrates says are hearsay., that is, things he has heard but has no first hand experience of. I think this relates to the question of who the audience is. The philosopher who desires the truth will not take these stories as true, but as part of her education they may be suitable.
  • Paine
    2.4k
    I wonder what words he used so that you felt his nostalgia?Amity

    That is an interesting question. It is easy when pointing at large mythological elements. I will have to think about it as related to more subtle themes. I am not trying to argue for that against other readings of the text.
  • Amity
    5k
    I recently re-read the Sophist and was struck at how Plato expressed a kind of nostalgia in his writing of the dialogue. The literary device of the Stranger is a reflective view of previous work in many ways.Paine

    I wonder what words he used so that you felt his nostalgia?
    — Amity

    That is an interesting question.
    Paine

    After I asked the question, I thought it might not be in the words but the gaps between. Any silence. Or change in tone that you picked up on.
    Perhaps it was simply the change of perspective; a different literary device and way to look at Socrates and his place in Plato.

    Another interesting question is: What do you think Plato was nostalgic for? Has his life changed so much from the early days. As a student of Socrates. The arguments they might have had. What Socrates would think of the progress of his student and how he is being used. Even if it means that without Plato, his story might have been lost? Did Plato feel closer to the spirit of Socrates in the early dialogues?

    I found an article which doesn't answer my questions but deals with nostalgia, images and words:
    https://www.oxfordpublicphilosophy.com/two/plato-poetry-nostalgia

    Plato purports, in his dialogues, to develop a new, intellectually hygienic genre of writing: dialectic. Where poetry acts as a pharmakon -- a kind of intellectual toxin, or drug, that makes us sleepy and forgetful, dialectic wakes us up. But the Socratic dialogue is an overtly theatrical form, blending comedic and tragic elements.Plato, poetry, and nostalgia - Oxford public philosophy

    The article addresses fascinating issues lightly and creatively. We fall into Lucy in Narnia. Then, Annie Dillard’s, Pilgrim at Tinker Creek, the narrator greedily recites accounts given of and by patients who, having spent their lives blinded by cataracts, become suddenly sighted:
    'Instead of a “dazzle of colour patches” she sees peaches. The colour patches seem lost forever. She mourns. “I cannot unpeach the peaches”.

    It made me wonder more about Plato the man and the way he used his creative energies. Perhaps, the obsession with Socrates and political philosophy meant he denied his own poetry and self-expression. Creating stories of magic. But then again...priorities, priorities...promotion of philosophy.
    The never-ending story...pathways and interpretations.

    Most significant, perhaps, is Plato’s choice of mouthpiece, Socrates. Plato’s dialogues do not mark Socrates’ debut as a literary character. The philosopher was something of a stock figure in Athenian comedy, and Socrates appeared on the stage cast in this mould, most famously, as a fraudulent crank in Aristophanes’ satire, Clouds. Plato could have channeled his philosophy through a figure of his own making. But he didn’t; instead, he chose a figure with a literary hinterland.

    It was more than this. There was a special love and closeness...and a need to defend; to carry on and support ideas in new ways.
    Also, grief and loss to be filled. I like to think so, anyway...but my imagination carries me away...
  • Amity
    5k
    The philosopher who desires the truth will not take these stories as true, but as part of her education they may be suitable.Fooloso4

    Well. I really don't know how to respond to this. It depends on what you mean by 'the philosopher'.
    What variety? I don't think of myself as a 'philosopher' but someone who enjoys different aspects. Of? Yes, its stories. All concerning life as we know it, even if we can't grasp it all.

    Any story can be an 'education'. A way to learn about self and others - we create our own and share.
    As to 'suitability' who is the judge? It isn't always about a desire for truth, is it? I really don't find it easy to talk about the Big Truth or little truths as something to aim for.
  • Amity
    5k
    From Cicero:

    But Socrates was the first who brought down philosophy from the heavens, placed it in cities, introduced it into families, and obliged it to examine into life and morals, and good and evil. And his different methods of discussing questions, together with the variety of his topics, and the greatness of his abilities, being immortalized by the memory and writings of Plato, gave rise to many sects of philosophers of different sentiments, of all which I have principally adhered to that one which, in my opinion, Socrates himself followed; and argue so as to conceal my own opinion ...
    (Tusculan Disputations, Book V, IV)
    Fooloso4

    Yes, thanks for the quote. Have you read all of the Tusculan Disputations?

    I searched for the context and found this:
    https://www.attalus.org/info/tusculan.html
    'Cicero's Tusculan Disputations, written in 45 B.C., is a discussion of various topics that had been explored by Greek philosophers. It takes the form of conversations at Cicero's Tusculan villa.
    The dialogue is split into five books, and links to the translation of each part of these books can be found in the following table:'
    Easy to find Book 5. From section 4:

    [...] But numbers and motions, and the beginning and end of all things, were the subjects of the ancient philosophy down to Socrates, who was a pupil of Archelaus, who had been the disciple of Anaxagoras. These made diligent inquiry into the magnitude of the stars, their distances, courses, and all that relates to the heavens. But Socrates was the first who brought down philosophy from the heavens, placed it in cities, introduced it into families, and obliged it to examine into life and morals, and good and evil.

    It continues:

    I have sent you a book of the four former days' discussions; but the fifth day, when we had seated ourselves as before, what we were to dispute on was proposed thus:-

    [5.] [12] A. I do not think virtue can possibly be sufficient for a happy life.

    M. But my friend Brutus thinks so, whose judgment, with submission, I greatly prefer to yours.

    A. I make no doubt of it; but your regard for him is not the business now; the question is now what is the real character of that quality of which I have declared my opinion. I wish you to dispute on that.

    M. What! do you deny that virtue can possibly be sufficient for a happy life?

    A. It is what I entirely deny.

    M. What! is not virtue sufficient to enable us to live as we ought, honestly, commendably, or, in fine, to live well?

    A. Certainly sufficient.

    M. Can you, then, help calling anyone miserable, who lives ill? or will you deny that anyone who you allow lives well, must inevitably live happily?
    Cicero - Tusculan Disputations,

    I didn't read much more but can only wonder at this seeming continuation. Is it a form of nostalgia?
    Distinguished, exclusive male followers of Socrates. In a different time and setting but still same old concerns? Would you have loved to have been there?
  • Amity
    5k
    Maybe that's because Stoicism is, putting it simplistically, the Socratic method applied covertly (or strategically) to practical / political life. 'Radically moderate' yet effective. Unapplied, however, elenchus is mostly therapeutic (e.g. (late) Wittgenstein).180 Proof

    Perhaps so. I don't know. But I think Stoicism is not just one thing. It grew and split as so many do. Ideas transplanted into other fields like psychology and CBT. Therapy via logic and reasoning.
    Just as Wittgenstein moved on. I haven't read much of him - don't know of any therapeutic effect.

    Edit to add:
    I've since scanned the Quietism article you linked to:
    Quietism in philosophy sees the role of philosophy as broadly therapeutic or remedial.[1] Quietist philosophers believe that philosophy has no positive thesis to contribute; rather, it defuses confusions in the linguistic and conceptual frameworks of other subjects, including non-quietist philosophy.[2] For quietists, advancing knowledge or settling debates (particularly those between realists and non-realists)[3] is not the job of philosophy, rather philosophy should liberate the mind by diagnosing confusing concepts. [...]

    Contemporary discussion of quietism can be traced back to Ludwig Wittgenstein, whose work greatly influenced the ordinary language philosophers. While Wittgenstein himself did not advocate quietism, he expressed sympathy with the viewpoint.
    Wiki - Quietism

    Perhaps philosophy is good at 'diagnosing confusing concepts' but not sure that this has liberated the mind. It seems any untanglements simply lead to more, no? Even adding to the problem...with different interpretations and neologisms...more 'isms'.
  • Paine
    2.4k

    Thank you for the article. The play of tragic and comedic elements is important in Plato's work and life. I will try to address that later as I need to do chores soon. But I will say something quickly about the interesting idea of a denial of self-expression that Fraser brings forward.

    The absence of Plato in the dialogues amongst people he lived with has a weird narrative effect. He is present throughout but hiding at the same time. In the Phaedo, the device is performed in front of us like a magic act. It is as if I handed you a photo album of my life events and you discover that I have used scissors to remove my image whenever I am in the shot.

    Nostalgia must be involved but it does not give the Proustian vibe of 'remembrance of things past'.

    Now to chores. My wife is asking for a greater display of practical reason over the theoretical for the coming week.
  • Amity
    5k
    My wife is asking for a greater display of practical reason over the theoretical for the coming week.Paine

    Sounds like she is applying the art and science of practical wisdom.

    Not in any sense a 'nag' or jealous shrew as poor Xanthippe is sometimes depicted.

    From https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xanthippe

    It is only in Xenophon's Symposium where Socrates agrees that she is (in Antisthenes' words) "the hardest to get along with of all the women there are."[7] Nevertheless, Socrates adds that he chose her precisely because of her argumentative spirit:

    It is the example of the rider who wishes to become an expert horseman: "None of your soft-mouthed, docile animals for me," he says; "the horse for me to own must show some spirit" in the belief, no doubt, if he can manage such an animal, it will be easy enough to deal with every other horse besides. And that is just my case. I wish to deal with human beings, to associate with man in general; hence my choice of wife. I know full well, if I can tolerate her spirit, I can with ease attach myself to every human being else.[8] [...]

    In his essay "The Case for Xanthippe" (1960), Robert Graves suggested that the stereotype of Xanthippe as a misguided shrew is emblematic of an ancient struggle between masculinity (rationality, philosophy) and femininity (intuition, poetry), and that the rise of philosophy in Socrates' time has led to rationality and scientific pursuit coming to exercise an unreasonable dominance over human life and culture.
  • 180 Proof
    15.3k
    Here are brief articles which summarize my understanding of 'philosophy as therapy' beginning with the Socratic method in (early) Plato's Dialogues, followed later by the Pyrrhonian epoché (re: undecidable statements (e.g. metaphysics, theology, ethics)) ... and reimagined explicitly via Wittgenstein's clarification of latent nonsense inherent in meta-discourses (early) and then more broadly as descriptions of conceptual confusions as symptoms of philosophers' misuses of everyday language (late)):

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quietism_(philosophy)

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Therapeutic_approach

    My point is, Amity, that 'rigorous conceptual clarification' (i.e. dialectics / therapy) is only a means and not the end (which is, imo, 'eudaimonic praxis') of Stoicism; thus, the Stoic philosopher reminds us, in part, of (Plato's early) Socrates. No doubt others will take issue with this sketchy interpretation; hopefully, however, the above is informative enough to point you in a fruitful direction.

    NB: I do not consider myself a 'philosophical quietist / therapist' (even though I agree with Witty that philosophy is not theoretical (i.e. doesn't explain matters of fact) – that, for me, it's only reflectively hermeneutic-pragmatic (Epicurus ... Spinoza ... Hume ... Peirce-Dewey ...)).
  • Amity
    5k

    Thanks for this. I had just returned and edited my original request to be given a 'direction'. It seemed lazy of me. Our posts crossed and I'm glad you posted your thoughts. It is indeed informative and I will take time to read... hopefully to improve my understanding.

    NB: I do not consider myself a 'philosophical quietist / therapist' (even though I agree with Witty that philosophy is not theoretical (i.e. doesn't explain matters of fact) – that, for me, it's only reflectively hermeneutic-pragmatic (Epicurus ... Spinoza ... Hume ... Peirce-Dewey ...)).180 Proof

    OK...'only' that, huh?! Sounds good to me :cool: and quite the journey...
  • Fooloso4
    6k
    It depends on what you mean by 'the philosopher'.Amity

    I mean the philosopher in the context of the education of the philosopher in the Republic.

    It isn't always about a desire for truth, is it? I really don't find it easy to talk about the Big Truth or little truths as something to aim for.Amity

    I think Nietzsche points in the right direction:

    He identifies three deadly truths:

    ... the doctrines of sovereign becoming, of the fluidity of all concepts, types and species, of the lack of any cardinal distinction between man and animals
    (Nietzsche, Untimely Meditations)

    These doctrines are the antithesis of what are often regarded as key Platonic doctrines based on immutable kinds or forms, which are key to the education of philosopher.

    It is not simply that we do not always desire the truth, but that certain truths should be hidden, because they can be harmful.

    That these truths are deadly may seem odd to us because:

    “No one dies of fatal truths nowadays: there are too many antidotes.” (Nietzsche, Human, All Too Human: A Book for Free Spirits)

    That anything should remain hidden seems to us antithetical to free and open inquiry. But free and open inquiry is not value neutral. Plato's noble lies are not simply a political expedient. We have paid a price for "deadly truth". That what was long held out as the truth may not be the truth is a hard truth to accept. It can leave us rudderless.

    On the question of the philosopher Nietzsche says:

    The real philosophers, however, are commanders and law-givers ...
    (BGE 211)

    Accordingly, most who study and write on philosophy are not philosophers. He reserves the title for the rare, exception individuals who shape and determine our lives.


    Have you read all of the Tusculan Disputations?Amity

    Most of it I have not read.

    Is it a form of nostalgia?Amity

    I think the last line I quoted is important:

    ... and argue so as to conceal my own opinion ...
  • Amity
    5k

    Thanks for the clarification and context of 'the philosopher'.

    I really don't understand Nietzsche's identification of 3 truths, deadly or otherwise:
    He identifies three deadly truths:

    ... the doctrines of sovereign becoming, of the fluidity of all concepts, types and species, of the lack of any cardinal distinction between man and animals
    (Nietzsche, Untimely Meditations)

    These doctrines are the antithesis of what are often regarded as key Platonic doctrines based on immutable kinds or forms, which are key to the education of philosopher.
    Fooloso4

    How is that pointing in the right direction?
    You would need to spell this out before I might appreciate the difference. Otherwise I would need to read and I'm not tempted to read N. especially when he says this:

    The real philosophers, however, are commanders and law-givers ...
    (BGE 211)

    Accordingly, most who study and write on philosophy are not philosophers. He reserves the title for the rare, exception individuals who shape and determine our lives.
    Fooloso4

    The talk of 'real philosophers' suggests that is a 'truth' for him. It doesn't make sense to me and sounds provocative. However, it would be wrong and stupid of me to judge by only reading snippets of his thoughts.

    I'm surprised that you haven't read all of the Disputations - where's your dedication, man? :wink:

    I think the last line I quoted is important:

    ... and argue so as to conceal my own opinion ...
    Fooloso4

    Yes, I wondered at that. I'm aware that these politically and philosophically motivated men lived in dangerous times. They witnessed how Socrates paid the ultimate price. So many philosophers wrote in ways to hide their identity and been quite creative in keeping alive. Until...
    Is that what you meant?
  • Fooloso4
    6k
    How is that pointing in the right direction?Amity

    In the Republic the education of the philosopher consists of gymnastics and music. That music is in large part appropriate stories. This education does not include philosophy. That comes later for those few with the right temperament and maturity. The developmental stages do not include the quest for the truth. The "truth" as it is given moves from stories to mathematics, from what is told to them as true to what can be demonstrated as true.

    Our relation to the truth has changed. This is reflected in your statement:

    I really don't find it easy to talk about the Big Truth or little truths as something to aim for.Amity

    And so, your question:

    It isn't always about a desire for truth, is it?Amity

    is not so simple. Whether or not we might think the truth is or is not preferable, we do not have a choice, unless perhaps we live in a closed, sheltered society.

    The talk of 'real philosophers' suggests that is a 'truth' for him.Amity

    We might look at this in different ways. As a truth for him, this might be regarded as merely his perspective, no more or less true than others. But perspectives are for him of great importance and not to be dismissed simply as one way of seeing things rather than some alternative. Perspectivism is additive. Not a matter of either this one or that one, but of what can be gained from seeing things this way or that way or this way and that way.

    We need to consider what he means when he says that real philosophers are commanders and law-givers and whether or not it is true. It is in this way not simply a truth for him. In order to test this we need to look at how certain thinkers and ideas have influenced the way we think, what we believe, and how we live.

    In so far as he intends to influence the philosophers who come after him, we might regard this as the story he tells them. If they are to be philosophers, what are their responsibilities to others both now and in the future? If, to use Plato's imagery, they are to be puppet-masters and opinion makers, what stories are they to tell?

    where's your dedication, man?Amity

    I have limited time and energy. I am not sure where I will spend it, but it probably will not with Cicero.

    Is that what you meant?Amity

    Yes. I don't think the need to hide, however, is for us at this moment something necessary, but that may change in the next few years.
  • Paine
    2.4k

    I am the hysterical side of the partnership. The one who has to be talked down from quitting out of anger, getting into needless conflicts, or arrested. Still a work in progress. No complaints here.
  • Amity
    5k
    I am the hysterical side of the partnership. The one who has to be talked down from quitting out of anger, getting into needless conflicts, or arrestedPaine

    Thanks for the insight into part of your life.

    Use of the word 'hysterical' bothered me a little, given its medical history. In ancient Greece, hysteria (Hysterikos) was thought to be a woman's disease, related to the womb. Later (17th century) the emphasis moved to the brain and a disorder of the nervous system, also affecting men. Emotions became relevant; passions arising in the brain, not 'vapours'.
    https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/B9780128017722000011

    It occurred to me that if the aim of Plato/Socrates is for us to lead the best life, wellbeing clearly involves health, food and medicine, why is the focus more on concepts and character. What 'the philosopher' should be.

    If we practise philosophy why would we need someone to talk us down or out of anger and its effects.
    Wouldn't it be wonderful if we could take the heat out of America. What would it take?

    We need to do all we can to lower the anger pervading American politics
    Robert Reich

    Trump’s messages to his followers during this election season has had a constant undercurrent of violence
    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/article/2024/jul/17/trump-campaign-martyrdom

    It's all very well diagnosing the problem, but where are the positive, political healers - words are empty without action. Where to start? With yourself? Change the diet?

    Back to Socrates, then, and his last words. What did they mean?

    Crito, we owe a cock to Asklepios - Pay it and do not neglect it.

    Plato’s dialogues show that Socrates saw Asklepios as more worthy of emulation than the warlike gods of the state-supported Greek pantheon.
    While dying from the executioner’s hemlock, Socrates asks his friend Crito to pay the traditional thank offering given to the physician-god: a cock symbolizing rebirth. He looks to the only god then known to revive the dead to help his ideas and spirit live on. Socrates’s last words thwart Athenian authorities’ attempts to silence him, issue a call for Asklepian ideals to prevail in the city of Athens, and identify the selfless caring for others exemplified by Asklepios as the highest duty for all humans. Socrates calls us from the past to remember timeless Asklepian physician duties to self, patients, and community. Socrates reminds modern physicians of their personal duty to make their own spiritual health their first priority, their professional duty to comfort the sick and alleviate suffering, and their societal duty to advocate for the vulnerable, sick, and suffering and the health of the public.
    Socrates last words - An ancient call for a healing ethos in civic life

    @Fooloso4 - I think we discussed the meaning of Socrates last words in your thread?
    https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/10914/platos-phaedo/p1
  • Amity
    5k
    In so far as he intends to influence the philosophers who come after him, we might regard this as the story he tells them. If they are to be philosophers, what are their responsibilities to others both now and in the future? If, to use Plato's imagery, they are to be puppet-masters and opinion makers, what stories are they to tell?Fooloso4

    Ah well, good questions. Stories. Isn't it all about mental manipulation? Some of the truth is hidden for the 'good of the people'. Some stories are never heard. Ears and eyes are closed and opened to suit.

    In order to test this we need to look at how certain thinkers and ideas have influenced the way we think, what we believe, and how we live.Fooloso4

    Are you talking about what we think is 'true' for ourselves? It is not always easy to follow the links of influence. Or even if we act according to our so-called beliefs. The truth is we can self-deceive quite readily without even being aware of it. Difficult to change perspective once fixed.

    I don't think the need to hide, however, is for us at this moment something necessary, but that may change in the next few years.Fooloso4

    Indeed. But it is happening now. It is frightening to consider the violence that can erupt. When even voicing an opinion contrary to a 'leader' or his mob can result in being called a traitor, criminalised or worse.
  • Fooloso4
    6k
    Fooloso4 - I think we discussed the meaning of Socrates last words in your thread?
    https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/10914/platos-phaedo/p1
    Amity

    From page 12 of that thread:

    Much has been written about what this means. Asclepius is the god of medicine. This suggests that there has been a cure or recovery. Some interpret this to mean that Socrates has been cured of the disease of life. But he says “we” not “I”.

    In the center of the dialogue Phaedo said that they had been “healed” of their distress and readiness to abandon argument. (89a) In other words, Socrates saved them from misologic,about which he said "there is no greater evil than hating arguments". (89d)

    There is one other mention of illness. In the beginning when we are told that Plato was ill. We are not told the nature of the illness that kept him away, but we know he recovered. Perhaps he too was cured of misologic. Rather than giving up on philosophy he went on to make the “greatest music”. Misologic is at the center of the problem, framed by Plato’s illness and the offer to Asclepius. And perhaps conquering the greatest evil is in the end a good reason to regard this as a comedy rather than a tragedy.
  • Fooloso4
    6k
    Are you talking about what we think is 'true' for ourselves?Amity

    I was referring to Nietzsche's claim about "real philosophers".
  • Amity
    5k
    Thanks for the help! :sparkle:
  • isomorph
    48
    Of course, despite what he says here, we know that Plato’s Socrates, although he did not write, is a highly skilled story-teller. He distinguishes between the music of philosophy and music in the popular sense.(61a) For the purposes of making popular music he thinks that second-hand stories will do. The question arises as to how much of what Socrates says in the dialogues is the reworking of second-hand stories?Fooloso4

    I have looked and have been unable to find an answer to my question: was Socrates literate? Greeks, as all humans before civilization, written language, etc., maintained continuity through epic story telling. Written words weren't required for thinking through and solving problems, and it seems most writing began as ledger keeping and literacy as we understand it had little to do with a successful life. Has this question of Socrates literacy been discussed anywhere? I haven't found anything definitive on it as a requirement for citizenship in Athens.
  • Fooloso4
    6k
    was Socrates literate?isomorph

    In the Phaedo he is putting some of Aesop's writings to verse. It is possible that he was working from memory from what he heard from others reading Aesop aloud, but there is no indication, as far as I am aware, that anyone else was writing down the verses he made for him.

    Perhaps more importantly, he was literate in the sense of being able to discuss the writings of others.
  • Paine
    2.4k

    In Phaedrus, Socrates demands to see the scroll Phaedrus is quoting from. The argument about the limits of the written word in that dialogue would be absurd if they were put in Socrates' mouth while Plato knew he was illiterate.

    It would also render absurd the jokes made in Cratylus about etymology and the structure of written words if it concerned something Socrates had no actual part in.

    Written words weren't required for thinking through and solving problems, and it seems most writing began as ledger keeping and literacy as we understand it had little to do with a successful life.isomorph

    It seems you are applying a general idea to a specific time. The dramas and comedies Socrates (and Plato) were aware of were compositions written to be scripted performances. The talk of many authors of that time was directed toward regarding some as better than others. A performance of Oedipus Rex could be better than others. Just as we witness different attempts at Shakespeare.
  • isomorph
    48
    It seems you are applying a general idea to a specific time. The dramas and comedies Socrates (and Plato) were aware of were compositions written to be scripted performances. The talk of many authors of that time was directed toward regarding some as better than others. A performance of Oedipus Rex could be better than others. Just as we witness different attempts at Shakespeare.Paine

    But Socrates did not write those plays. Hearing them, remembering them and reciting them does not require reading and writing skills. This is evident in the predecessor to Attic writers - Homer. I'm old enough to remember (a very few old people) people who who couldn't read or write (at least not well) and were able to be successful because they could think problems through. My question arises because of the persistent caveat that is at the beginning of every conversation about Socrates: he didn't write anything. Onian discusses some of this about Homer's era in Origins of European Thought. By Socrates time, literacy might have been commonplace, but not ubiquitous, and it is not hard to imagine many intelligent successful people unable to write.
  • Amity
    5k
    was Socrates literate?isomorph

    I have never questioned this. I had assumed he would be. And that the reason for his not writing anything down was a simple preference for engaging directly in dialogue.

    Perhaps more importantly, he was literate in the sense of being able to discuss the writings of others.Fooloso4

    Yes. I wondered why it would be important for Socrates to be 'literate' in the sense of being able to read and write. I think there is a habit and preference for the real study of people. Personal, close up listening rather than reading; conversing rather than writing. Reading them, not just their words, along the way...

    But Socrates did not write those playsisomorph
    Indeed. Plato wrote the Dialogues.
    By Socrates time, literacy might have been commonplace, but not ubiquitous, and it is not hard to imagine many intelligent successful people unable to write.isomorph
    That does seem to be the case. Apparently, writing is seen as 'an ambivalent new technology':

    Near the end of Phaedrus, Socrates and Phaedrus have a short but fascinating exchange on the subject of the “propriety and impropriety [of] … writing.” Writing things down wasn’t common even among learned circles in classical Greece; in this discussion, in fact, it’s regarded as an ambivalent new technology. While Plato doesn’t mean to dismiss writing as a worthless practice, he uses Socrates’s arguments to show that, in the pursuit of wisdom, writing has inherent limitations and can’t replace the interactive, personalized nurturing of individual souls through philosophical discourse.Litcharts - The Limits of Writing Theme in Phaedrus

    In Phaedrus, Socrates demands to see the scroll Phaedrus is quoting from. The argument about the limits of the written word in that dialogue would be absurd if they were put in Socrates' mouth while Plato knew he was illiterate.Paine

    Thanks for introducing Plato's Phaedrus to the discussion.
    I think you might be interested in reading Plato's play from p46/51.
    https://wyomingcatholic.edu/wp-content/uploads/Plato-Phaedrus.pdf
    SocRATES: Well, then, that's enough about artfulness and artlessness in
    connection with speaking.
    PHAEDRUS: Quite.
    SOCRATES: What's left, then, is aptness and ineptness in connection with
    writing: What feature makes writing good, and what inept? Right?
    PHAEDRUS: Yes.
    SocRATES: Well, do you know how best to please god when you either
    use words or discuss them in general?
    Plato-Phaedrus pdf

    More thoughts and comments about Socrates/Plato and Writing. Unfortunately, this does not directly link to Phaedrus lines:

    “Writing, Plato has Socrates say in the Phaedrus, is inhuman, pretending to establish outside the mind what in reality can only be in the mind. It is a thing, a manufactured product.” (Orality and Literacy pg 78) [...]
    “Secondly, Plato’s Socrates urges, writing destroys memory. Those who use writing will become forgetful, relying on an external resource for what they lack in internal resources.” (Orality and Literacy pg 78) [...]
    “Thirdly, a written text is unresponsive” (Orality and Literacy pg 78) [...]
    “Plato’s Socrates also holds it against writing that the written word cannot defend itself as the natural spoken word can: real speech and thought always exist essentially in a context of give-and-take between real persons.”(Orality and Literacy pg 78) [...]
    Engaging Text: Plato’s Assertions vs. Modern Technologies
  • Amity
    5k
    @isomorph I meant to say - "Welcome to the Conversation!"

    What do you think of the thread so far?
    How do you respond to the questions in the OP?:

    What do you want and expect from philosophy?Fooloso4

    I will end this with another question: Has the philosopher outgrown the need for stories?Fooloso4
  • Amity
    5k
    SocRATES: Well, do you know how best to please god when you either
    use words or discuss them in general?
    Plato-Phaedrus pdf

    I'm puzzling over the word 'god'. @Fooloso4 @Paine and anyone else who is still around and interested: Why would the focus be on the best way to 'please god'? I'm not sure this is the best translation or interpretation? Any thoughts?
  • isomorph
    48
    What do you think of the thread so far?
    How do you respond to the questions in the OP?:

    What do you want and expect from philosophy?
    — Fooloso4
    Amity

    All of the threads by Fooloso4 are educational. I don't know that I expect anything from philosophy, it just seems to be what I do. At my stage in life I am a pessimist and I don't look for reason and purpose beyond association in this world.

    I'm puzzling over the word 'god'. Fooloso4 @Paine and anyone else who is still around and interested: Why would the focus be on the best way to 'please god'? I'm not sure this is the best translation or interpretation? Any thoughts?Amity

    You need to search for each writers' use of the word 'god'. It might mean 'nature', the 'cosmos' or an anthropomorphic entity as Xenophanes spoke of when he compared people and horses, etc. or a personal involved deity in some Christian sects. Spinoza equated god with nature. Heraclitus said, "the oneness of all wisdom may be found, or not, under the name of God."
  • Amity
    5k
    At my stage in life I am a pessimist and I don't look for reason and purpose beyond association in this world.isomorph

    Well, there's probably good reason or cause to be a pessimist. What do you mean by 'association'?

    Why would the focus be on the best way to 'please god'? I'm not sure this is the best translation or interpretation? Any thoughts?
    — Amity

    You need to search for each writers' use of the word 'god'
    isomorph

    Really? My question is specific to the writing of Plato in Phaedrus. The word/s and questions he places in the mouth of Socrates. I know the word 'god' can be ambiguous and have different interpretations, according to beliefs. What 'god' is being spoken of here? The Writing God/dess?
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