Maybe I can take that. The end of Euthyphro is best understood as ironical, a tone frequently associated to Socrates. — Olivier5
Heracles! Surely the many, Euthyphro, are ignorant of what way is correct. For I don't suppose that it is the part of just anyone to do this correctly, but of one who is no doubt already advanced in wisdom.
Euthyphro: Far indeed, by Zeus, Socrates.(4b)
... therefore that justice should not concern itself with piety. — Olivier5
But then, what is the metaphysical or moral message of that interpretation? Do all you can to cleanse yourself/your house/your city of impiety, even if you need to prosecute your own father? — Olivier5
IDK — Olivier5
In economic terms, the monetary value of anything is a complex function of desire, utility and availability, — Olivier5
Likewise, Euthyphro being real or not is a meaningless detail which makes no difference whatsoever to the philosophical meaning of the story. — Olivier5
God is unimpressed by empty, ritualistic piety, be that from the high priest, the levite or Euthyphro; He loves justice best, even when it comes from the impious. — Olivier5
And he would have written a dialogue about it, right? Where this Euthyphro superstitious character would be a fool, unable to justify himself... — Olivier5
A means to an end. And the real absolute end, for which piety is only a means, is proposed to be justice. — Olivier5
I think the political dimension of Plato cannot be denied. — Olivier5
So there is mutual influence between the souls of the citizens and the soul of the city. — Olivier5
People cannot live without art. — Olivier5
Re. religion, is there ANY role for priests in the Republic? — Olivier5
... the protection of the sacrifices and prayers which priestesses, priests, and the whole city offer at every marriage ...
Obviously, a new metaphysical message is always a critique of the old one. — Olivier5
Which is why I think it is safe to see all of Plato's dialogue circling around the questions of not just what is right and just for the individual man, or for the gods, but also and most importantly what is just and right for the polis. — Olivier5
And you never heard about conflicts between parents and children about what to do and not do? — Olivier5
The dialogue is obviously intended to advise its reader, somehow. — Olivier5
And I dare say this is exactly how "Apollodorus" uses platonism: as a mere rhetorical weapon against them materialists. He treats Plato's thought as a dead body, intrumentalized in defense of religion — Olivier5
That is your judgment of what has been claimed, not a reference to the argument made. — Valentinus
The simple fact of the matter is that I happen to know a great deal more about Plato than both of you put together. I have the degrees to back that up. I don't need a medal, I would however like you to [edit]. — Fooloso4
Average, and therefore worthy of some scorn by the wise... But I think you are not picking up the clues Plato left about Euthyphro's venality and ruthless ambition. The text does not exclude ulterior motives for prosecuting his own father, and perhaps I agree with "Fooloso4" that the mention of Naxos implies some ulterior motive. — Olivier5
how do we know about the ideal of justice? — frank
You tell me. — Olivier5
What would be the relevance of the Naxos reference? — Olivier5
(4d)it was no matter even if he should die.
What I gathered from my superficial reading on the subject is the conventional wisdom that Plato went through 'phases' or 'periods' like Picasso. — Olivier5
in later dialogues he tended to be replaced by 'the stranger' ( — Olivier5
It could be that the reports by Plato are inaccurate, or it could be that Socrates himself harboured some contradictions. — Olivier5
"No writing of Plato exists or ever will exist, but those now said to be his are those of a Socrates become beautiful and new".
Maybe I can take that. The end of Euthyphro is best understood as ironical, a tone frequently associated to Socrates. — Olivier5
When we are grown up, we have personally "abolished our own childhood" so your comparison doesn't work very well. I repeat: new metaphysics often compete with old metaphysics. — Olivier5
Do you define yourself as anti-materialist? — Olivier5
You take Socrates' irony and false praise at first degree. That's quite foolish in my opinion. — Olivier5
Having said that, I don't read Plato to worry about this or that character. I read him to see if he, Plato, has got any metaphysical thoughts to share — Apollodorus
Plato's main concern was not to criticize religion but to convey a metaphysical message — Apollodorus
As for the anti-materialists, they may have no interest in Euthyphro or his father. They may read Plato to gain spiritual knowledge. — Apollodorus
@Fooloso4 is just saying that Euthyphro plays the role of the fool in the dialogue — Olivier5
but he does not show that what he is doing is something the gods love, unless the gods love patricide. — Fooloso4
etc. ....The penalty for murder was death. — Fooloso4
Or perhaps vice versa, given that "god" seems to function in this thread as a place-holder for our "best self" ....
Another point: I've been confused with the use of "pious" as meaning "beloved of God" in this thread. This is not the case in French or Italian, — Olivier5
and that he is simply chosing from the long list of crimes attributed to the gods one that will help him justify his shameful intention. — Olivier5
The kind of people who uses pious rhetoric to justify killing their father.
— Olivier5
Yes, but that doesn't say anything about true piety and the truly pious. — Apollodorus
I had thought Olivier5 was making a joke with "Socrates himself didn't do such a great job at this task." — Banno
It says that piety can be used to justify any crime, even the most disgusting. And that is true.
— Olivier5
I've already addressed that — Apollodorus
the connections between politics and religion in Athens, 5th century BCE, — Olivier5
Greek religion, Athenian religion included, is closely related to social and political structures, i.e. to polis and its parts. Progress and welfare of the polis were identified with progress and wellbeing of its citizens and vice versa. To call somebody Fortunate/lucky/happy meant that the very person is favored by gods. In other words, religion was the frame of the structure and the functioning of the ancient Hellenic poleis.
Greek religion is connected to performing and fulfilling certain established rites and rituals that were believed to be in accordance with the will of gods and in avoiding those which were opposite to their will. Since the whole society could be punished due to the impiety of one person, polis controlled the religious rites and their fulfillment as well as their violation. Because of this potential threat provoked by a person, the punishments for impiety were very rigid, mostly death penalties. That is why, in political struggle and even in personal conflicts, people were often accused for religious violation, and if this violation was “proved to be true”, the accused was usually put to death, like in the case of Socrates. Proving religious violation and impiety was easier than proving state offence or offence in private lawsuits, because the jury in those cases had the same religious feelings, opposite to the political or personal favors towards the accused.
...
According to Martin Ostwald, in the years that Euripides’ Hiketides were put on stage (423 BCE), “oligarchic tendencies” entered the political stage of Athens and were especially favored amongst the young Athenian aristocrats. This coincides with the so called instable peace, i.e. the Peace of Nikias, during which, according to Thukydides, a new generation with new attitudes on life, religion and policy merged, a generation which grew up under the influence of the Sophists and Socrates as well.
It needed the one God if it was to remain one empire. — Olivier5
Origen had produced thousands of treatises and books. He had reviewed systematically all the gospels available at his time, including some now lost. For this and many other reasons, the burning of his work was a grievous loss. — Olivier5
And according to your interpretation, Plato would have agreed with his teacher Socrates' scapegoating. — Olivier5
Unlike piety, money can be quantified, stored, stolen, changed, and exchanged against physical goods and services. I see it as a very practical thing and not an abstraction. — Olivier5
The solution of this seeming contradiction could be as simple as Plato putting words in Socrates' mouth. — Olivier5
Another solution would be that Socrates, while doubting, had a sort of hunch that the good was beyond the gods and all that. — Olivier5
Hence the kind of analytic theology you seem to rely on, is foly. God is not bound by human logic. — Olivier5
In other words, Socrates is accused of being impious. His defense is that "pious" means everything and nothing, that it cannot be defined, that it helps justify the most unjust behaviors such as Euthyphro's, and therefore that justice should not concern itself with piety. — Olivier5
He seems like a constructed, composite character, a literary device.Euthyphro is just a character, playing the role of the fool. — Olivier5
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.