Inventing the philosopher: an essay on the dialogues of Plato
"This book is an inquiry into the works of the Greek philosopher Plato to determine how they define the practice of being a philosopher"--
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Weitere Verfasser: | |
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Washington ; London
Academica Press
[2023]
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Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Zusammenfassung: | "This book is an inquiry into the works of the Greek philosopher Plato to determine how they define the practice of being a philosopher"-- |
Beschreibung: | 344 Seiten 24 cm |
ISBN: | 9781680538229 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | Contents Foreword to the Translation..................................................................................... xi Preface to this Edition............................................................................................. xiii Apology of the Translator........................................................................................ xv Introduction ................................................................................................................. 1 1. An Impossible History.....................................................................................2 2. The Problem of Writing...................................................................................8 3. Questions of Method...................................................................................... 17 Chapter One Sophia and Philosophia........................................................................................... 29 1. The Ideal of Sophia........................................................................................ 30 The tradition as to its origin...................................................................... 30 Philosophers and polymathy..................................................................... 34 The ironic inversion................................................................................... 37 2. The “Technical Sense” ofphilosophia......................................................... 42 The technician vs. philosophia................................................................. 42 The “technical” sense
of sophia............................................................... 44 3. The Technique of the “Philosophers”.......................................................... 48 The magical power of logic...................................................................... 48 “The source of unintelligent opinion”: phusis and technè..................... 51 4. Wisdom and Madness.................................................................................... 53 The proper use of philosophizing: neither too much nor too little?..... 53 The right measure...................................................................................... 54 Chapter Two From a Semblance of Sophia to “One Must Philosophize”................................. 65 The silence of Socrates..................................................................................... 65 1. The Phantom Difference.............................................................................. 70
The name of the sophist........................................................................70 The ability to speak.............................................................................. 72 The reality of trade............................................................................... 73 2. The Philosopher’s Sophisms.................................................................... 74 The paradox of feigned ignorance and pleasure.................................. 74 The paradox of the truth-teller and the liar, of the good and the wicked............................................. 75 The paradox of the easy and the difficult........................................... 77 3. Phantoms of Difference...........................................................................82 The advantage of double listening...................................................... 82 Phantoms of differences and phantoms of resemblances................... 84 The hypothesis of the sophist.............................................................. 90 Philosophizing as metaxu.....................................................................91 What is it in us that philosophizes: ignorance...................................... 94 ... or desire?.......................................................................................... 98 Chapter Three Eros as Philosopher............................................................................................. 99 1. Eros as Philosopher................................................................................. 102 Epithumia
and eros............................................................................. 102 Eros and parody.................................................................................. 107 The power of eros............................................................................... 114 Eros and philia................................................................................... 116 Eros as dialectician............................................................................. 120 Eros as philosopher............................................................................ 123 2. The Personage of the Philosopher........................................................... 126 Socrates and his images...................................................................... 126 Opinions about intelligence: the myths....................................... 129 Soul as a principle of intellection and an object ofjudgment.... 132 Opinions about knowledge: the myths............................................... 137 The Myth of the Gorgias (523a-527e)........................................ 137 The Myth of the Phaedrus (248a-249b)..................................... 140 The Myth of Er (Rep. X. 617d-621d) and the Myth of the Phaedo (113d—114e)................................... 142 The Myth of the Politicus (271 d—272d)...................................... 144
Conclusion: the Secondary Effects and Their Intermittencies..................... 147 Chapter Four Hades as Philosopher............................................................................................. 151 What Hades knows and the four powers of Apollo....................................... 152 1. The Correctness of Names.......................................................................... 155 Phusis and nomos.................................................................................... 157 Words and things..................................................................................... 162 The absent etymology..............................................................................166 2. The Correctness of a Name: The “True,” the “Correct” Philosophia.... 173 Death as a sign of recognition................................................................ 175 The two languages................................................................................... 178 From the correctness of a definition to the justness of an attribution............................................ 182 The hypothesis of the philosopher.........................................................187 The difficulties of the hypothesis.......................................................... 190 Chapter Five The Philosopher and His Name............................................................................. 197 1. The Philosopher’s Nature.............................................................................199 The definition of the philosopher’s
nature............................................ 200 The natural dimensions of thinking....................................................... 208 His Alètheia...................................................................................... 208 His Virtues........................................................................................ 211 His Qualities..................................................................................... 212 The perversion of the philosopher’s nature.......................................... 214 The perversion of philosophia................................................................ 217 2. Dialectic Is the Highest Science.................................................................. 220 The Good as Idea and the idea of the Good.......................................... 220 The image of sectioning: the Line..........................................................224 The two discourses on the good: the hyperbolic discourse.................. 227 ... and the ironic discourse......................................................................229 The image of the transition: the Cave.................................................... 234 Chapter Six The Philosopher’s Discourse................................................................................ 241 1. The Science of Free Men............................................................................243
The aporias of participation (the Parmenides, Part One).................. 243 The hypotheses of these hypotheses (the Parmenides, Part Two)..... 248 The science of differences and the difference of science (the Theaetetus)......................................... 256 The science of free men (the Sophist)................................................ 266 2. The Seemings of the Philosopher........................................................... 280 The sophist......................................................................................... 280 The statesman..................................................................................... 288 The madman....................................................................................... 293 3. Maieutic, Dialectic, and Division........................................................... 295 Conclusion........................................................................................................ 299 Appendix I The Tradition Regarding the Origin of the Terms ipiÀôoocpoç, (piÀoootpia..................................................................... 307 Appendix II The Pre-Platonic Occurrences of piÀ6oo poç pÄoao pia, (piXooocpEÎv............ 311 Appendix III Authenticity and Chronology of the Dialogues............................................... 315 Table of Platonic Occurrences.......................................................................... 321 Bibliography..................................................................................................... 327 Editions of Ancient
Authors........................................................................327 Modern Authors.......................................................................................... 327 Index Nominum................................................................................................ 332 Index Locorum Platonicorum........................................................................... 334
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adam_txt |
Contents Foreword to the Translation. xi Preface to this Edition. xiii Apology of the Translator. xv Introduction . 1 1. An Impossible History.2 2. The Problem of Writing.8 3. Questions of Method. 17 Chapter One Sophia and Philosophia. 29 1. The Ideal of Sophia. 30 The tradition as to its origin. 30 Philosophers and polymathy. 34 The ironic inversion. 37 2. The “Technical Sense” ofphilosophia. 42 The technician vs. philosophia. 42 The “technical” sense
of sophia. 44 3. The Technique of the “Philosophers”. 48 The magical power of logic. 48 “The source of unintelligent opinion”: phusis and technè. 51 4. Wisdom and Madness. 53 The proper use of philosophizing: neither too much nor too little?. 53 The right measure. 54 Chapter Two From a Semblance of Sophia to “One Must Philosophize”. 65 The silence of Socrates. 65 1. The Phantom Difference. 70
The name of the sophist.70 The ability to speak. 72 The reality of trade. 73 2. The Philosopher’s Sophisms. 74 The paradox of feigned ignorance and pleasure. 74 The paradox of the truth-teller and the liar, of the good and the wicked. 75 The paradox of the easy and the difficult. 77 3. Phantoms of Difference.82 The advantage of double listening. 82 Phantoms of differences and phantoms of resemblances. 84 The hypothesis of the sophist. 90 Philosophizing as metaxu.91 What is it in us that philosophizes: ignorance. 94 . or desire?. 98 Chapter Three Eros as Philosopher. 99 1. Eros as Philosopher. 102 Epithumia
and eros. 102 Eros and parody. 107 The power of eros. 114 Eros and philia. 116 Eros as dialectician. 120 Eros as philosopher. 123 2. The Personage of the Philosopher. 126 Socrates and his images. 126 Opinions about intelligence: the myths. 129 Soul as a principle of intellection and an object ofjudgment. 132 Opinions about knowledge: the myths. 137 The Myth of the Gorgias (523a-527e). 137 The Myth of the Phaedrus (248a-249b). 140 The Myth of Er (Rep. X. 617d-621d) and the Myth of the Phaedo (113d—114e). 142 The Myth of the Politicus (271 d—272d). 144
Conclusion: the Secondary Effects and Their Intermittencies. 147 Chapter Four Hades as Philosopher. 151 What Hades knows and the four powers of Apollo. 152 1. The Correctness of Names. 155 Phusis and nomos. 157 Words and things. 162 The absent etymology.166 2. The Correctness of a Name: The “True,” the “Correct” Philosophia. 173 Death as a sign of recognition. 175 The two languages. 178 From the correctness of a definition to the justness of an attribution. 182 The hypothesis of the philosopher.187 The difficulties of the hypothesis. 190 Chapter Five The Philosopher and His Name. 197 1. The Philosopher’s Nature.199 The definition of the philosopher’s
nature. 200 The natural dimensions of thinking. 208 His Alètheia. 208 His Virtues. 211 His Qualities. 212 The perversion of the philosopher’s nature. 214 The perversion of philosophia. 217 2. Dialectic Is the Highest Science. 220 The Good as Idea and the idea of the Good. 220 The image of sectioning: the Line.224 The two discourses on the good: the hyperbolic discourse. 227 . and the ironic discourse.229 The image of the transition: the Cave. 234 Chapter Six The Philosopher’s Discourse. 241 1. The Science of Free Men.243
The aporias of participation (the Parmenides, Part One). 243 The hypotheses of these hypotheses (the Parmenides, Part Two). 248 The science of differences and the difference of science (the Theaetetus). 256 The science of free men (the Sophist). 266 2. The Seemings of the Philosopher. 280 The sophist. 280 The statesman. 288 The madman. 293 3. Maieutic, Dialectic, and Division. 295 Conclusion. 299 Appendix I The Tradition Regarding the Origin of the Terms ipiÀôoocpoç, (piÀoootpia. 307 Appendix II The Pre-Platonic Occurrences of piÀ6oo poç pÄoao pia, (piXooocpEÎv. 311 Appendix III Authenticity and Chronology of the Dialogues. 315 Table of Platonic Occurrences. 321 Bibliography. 327 Editions of Ancient
Authors.327 Modern Authors. 327 Index Nominum. 332 Index Locorum Platonicorum. 334 |
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spelling | Dixsaut, Monique Verfasser (DE-588)114771979 aut Naturel philosophe Inventing the philosopher an essay on the dialogues of Plato Monique Dixsaut ; a revised edition translated by Kenneth Quandt Washington ; London Academica Press [2023] © 2023 344 Seiten 24 cm txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier "This book is an inquiry into the works of the Greek philosopher Plato to determine how they define the practice of being a philosopher"-- Plato v427-v347 Dialogi (DE-588)4300475-1 gnd rswk-swf Philosoph (DE-588)4045790-4 gnd rswk-swf Berufsbild (DE-588)4069340-5 gnd rswk-swf Ethos (DE-588)4127351-5 gnd rswk-swf Plato / Dialogues Dialogues (Plato) Philosophers Philosophie der Antike (DE-2581)TH000006619 gbd Plato phil. TLG 0059 (DE-2581)TH000002380 gbd Plato v427-v347 Dialogi (DE-588)4300475-1 u Philosoph (DE-588)4045790-4 s Berufsbild (DE-588)4069340-5 s Ethos (DE-588)4127351-5 s DE-604 Quandt, Kenneth (DE-588)1187365718 trl Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe 978-1-68053-823-6 Digitalisierung BSB München - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=034579030&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Dixsaut, Monique Inventing the philosopher an essay on the dialogues of Plato Plato v427-v347 Dialogi (DE-588)4300475-1 gnd Philosoph (DE-588)4045790-4 gnd Berufsbild (DE-588)4069340-5 gnd Ethos (DE-588)4127351-5 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4300475-1 (DE-588)4045790-4 (DE-588)4069340-5 (DE-588)4127351-5 |
title | Inventing the philosopher an essay on the dialogues of Plato |
title_alt | Naturel philosophe |
title_auth | Inventing the philosopher an essay on the dialogues of Plato |
title_exact_search | Inventing the philosopher an essay on the dialogues of Plato |
title_exact_search_txtP | Inventing the philosopher an essay on the dialogues of Plato |
title_full | Inventing the philosopher an essay on the dialogues of Plato Monique Dixsaut ; a revised edition translated by Kenneth Quandt |
title_fullStr | Inventing the philosopher an essay on the dialogues of Plato Monique Dixsaut ; a revised edition translated by Kenneth Quandt |
title_full_unstemmed | Inventing the philosopher an essay on the dialogues of Plato Monique Dixsaut ; a revised edition translated by Kenneth Quandt |
title_short | Inventing the philosopher |
title_sort | inventing the philosopher an essay on the dialogues of plato |
title_sub | an essay on the dialogues of Plato |
topic | Plato v427-v347 Dialogi (DE-588)4300475-1 gnd Philosoph (DE-588)4045790-4 gnd Berufsbild (DE-588)4069340-5 gnd Ethos (DE-588)4127351-5 gnd |
topic_facet | Plato v427-v347 Dialogi Philosoph Berufsbild Ethos |
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