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How the images in Plato's dialogues develop a life of their own when his poetry trumps his philosophy PDF

313 Pages·2011·12.37 MB·English
by  JenksRod
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Preview How the images in Plato's dialogues develop a life of their own when his poetry trumps his philosophy

How TIlE ll\lAGES IN PLATO'S DIALOGUES DEVELOP A LIFE OF THEIR OWN How THE 1i\1AGES IN PLATO'S DIALOGUES DEVEI~OP A LIFE OF THEIR OWN When His Poetry Trumps His Philosophy Rod Jenks With a Preface by Nicholas D. Smith The Edwin Mellen Press LewistoneQueenston" Lampeter Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Jenks, Rod. How the images in Plato's dialogues develop a life oftheir own: when his poetry tmmps his philosophy! Rod Jenks; with a preface by Nicholas D. Smith. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN-13: 978-0-7734-3934-4 (hardcover) ISBN-IO: 0-7734-3934-X (hardcover) 1. Plato. Dialogues. 2. Plato--Literary art. I. Title. B395.J425 201 I I 84--dc23 2011028434 hoI's serie. A CIP catalog record for this book is available from the British Library. Front cover: MC Escher lithograph, Drawing Hands, 1948 Copyright © 20 I I Rod Jenks All rights reserved. For infomlation contact The Edwin Mellen Press The Edwin Mellen Press Box 450 Box 67 Lewiston, New York Queenston, Ontario USA 14092-0450 CANADA LOS I LO The Edwin Mellen Press, Ltd. Lampeter, Ceredigiol1, Wales UNITED KINGDOM SA48 8LT Printed in the United States of America This book ;..; dedicated to My daughters, Olga and Yelena Table of Contents Preface by Nicholas D. Smith IX Foreword XIX Acknowledgements xxv 1. Madness in the Dialogues 1 A. The Explananda 8 1. The CrUo 8 2. The Profagoras 8 3. The Phaed/'us 9 4. The Theaetefus 9 5. The Republic 9 6. The Daimonion 9 7. The Meno 10 B. The Explanantia 17 C. Schisms in the Phaedrus 29 Conclusion 32 Notes 34 II. Metaphor in the Crito 49 A. The Complexity of Piety in the Euthyphro 51 B. Persuasion and Obedience 52 C. The Scholarship on "Persuade or Obey" 53 D. Defiance Would Amount to Rebellion 61 E. A Rationale for the Metaphor 64 Notes 69 III. The Aleno and its Metaphors 85 A. The Context 87 B. Anamnesis 88 C. Larissa and Daedalus 95 1. The Road to Larissa 95 2. The Statues of Daedalus 97 \,11 D. Divine People 100 Conclusion 105 Notes 108 IV. Some Images in Republic 117 A. Going Down 118 B. Horses and Fire 119 C. Gyges'Ring 124 D. The Myth of the Metals 130 F. Justice "Writ Large" 131 F. The Cave and its Fire 133 G. Decline and Fall 140 H. The Myth of Er 149 Notes 156 V. Suspicious Characters in the Corpus 179 A. The Daimonion 179 B. "The Argument" 191 C. "Protagoras" 192 D. The Charioteer of the Phaedrus 198 E. The Eleatic Stranger 204 Notes 211 VI. Conclusion: The Image and Its Place in "Tm e Rhetoric" 225 Notes 241 Epilogue 247 Notes 251 Bibliography 253 Indices 273 General Index 273 Index of Proper Names 274 Index Locomm 279 viii Preface: Paradoxes of Platonic Imagination Nicholas D. Smith Lewis & Clark College In Book Ten of the Republic, Plato's Socrates seems to have nothing but scom for image-makers: Neither will the imitator know, nor opine rightly concerning the nobility or vulgarity of his imitations. [ ... J On this issue, then, as it seems, we clearly agree that the imitator knows nothing worth mentioning of what he imitates, and that imitation is not serious ... (602a8-9, b6-8) A moment's reflection on what Socrates says here is enough to see what is jarring about it: the character who speaks these lines is, after all, but an image of the historical figure named Socrates, and so in the very moment of writing this condemnation of image-making, it seems that Plato was himself creating the very sort of thing he sought to revile. What are we to make of this? In this book, Rod Jenks explores a number of Plato's most perplexing images, and seeks to explain these both specifically, but also very generally, within Plato's overall philosophical program. What Jenks provides, let us be clear, is not primarily a literary analysis, but a philosophical analysis of Plato's image making, that is, of Plato's philosophical imagination. Even so, IX

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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.