Plato's Dream of Sophistry

Plato's Dream of Sophistry
Title Plato's Dream of Sophistry PDF eBook
Author Richard Marback
Publisher Univ of South Carolina Press
Pages 184
Release 1999
Genre Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN 9781570032400

Download Plato's Dream of Sophistry Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

In Plato's Dream of Sophistry, Richard Marback shows that Plato's vision was remarkably accurate. Against histories of rhetoric that described Plato's influence mainly in terms of his overarching dominance, Marback argues that Plato's lasting influence results not from the force of the dialogues themselves but from continued investments in arguing about the dialogues.

Plato's Sophist

Plato's Sophist
Title Plato's Sophist PDF eBook
Author Stanley Rosen
Publisher Carthage Reprint
Pages 356
Release 1999
Genre Philosophy
ISBN

Download Plato's Sophist Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Plato's great attempt to define the nature of the sophist -- the false image of the philosopher -- has perplexed readers from classical times to the present. The dialogue has been central in the ongoing debate about the theory of forms, and it remains a crucial text for Plato scholars in both the analytical and the phenomenological traditions. Stanley Rosen's book is the first full-length study of the Sophist in English and one of the most complete in any language. He follows the stages of the dialogue in sequence and offers an exhaustive analysis of the philosophical questions that come to light as Theaetetus and the Eleatic Stranger pursue the sophist through philosophical debate. Rosen finds the central problem of the dialogue in the relation between original and image; he shows how this distinction underlies all subsequent technical themes and analyzes in detail such problems as non-being or negation and false statement. Arguing that the dialogue must be treated as a dramatic unity, he pays careful attention throughout to the setting, the events, the language used, and the relations between the natures of the speakers and the topics under discussion. Rosen's new approach to the technical issues in the dialogue will be of interest to Plato scholars of all schools, and his analysis of the sophistical dimension of the world will engage all who have puzzled over what it means to be a philosopher.

Image and Paradigm in Plato's Sophist

Image and Paradigm in Plato's Sophist
Title Image and Paradigm in Plato's Sophist PDF eBook
Author David K. Ambuel
Publisher Parmenides Publishing
Pages 190
Release 2007-06-15
Genre Philosophy
ISBN 1930972520

Download Image and Paradigm in Plato's Sophist Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

The Sophist sets out to explain what the sophist does by defining his art. But the sophist has no art. Plato lays out a challenging puzzle in metaphysics, the nature of philosophy, and the limitation of philosophy that is unraveled in this new and unconventional interpretation. The Sophist is presented now not as an artefact of the intellectual past or precursor of late 20th century philosophical theories, but as living philosophy. In a new translation and interpretation, this late dialogue is shown to be a defense of not a departure from Plato's metaphysics. The book is intended to provide a complete interpretation of Plato's Sophist as a whole. Central to the methodology adopted is the assumption that all elements of the dialogue to be understood must be understood in the context of the dialogue as a whole and in its relation to other works in the Platonic corpus.

Sophist

Sophist
Title Sophist PDF eBook
Author Plato
Publisher Hackett Publishing
Pages 118
Release 1993-01-01
Genre Philosophy
ISBN 9780872202023

Download Sophist Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

A fluent and accurate new translation of the dialogue that, of all Plato's works, has seemed to speak most directly to the interests of contemporary and analytical philosophers. White's extensive introduction explores the dialogue's central themes, its connection with related discussions in other dialogues, and its implicaiton for the interpretation of Plato's metaphysics.

Plato's Sophist

Plato's Sophist
Title Plato's Sophist PDF eBook
Author Richard Stanley Bluck
Publisher Manchester University Press
Pages 200
Release 1975
Genre Philosophy
ISBN

Download Plato's Sophist Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Plato's Sophist

Plato's Sophist
Title Plato's Sophist PDF eBook
Author Plato
Publisher University of Chicago Press
Pages 201
Release 2020-05-21
Genre Philosophy
ISBN 022677340X

Download Plato's Sophist Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Theaetetus, the Sophist, and the Statesman are a trilogy of Platonic dialogues that show Socrates formulating his conception of philosophy as he prepares the defense for his trial. Originally published together as The Being of the Beautiful, these translations can be read separately or as a trilogy. Each includes an introduction, extensive notes, and comprehensive commentary that examines the trilogy's motifs and relationships. "Seth Benardete is one of the very few contemporary classicists who combine the highest philological competence with a subtlety and taste that approximate that of the ancients. At the same time, he as set himself the entirely modern hermeneutical task of uncovering what the ancients preferred to keep veiled, of making explicit what they indicated, and hence...of showing the naked ugliness of artificial beauty."—Stanley Rose, Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal Seth Benardete (1930-2001) was professor of classics at New York University. He was the author or translator of many books, most recently The Argument of the Action, Plato's "Laws," and Plato's "Symposium," all published by the University of Chicago Press.

Tragically Speaking

Tragically Speaking
Title Tragically Speaking PDF eBook
Author Kalliopi Nikolopoulou
Publisher U of Nebraska Press
Pages 378
Release 2013-01-01
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 0803244878

Download Tragically Speaking Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

From German idealism onward, Western thinkers have sought to revalue tragedy, invariably converging at one cardinal point: tragic art risks aestheticizing real violence. Tragically Speaking critically examines this revaluation, offering a new understanding of the changing meaning of tragedy in literary and moral discourse. It questions common assumptions about the Greeks’ philosophical relation to the tragic tradition and about the ethical and political ramifications of contemporary theories of tragedy. Starting with the poet Friedrich Hölderlin and continuing to the present, Kalliopi Nikolopoulou traces how tragedy was translated into an idea (“the tragic”) that was then revised further into the “beyond the tragic” of postmetaphysical contemporary thought. While recognizing some of the merits of this revaluation, Tragically Speaking concentrates on the losses implicit in such a turn. It argues that by translating tragedy into an idea, these rereadings effected a problematic subordination of politics to ethics: the drama of human conflict gave way to philosophical reflection, bracketing the world in favor of the idea of the world. Where contemporary thought valorizes absence, passivity, the Other, rhetoric, writing, and textuality, the author argues that their “deconstructed opposites” (presence, will, the self, truth, speech, and action, all of which are central to tragedy) are equally necessary for any meaningful discussion of ethics and politics.