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On Plato's Concept of Reason

About On Plato's Concept of Reason

AnyworkonthePlatonicconceptionofreasonhastowrestlewithafew signaldifficultiesoftheproblem.ThefirstisthatPlatohasnoexplicittheoryof 'reason'assuchinanyofhisworks.Thereis,forexample,nonotionof¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿in Plato:astrictlyandpreciselydefinedprincipleofcogitativepowerthatmakesa humanbeingtobewhatitessentiallyis.Initsplace,awideandvariedarrayof Greektermsisrenderedby'reason':¿¿¿¿,¿¿¿¿¿,¿¿¿¿¿¿,and¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿allshowup, atsomepointoranother,as'reason'intranslation.Ofalloftheseitisperhaps¿¿¿¿, sometimesalsotranslated'mind',thatcomesclosesttowhatweordinarily understandbytheterm.Thissimilarity,however,isdeceptive.Theproblemwith ¿¿¿¿isthatithasitsownregisterofmeaninginthecontextofAncientGreek philosophymoregenerally,throughtheinfluenceofAnaxagoras,forwhom¿¿¿¿ wasthe¿¿¿¿¿¿¿principleofbeing1.¿¿¿¿inthePhaedo(wherePlatoisexplicitly referringtoAnaxagoras)meanssomethingquitedifferentfrom¿¿¿¿inthePhaedrus (whereitisthefacultybywhichhumanbeingsapprehendthetruthintheirjourney aroundtheheavens),andbothoftheseinstancesofusagearequitedifferentfrom themodernideaof'reason'.Broadlyspeaking,however,wecansaythatthesetwo dialoguesuse'¿¿¿¿'accordingtotwodifferent,andopposite,acceptations: 'subjective'and'objective'¿¿¿¿

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  • Language:
  • English
  • ISBN:
  • 9781805263326
  • Binding:
  • Paperback
  • Pages:
  • 112
  • Published:
  • May 17, 2023
  • Dimensions:
  • 152x7x229 mm.
  • Weight:
  • 175 g.
Delivery: 1-2 weeks
Expected delivery: December 7, 2024

Description of On Plato's Concept of Reason

AnyworkonthePlatonicconceptionofreasonhastowrestlewithafew signaldifficultiesoftheproblem.ThefirstisthatPlatohasnoexplicittheoryof 'reason'assuchinanyofhisworks.Thereis,forexample,nonotionof¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿in Plato:astrictlyandpreciselydefinedprincipleofcogitativepowerthatmakesa humanbeingtobewhatitessentiallyis.Initsplace,awideandvariedarrayof Greektermsisrenderedby'reason':¿¿¿¿,¿¿¿¿¿,¿¿¿¿¿¿,and¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿allshowup, atsomepointoranother,as'reason'intranslation.Ofalloftheseitisperhaps¿¿¿¿, sometimesalsotranslated'mind',thatcomesclosesttowhatweordinarily understandbytheterm.Thissimilarity,however,isdeceptive.Theproblemwith ¿¿¿¿isthatithasitsownregisterofmeaninginthecontextofAncientGreek philosophymoregenerally,throughtheinfluenceofAnaxagoras,forwhom¿¿¿¿ wasthe¿¿¿¿¿¿¿principleofbeing1.¿¿¿¿inthePhaedo(wherePlatoisexplicitly referringtoAnaxagoras)meanssomethingquitedifferentfrom¿¿¿¿inthePhaedrus (whereitisthefacultybywhichhumanbeingsapprehendthetruthintheirjourney aroundtheheavens),andbothoftheseinstancesofusagearequitedifferentfrom themodernideaof'reason'.Broadlyspeaking,however,wecansaythatthesetwo dialoguesuse'¿¿¿¿'accordingtotwodifferent,andopposite,acceptations: 'subjective'and'objective'¿¿¿¿

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