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Plato’s Dialogues of Definition = Causal and Conceptual Investigations /
紀錄類型:
書目-語言資料,印刷品 : Monograph/item
正題名/作者:
Plato’s Dialogues of Definition/ by Justin C. Clark.
其他題名:
Causal and Conceptual Investigations /
作者:
Clark, Justin C.
面頁冊數:
VII, 203 p. 5 illus.online resource. :
Contained By:
Springer Nature eBook
標題:
Epistemology. -
電子資源:
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-07849-1
ISBN:
9783031078491
Plato’s Dialogues of Definition = Causal and Conceptual Investigations /
Clark, Justin C.
Plato’s Dialogues of Definition
Causal and Conceptual Investigations /[electronic resource] :by Justin C. Clark. - 1st ed. 2022. - VII, 203 p. 5 illus.online resource.
Chapter 1. Plato’s Dialogues of Definition: A Socratic Philosophy -- Chapter 2. Socratic Inquiry and the “What is F-ness?” Question.-Chapter 3: Socratic Ethics and Unity of the Virtues -- Chapter 4. Socratic Epistemology and the Priority of Definition -- Chapter 5. Socratic Inquiry and Aporetic Endings -- Chapter 6: The Search for Temperance in Charmides -- Chapter 7: The Search for Friendship in Lysis -- Chapter 8: The Search for Beauty in Hippias Major.
In each of Plato’s “dialogues of definition” (Euthyphro, Laches, Meno, Charmides, Lysis, Republic I, Hippias Major), Socrates motivates philosophical discussion by posing a question of the form “What is F-ness?” Yet these dialogues are notorious for coming up empty. Socrates’ interlocutors repeatedly fail to deliver satisfactory answers. Thus, the dialogues of definition are often considered negative— empty of any positive philosophical content. Justin C. Clark resists the negative reading, arguing that the dialogues of definition contain positive “Socratic” answers. In order to see the positive theory, however, one must recognize what Clark calls the "dual function" of the “What is F-ness?” question. Socrates is not looking for a single type of answer. Rather, Socrates is looking for two distinct types of answers. The “What is F-ness?” question serves as a springboard for two types of investigation— conceptual and causal. The key to understanding any of the dialogues of definition, therefore, is to decipher between them. Clark offers a way to do just that, at once resolving interpretive issues in Socratic philosophy, providing systematic interpretations of the negative endings, and generating important new readings of the Charmides and Lysis, whilst casting further doubt on the authenticity of the Hippias Major. Justin C. Clark is Assistant professor of philosophy at Hamilton College.
ISBN: 9783031078491
Standard No.: 10.1007/978-3-031-07849-1doiSubjects--Topical Terms:
671538
Epistemology.
LC Class. No.: B1-5802
Dewey Class. No.: 100
Plato’s Dialogues of Definition = Causal and Conceptual Investigations /
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Chapter 1. Plato’s Dialogues of Definition: A Socratic Philosophy -- Chapter 2. Socratic Inquiry and the “What is F-ness?” Question.-Chapter 3: Socratic Ethics and Unity of the Virtues -- Chapter 4. Socratic Epistemology and the Priority of Definition -- Chapter 5. Socratic Inquiry and Aporetic Endings -- Chapter 6: The Search for Temperance in Charmides -- Chapter 7: The Search for Friendship in Lysis -- Chapter 8: The Search for Beauty in Hippias Major.
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In each of Plato’s “dialogues of definition” (Euthyphro, Laches, Meno, Charmides, Lysis, Republic I, Hippias Major), Socrates motivates philosophical discussion by posing a question of the form “What is F-ness?” Yet these dialogues are notorious for coming up empty. Socrates’ interlocutors repeatedly fail to deliver satisfactory answers. Thus, the dialogues of definition are often considered negative— empty of any positive philosophical content. Justin C. Clark resists the negative reading, arguing that the dialogues of definition contain positive “Socratic” answers. In order to see the positive theory, however, one must recognize what Clark calls the "dual function" of the “What is F-ness?” question. Socrates is not looking for a single type of answer. Rather, Socrates is looking for two distinct types of answers. The “What is F-ness?” question serves as a springboard for two types of investigation— conceptual and causal. The key to understanding any of the dialogues of definition, therefore, is to decipher between them. Clark offers a way to do just that, at once resolving interpretive issues in Socratic philosophy, providing systematic interpretations of the negative endings, and generating important new readings of the Charmides and Lysis, whilst casting further doubt on the authenticity of the Hippias Major. Justin C. Clark is Assistant professor of philosophy at Hamilton College.
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