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Plato's Phaedrus : the philosophy of love / Graeme Nicholson.

Van Pelt Library B380 .N53 1999
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Nicholson, Graeme.
Series:
Purdue University Press series in the history of philosophy
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Plato. Phaedrus.
Plato.
Love.
Physical Description:
x, 231 pages ; 24 cm.
Place of Publication:
West Lafayette, Ind. : Purdue University Press, [1999]
Summary:
The Phaedrus lies at the heart of Plato's work, and the topics it discusses are central to his thought. In its treatment of the topics of the soul, the ideas, and love, it is closely tied to the other dialogues of Plato's "middle period" the Phaedo, the Symposium, and the Republic.
Socrates and Plato have left many marks upon our culture, and the strongest one perhaps is the stature they gave to philosophy by contrasting it with other forms of thought and speech. In the Phaedrus, however, Plato does not feel the need to resist other forms of culture but rather is ready to assimilate them. Graeme Nicholson's study of the Phaedrus brings out the serious philosophical import of a work that is at once a rhapsody and an argument.
Nicholson offers a new translation of Socrates' "great speech" on the divine madness of love, revealing it as a polyphony of rhetoric, dialectic, and myth. He also casts new light on many current debates about the status of writing in the Phaedrus and in Plato generally, and the problems of the "unwritten philosophy".
This dose reading of the Phaedrus text shows that the Platonic ideas were never abandoned, neither here nor in the later dialogues. Drawing upon many German commentators, as well as English-language ones, Nicholson makes a strong case for a unitary reading of Plato's early and late philosophy.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 223-228) and index.
ISBN:
1557531188
1557531196
OCLC:
37975535

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