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The soul of Socrates / Nalin Ranasinghe.

Van Pelt Library B317 .R36 2000
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Ranasinghe, Nalin, 1960-
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Socrates.
Plato. Dialogues.
Plato.
Physical Description:
xv, 196 pages ; 24 cm
Place of Publication:
Ithaca, N.Y. : Cornell University Press, 2000.
Summary:
Nalin Ranasinghe has a strong affection for the Socrates he finds in four of Plato's most influential dialogues. This engagingly humane book traces Plato's struggle to simultaneously understand and convey the erotic presence of Socrates. Most commentators suppose that Plato assumes an ironic distance from Socrates. Ranasinghe claims, rather, that the dialogues reflect Plato's awe and frustration before the enigmatic figure whose conduct fascinated and bewildered Classical Athens.
In original readings of the Republic, the Protagoras, the Phaedo, and the Symposium, Ranasinghe uncovers the profound literary and thematic unity of each work and shows new connections among the dialogues. From this re-reading, Ranasinghe proposes new answers to such perennial problems as the invalidity of the four proofs of the soul's immortality in the Phaedo, the draconian nature of the perfect regime described in the Republic, and the nature of Socrates' dalliance with Alcibiades in the Symposium.
The book begins with an exegesis of the Republic that defends Socrates against the charge that he offers the blueprint for a totalitarian state -- this slander must be refuted, Ranasinghe argues, before Plato can be understood as a liberal humanist. The chapter on the Protagoras examines the roots of sophistry and explicates a startling similarity between Protagoras and the nihilistic intellectual of the present day. The chapter on the Phaedo attacks the depiction of Plato as an otherworldly mystic who despised human existence. Two final chapters on the Symposium reveal the true Socrates. He is, Ranasinghe finds, an exemplary citizen and a human being passionately devoted to his mission of reconciling the mindto the desires.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages [179]-188) and index.
ISBN:
0801437466
OCLC:
43333586

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