• Eros and the intoxications of enlightenment : on Plato's Symposium
  • Record Type: Electronic resources : monographic
    Title Information: on Plato's Symposium
    Author: BergSteven, 1959-
    Secondary Intellectual Responsibility: Project Muse
    Place of Publication: Albany
    Published: State University of New York Press;
    Year of Publication: c2010
    Description: 1 online resource (xii, 170 p.).
    Series: SUNY series in ancient Greek philosophy
    Subject: Love -
    Personal Subject: Socrates -
    Personal Subject: Plato -
    Online resource: http://muse.jhu.edu/books/9781438430195/
    Notes: Includes bibliographical references (p. 155-168) and index
    Summary: "An original analysis of one of Plato's most well-known and pivotal dialogues, this study is based upon the effort to think together the most manifest themes of the Symposium (the nature of eros and the relation between poetry and philosophy) with its less obvious but no less essential themes(the character of the city and the nature and limitations of sophistic enlightenment). Author Steven Berg offers an interpretation of this dialogue wherein all the speakers at the banquet - with the exception of Socrates - not only offer their views on the nature of love, but represent Athens and the Athenian enlightenment. Accordingly, Socrates' speech, taken in relation to the speeches that precede it, is shown to articulate the relation between Socrates and the Athenian enlightenment, to expose the limitations of that enlightenment, and thereforefinally to bring to light the irresolvable tension between Socrates and his philosophy and the city of Athens even at her most enlightened."--BOOK JACKET
    ISBN: 9781438430195electronic bk.
    ISBN: 1438430191electronic bk.
    ISBN: 9781438430171hbk.
    ISBN: 1438430175hbk.
    Content Note: Introduction -- Athens and Enlightenment -- Socrates made beautiful -- Phaedrus : Phaedrus' best city in speech -- Pausanias : noble lies and the fulfillment of greekness -- Eryximachus : sovereign science and the sacred law -- Athens and the poets -- Aristophanes : Eros, soul, and law -- Agathon : Eros, soul, and rhetoric -- Socrates and Athens -- Socrates : daimonic eros -- Alcibiades : divine Socrates -- Conclusion: Socrates and Plato
Reviews
Export
pickup library
 
 
Change password
Login