The Lysis is one of Plato's most engaging but also puzzling dialogues, often regarded as a philosophical failure.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Terry Penner is Professor of Philosophy, Emeritus, and was, for a time, Affiliate Professor of Classics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. In Spring 2005 he was A. G. Leventis Visiting Research Professor of Greek in the University of Edinburgh. His previous publications include The Ascent from Nominalism: Some Existence Arguments in Plato's Middle Dialogues(1986) and numerous articles on Socrates.
Inhaltsangabe
Preface Part I. An Analysis of the Lysis: 1. 203AI-207B7: the cast assembles and the main conversation is set up 2. 207B8-210D8 (Socrates and Lysis): do Lysis' parents really love him? 3. 210EI-213C9: Socrates and Menexenus - how does one get a friend? 4. 213DI-216B9: Socrates and Lysis again, then Menexenus - poets and cosmologists on what is friend of what (like of like: or opposite of opposite?) 5. 216CI-221D6: what it is that loves, what it really loves and why 6. 221D6-222B2: the main argument reaches its conclusion 7. 222B3-E7: some further questions from Socrates about the argument, leading to (apparent) impasse 8. 223AI-B8: the dialogue ends - people will say that Socrates and the boys think they are friends, but they haven't been able to discover what 'the friend' is 9. 203AI-207B7 revisited Part II. The Theory of the Lysis: 10. A rereading of the Lysis: some preliminaries 11. A rereading of the Lysis 12. On seeking the good of others independently of one's own good and other unfinished business Epilogue Translation of the Lysis Bibliography Indexes.
Preface Part I. An Analysis of the Lysis: 1. 203AI-207B7: the cast assembles and the main conversation is set up 2. 207B8-210D8 (Socrates and Lysis): do Lysis' parents really love him? 3. 210EI-213C9: Socrates and Menexenus - how does one get a friend? 4. 213DI-216B9: Socrates and Lysis again, then Menexenus - poets and cosmologists on what is friend of what (like of like: or opposite of opposite?) 5. 216CI-221D6: what it is that loves, what it really loves and why 6. 221D6-222B2: the main argument reaches its conclusion 7. 222B3-E7: some further questions from Socrates about the argument, leading to (apparent) impasse 8. 223AI-B8: the dialogue ends - people will say that Socrates and the boys think they are friends, but they haven't been able to discover what 'the friend' is 9. 203AI-207B7 revisited Part II. The Theory of the Lysis: 10. A rereading of the Lysis: some preliminaries 11. A rereading of the Lysis 12. On seeking the good of others independently of one's own good and other unfinished business Epilogue Translation of the Lysis Bibliography Indexes.
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