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Interpreting Plato Socratically - Socrates and Justice (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2018)
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Interpreting Plato Socratically - Socrates and Justice (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2018)
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J. Angelo Corlett's new book, Interpreting Plato Socratically
continues the critical discussion of the Platonic Question where
Corlett's book, Interpreting Plato's Dialogues concluded. New
arguments in favor of the Mouthpiece Interpretation of Plato's
works are considered and shown to be fallacious, as are new
objections to some competing approaches to Plato's works. The
Platonic Question is the problem of how to approach and interpret
Plato's writings most of which are dialogues. How, if at all, can
Plato's beliefs, doctrines, theories and such be extracted from
dialogues where there is no direct indication from Plato that his
own views are even to be found therein? Most philosophers of Plato
attempt to decipher from Plato's texts seemingly all manner of
ideas expressed by Socrates which they then attribute to Plato.
They seek to ascribe to Plato particular views about justice, art,
love, virtue, knowledge, and the like because, they believe,
Socrates is Plato's mouthpiece through the dialogues. But is such
an approach justified? What are the arguments in favor of such an
approach? Is there a viable alternative approach to Plato's
dialogues? In this rigorous account of the dominant approach to
Plato's dialogues, there is no room left for reasonable doubt about
the problematic reasons given for the notion that Plato's dialogues
reveal either Plato's or Socrates' beliefs, doctrines or theories
about substantive philosophical matters. Corlett's approach to
Plato's dialogues is applied to a variety of passages throughout
Plato's works on a wide range of topics concerning justice.
In-depth discussions of themes such as legal obligation, punishment
and compensatory justice are clarified and with some surprising
results. Plato's works serve as a rich source of philosophical
thinking about such matters. A central question in today's Platonic
studies is whether Socrates, or any other protagonist in the
dialogues, presents views that the author wanted to assert or
defend. Professor Corlett offers a detailed defense of his view
that the role of Socrates is to raise questions rather than to
provide the author's answers to them. This defense is timely as
intellectual historians consider the part played by Academic
scholars centuries after Plato in systematizing Platonism. J. J.
Mulhern, University of Pennsylvania
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