This book examines what we can reliably know about Plato and the
historical Socrates. It shows how pervasively the sources of
information were biased by Pythagoreanism, Platonism, and
Neoplatonism. It gives a source-critical account of how the climate
of opinion in fourth-century Athens was captured by the
Pythagoreans and how Speusippos's Academy also came to be
pythagorized--adding definitional idealism to Pythagorean number
idealism, and elevating Plato to a divine level that makes him into
a coequal of Pythagoras, thus capturing Plato for Pythagoreanism.
By showing how Plato's dialogues were dedramatized, dedialogized,
and read or understood as if they were works expounding
pythagorizing doctrine, Tejera has created a provocative
reappraisal for scholars of ancient Greek philosophy.
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