The art of Platonic love

<p>This is a study of love (<em>erōs</em>) in Plato’s <em>Symposium</em>. It’s a study undertaken over three chapters, each of which serves as a stepping stone for the following and addresses one of three primary aims. First: to provide an interpretation of Plato’s favo...

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Main Author: Lopez, N
Other Authors: Crisp, R
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
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author Lopez, N
author2 Crisp, R
author_facet Crisp, R
Lopez, N
author_sort Lopez, N
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description <p>This is a study of love (<em>erōs</em>) in Plato’s <em>Symposium</em>. It’s a study undertaken over three chapters, each of which serves as a stepping stone for the following and addresses one of three primary aims. First: to provide an interpretation of Plato’s favored theory of <em>erōs</em> in the <em>Symposium</em>, or as it’s referred to here, a theory of Platonic love. This theory is understood to be ultimately concerned with a practice of living which, if developed correctly, may come to constitute the life most worth living for a human being. On this interpretation, Platonic love is the desire for Beauty, ultimately for the sake of eudaimonic immortality, manifested through productive activity. Second: to offer a reading of the <em>Symposium</em> which attends to the work’s literary elements, especially characterization and narrative structure, as partially constitutive of Plato’s philosophical thought on <em>erōs</em>. Here it’s suggested that Platonic love is concerned with seeking and producing truly virtuous action and true poetry. This reading positions us to see that a correctly progressing and well-practiced Platonic love is illustrated in the character of the philosopher Socrates, who is known and followed for his bizarre displays of virtue and whom Alcibiades crowns over either Aristophanes or Agathon as the wisest and most beautiful poet at the <em>Symposium</em>. Third: to account for how to love a person Platonically. Contra Gregory Vlastos’ influential critical interpretation, it’s here argued that the Platonic lover is able to really love a person: to really love a person Platonically is to seek jointly for Beauty; it is to work together as co-practitioners in the art of love. The art of Platonic love is set up in this way to be explored as a practice potentially constitutive of the life most worth living for a human being.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:5e9b2d70-49d9-4e75-b445-fcb0bfecdcef2022-03-26T17:41:38ZThe art of Platonic loveThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:5e9b2d70-49d9-4e75-b445-fcb0bfecdcefEthics (Moral philosophy)Hellenic (Classical Greek) literatureAncient philosophyEnglishOxford University Research Archive - Valet2014Lopez, NCrisp, RMoss, J<p>This is a study of love (<em>erōs</em>) in Plato’s <em>Symposium</em>. It’s a study undertaken over three chapters, each of which serves as a stepping stone for the following and addresses one of three primary aims. First: to provide an interpretation of Plato’s favored theory of <em>erōs</em> in the <em>Symposium</em>, or as it’s referred to here, a theory of Platonic love. This theory is understood to be ultimately concerned with a practice of living which, if developed correctly, may come to constitute the life most worth living for a human being. On this interpretation, Platonic love is the desire for Beauty, ultimately for the sake of eudaimonic immortality, manifested through productive activity. Second: to offer a reading of the <em>Symposium</em> which attends to the work’s literary elements, especially characterization and narrative structure, as partially constitutive of Plato’s philosophical thought on <em>erōs</em>. Here it’s suggested that Platonic love is concerned with seeking and producing truly virtuous action and true poetry. This reading positions us to see that a correctly progressing and well-practiced Platonic love is illustrated in the character of the philosopher Socrates, who is known and followed for his bizarre displays of virtue and whom Alcibiades crowns over either Aristophanes or Agathon as the wisest and most beautiful poet at the <em>Symposium</em>. Third: to account for how to love a person Platonically. Contra Gregory Vlastos’ influential critical interpretation, it’s here argued that the Platonic lover is able to really love a person: to really love a person Platonically is to seek jointly for Beauty; it is to work together as co-practitioners in the art of love. The art of Platonic love is set up in this way to be explored as a practice potentially constitutive of the life most worth living for a human being.</p>
spellingShingle Ethics (Moral philosophy)
Hellenic (Classical Greek) literature
Ancient philosophy
Lopez, N
The art of Platonic love
title The art of Platonic love
title_full The art of Platonic love
title_fullStr The art of Platonic love
title_full_unstemmed The art of Platonic love
title_short The art of Platonic love
title_sort art of platonic love
topic Ethics (Moral philosophy)
Hellenic (Classical Greek) literature
Ancient philosophy
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