The symphony of temperance in Republic 4: Musical imagery and practical models

This paper calls into question a long-lasting but ill-founded tenet of Platonic scholarship, namely that Plato was not interested in, or aware of, the technical implications of the musical concepts he employed in the dialogues. Conversely, I will show how Plato exploited the technical and practical...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lynch, T
Format: Journal article
Published: Brill 2017
_version_ 1826302746410614784
author Lynch, T
author_facet Lynch, T
author_sort Lynch, T
collection OXFORD
description This paper calls into question a long-lasting but ill-founded tenet of Platonic scholarship, namely that Plato was not interested in, or aware of, the technical implications of the musical concepts he employed in the dialogues. Conversely, I will show how Plato exploited the technical and practical features of the concept of symphōnía dià pasôn, and of choral singing more generally, to highlight the unique role played by temperance (sōphrosýnē) in the ideal city. More precisely I contend that Plato’s musical images, far from being decorative or purely metaphoric devices, enrich our understanding of this ethical notion precisely by means of their technical and performative implications, which were very familiar to the original readers of the Republic. Hence musical theory and practice, in addition to being central elements of the cultural context in which Plato’s reflections must be interpreted, represent also a repertoire of concepts that significantly informed his philosophical theories.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T05:52:13Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:e94769f3-f891-4bcb-a217-991053c58cb5
institution University of Oxford
last_indexed 2024-03-07T05:52:13Z
publishDate 2017
publisher Brill
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:e94769f3-f891-4bcb-a217-991053c58cb52022-03-27T10:53:06ZThe symphony of temperance in Republic 4: Musical imagery and practical modelsJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:e94769f3-f891-4bcb-a217-991053c58cb5Symplectic Elements at OxfordBrill2017Lynch, TThis paper calls into question a long-lasting but ill-founded tenet of Platonic scholarship, namely that Plato was not interested in, or aware of, the technical implications of the musical concepts he employed in the dialogues. Conversely, I will show how Plato exploited the technical and practical features of the concept of symphōnía dià pasôn, and of choral singing more generally, to highlight the unique role played by temperance (sōphrosýnē) in the ideal city. More precisely I contend that Plato’s musical images, far from being decorative or purely metaphoric devices, enrich our understanding of this ethical notion precisely by means of their technical and performative implications, which were very familiar to the original readers of the Republic. Hence musical theory and practice, in addition to being central elements of the cultural context in which Plato’s reflections must be interpreted, represent also a repertoire of concepts that significantly informed his philosophical theories.
spellingShingle Lynch, T
The symphony of temperance in Republic 4: Musical imagery and practical models
title The symphony of temperance in Republic 4: Musical imagery and practical models
title_full The symphony of temperance in Republic 4: Musical imagery and practical models
title_fullStr The symphony of temperance in Republic 4: Musical imagery and practical models
title_full_unstemmed The symphony of temperance in Republic 4: Musical imagery and practical models
title_short The symphony of temperance in Republic 4: Musical imagery and practical models
title_sort symphony of temperance in republic 4 musical imagery and practical models
work_keys_str_mv AT lyncht thesymphonyoftemperanceinrepublic4musicalimageryandpracticalmodels
AT lyncht symphonyoftemperanceinrepublic4musicalimageryandpracticalmodels