Plato's Progress
£39.99
- Author: Gilbert Ryle
- Date Published: July 1975
- availability: Available
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9780521099820
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This is, as from the author of The Concept of Mind it could scarcely fail to be, a bold and rollicking book. It is also one of the most important works about Plato to have appeared since the first volume of Sir Karl Popper's The Open Society. Whereas The Concept of Mind was a general offensive against Cartesian views of man, eschewing any precise references to particular sources, Plato's Progress deals with scholarly questions of datings and developments, showing and demanding familiarity with a wide literature. Yet Professor Ryle is still incapable as ever of the dry-as-dust.
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×Product details
- Date Published: July 1975
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9780521099820
- length: 320 pages
- dimensions: 198 x 129 x 16 mm
- weight: 0.315kg
- availability: Available
Table of Contents
Part I. The Disorders:
1. Aristotle and Plato
2. Plato
3. Conclusion
Part II. The Publication of Dialogues:
4. Book-reading
5. The recitation of dialogues
6. games-audiences
7. The mammoth dialogues
Part III. Plato and Sicily:
8. Who invited Plato to come to Syracuse in 367?
What were Isocrates, Plato, etc., invited for?
10. The real Dion
11. The forger
12. Plato's third visit to Sicily
13. Aristotle and Sicily
Part IV. Dialectic:
14. Foreword
15. Aristotle's Art of Dialectic
16. The earlier history of dialectic
17. Plato's dialectic vis-à-vis eristic
18. The minor values of dialectic
19. The philosophical value of dialectic
20. Conclusion
Part V. The Crisis:
21. The charges against Socrates
22. The charges against 'Socrates'
23. Evidence
24. Plato's co-defendants
25. Epilogue
Part VI. The Disappearance of the Eristic Dialogue:
26. The abandonment of the elenchus
27. The organisation of the eristic Moot
28. The minuting of debates
29. Dialogues and the minutes of debates
30. Why the eristic dialogue vanished
31. From eristic to philosophy
32. Eristic and the Theory of Forms
Part VII. The Timetable:
33. Foreword
34. The eristic dialogues
35. The Apology and the Crito
36. The foundation of the Academy
37. The Phaedo and the Symposium
38. The Critias
39. The Timaeus
40. The Republic
41. The Philebus
42. The Laws
43. The Phaedrus
44. The Cratylus
45. The Theaetetus
46. The Sophist
47. The Politicus
48. The Parmenides
49. A stylometric difficulty
Acknowledgements
Indices.
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