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  • The Bloomsbury Handbook of Plato

    The Bloomsbury Handbook of Plato by Press, Gerald A.; Duque, Mateo;

    Series: Bloomsbury Handbooks;

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    Product details:

    • Publisher Bloomsbury Academic
    • Date of Publication 30 May 2024
    • Number of Volumes Paperback

    • ISBN 9781350347908
    • Binding Paperback
    • No. of pages544 pages
    • Size 239x165x30 mm
    • Weight 940 g
    • Language English
    • 599

    Categories

    Long description:

    This essential reference text on the life, thought and writings of Plato uses over 160 short, accessible articles to cover a complete range of topics for both the first-time student and seasoned scholar of Plato and ancient philosophy.

    It is organized into five parts illuminating Plato's life, the whole of the Dialogues attributed to him, the Dialogues' literary features, the concepts and themes explored within them and Plato's reception via his influence on subsequent philosophers and the various interpretations of his work. This fully updated 2nd edition includes 19 newly commissioned entries on topics ranging across comedy, tragedy, Xenophon, metatheatre, gender, musical theory, animals, Orphism, political theory, religion, time, Hellenistic philosophy and post-Platonic ancient commentaries. It also features revisions to the majority of articles from the 1st edition, including 8 which have been completely re-written, and 12 which have had the references substantially revised.

    Reflecting the growing diversity of Plato scholarship across the world, this edition includes contributions from a wide range of scholars who enrich the field and provide students and scholars with a vital resource for study and reference.

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    Table of Contents:

    List of Contributors
    Acknowledgements
    List of Dialogue Abbreviations
    How to Use This Book

    Introduction

    1. PLATO'S LIFE, HISTORICAL, LITERARY AND PHILOSOPHIC CONTEXT
    Plato's life
    Aristophanes and intellectuals
    Comedy
    Education
    Eleatics
    Isocrates and logography
    Orality and literacy
    Poetry (epic and lyric)
    Pre-socratic philosophers
    Pythagoreans
    Rhetoric and speechmaking
    Socrates (historical)
    Socratics (other than Plato)
    The Sophists
    Xenophon

    2. THE DIALOGUES
    The Platonic corpus and manuscript tradition
    Alcibiades 1
    The Apology of Socrates
    Charmides
    Clitophon
    Cratylus
    Crito
    Dubia and Spuria (Alcibiades 2, Hipparchus, Minos, Rival Lovers, Axiochus, Definitions, On Justice, On Virtue, Demodocus, Eryxias, Sisyphus)
    Epinomis
    Euthydemus
    Euthyphro
    Gorgias
    Hippias Major
    Hippias Minor
    Ion
    Laches
    Laws
    Letters
    Lysis
    Menexenus
    Meno
    Parmenides
    Phaedo
    Phaedrus
    Philebus
    Politicus (Statesman)
    Protagoras
    Republic
    Sophist
    Symposium
    Theaetetus
    Theages
    Timaeus and Critias

    3. IMPORTANT FEATURES OF THE DIALOGUES
    Anonymity
    Characters
    Comedy
    Drama
    History
    Emotions (pathe, pathemata)
    Humour
    Irony
    Language
    Literary composition
    Musical structure
    Myth (muthos)
    Pedagogical structure
    Pedimental structure
    Play (paidia)
    Proleptic composition
    Reading order
    Socrates (the character)
    Tragedy

    4. CONCEPTS, THEMES AND TOPICS TREATED IN THE DIALOGUES
    Account (see Logos)
    Aesthetics
    Akrasia (incontinence, weakness of will)
    Animals
    Antilogy and eristic
    Aporia
    Appearance and reality
    Argument (see Logos)
    Art (techne)
    Beauty (kalon)
    Being and becoming (on, onta; gignesthai)
    Cause (aitia)
    Cave, the allegory of the
    Character
    City (polis)
    Convention (see Law)
    Cosmos (kosmos)
    Cross-examination (see Elenchus)
    Daimon
    Death
    Definition (see Logos)
    Desire (appetite, epithumia)
    Dialectic (dialektike)
    The divided line
    Education
    Elenchus (cross-examination, refutation)
    Epistemology (knowledge)
    Eristic (see Antilogy and Eristics)
    Eros (see Love)
    Eschatology
    Ethics
    Eudaimonia (see Happiness)
    Excellence (virtue, arete?)
    Forms (eidos, idea)
    Friendship (philia)
    Gender
    Goodness (the good, Agathon)
    Happiness (eudaimonia)
    Hermeneutics
    Idea (see forms)
    Image (eikon)
    Imitation (see Mimesis)
    Incontinence (see Akrasia)
    Inspiration
    Intellectualism
    Justice (dikaion, dikaiosune)
    Knowledge (see Epistemology)
    Language
    Law, convention (nomos)
    Logic
    Logos (account, argument, definition)
    Love (eros)
    Madness and possession
    Mathematics (mathematike)
    Medicine (iatrike)
    Metaphysics (see Ontology)
    Metatheatre
    Method
    Mimesis (imitation)
    Music
    Mysteries
    Myth (muthos)
    Nature (phusis)
    Nomos (see Law)
    Non-propositional knowledge
    The one (to hen)
    Ontology (metaphysics)
    Orphism
    Paiderastia (pederasty)
    Participation
    Perception and sensation (aisthesis, aisthanomai)
    Philosophy and the philosopher
    Phusis (see Nature)
    Piety (eusebeia, hosios)
    Pleasure (hedone)
    Poetry (poiesis)
    Politics and the (figure of the)
    Politicus
    Reality (see Appearance and reality)
    Reason
    Recollection (anamnesis)
    Refutation (see Elenchus)
    Rhetoric (rhetorike)
    Self-knowledge
    Sensation (see Perception and sensation)
    The Sophists
    Soul (psyche)
    The sun simile
    Theology
    Time
    Virtue (see Excellence)
    Vision
    Weakness of will (see Akrasia)
    Women
    Writing

    5. LATER RECEPTION, INTERPRETATION AND INFLUENCE OF PLATO AND THE DIALOGUES
    Section A: Plato in the Ancient World
    Ancient hermeneutics
    Aristotle
    Academy of Athens, ancient history of
    Jewish Platonism (ancient)
    Neoplatonism and its diaspora
    Section B: Plato in the Middle Ages and Renaissance
    Medieval Islamic Platonism
    Medieval Jewish Platonism
    Medieval Christian Platonism
    Renaissance Platonism
    The Cambridge Platonists
    Section C: Plato in Modern and Contemporary Philosophy
    Early modern philosophy from Descartes to Berkeley
    Nineteenth-century German idealism
    Nineteenth-century Plato scholarship
    Developmentalism
    Compositional chronology
    Analytic approaches to Plato
    Vlastosian approaches
    Continental approaches
    Straussian readings of Plato
    Plato's unwritten doctrines
    Esotericism
    The Tübingen approach
    Anti-Platonism, from ancient to modern
    References
    Index

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