Socrates in August : from incondensable complexity to myth
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Bibliographic Information
Socrates in August : from incondensable complexity to myth
(American university studies, ser. V . Philosophy ; v. 66)
P. Lang, c1989
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Note
"Companion to my two earlier books, Socrates in October ... and Socrates in September"--Acknowledgments
Description and Table of Contents
Description
How is our world incondensably complex? What does this mean for the kinds of understandings with which we must eventually rest satisfied? In 399 B.C., Socrates would have faced this challenge without the language of modern science - a language rife with spacetime continua and four dimensions and genetic codes, all of which hide innumerable elemental assumptions about the structure of human understanding. Instead, Socrates had only his hands and his feet, and trees, houses, and mountains. Most of all, Socrates had the great myths, tales that, having rubbed shoulders with people since time immemorial, still maintain a standing in the crowd. Myths are bald wishes and hopes that are unabashedly fiction and that are human because they resonate in the human soul. They reiterate common human qualities, and they mirror truths that are direct and general and special to us all.
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