Plato's self-corrective development of the concepts of soul, forms, and immortality in three arguments of the Phaedo
著者
書誌事項
Plato's self-corrective development of the concepts of soul, forms, and immortality in three arguments of the Phaedo
(Studies in the history of philosophy, v. 52)
E. Mellen Press, c1999
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注記
Includes bibliographical references and indexes
内容説明・目次
内容説明
This study argues that the overall purpose of the "Phaedo" is to prese nt a number of possible arguments for the soul's immortality in a philosophically systematic way, and that both Plato and Socrates were aware of the flaws in the proofs. Only three of the arguements for immortality include a discussion of the forms. This study argues that the view of forms, soul and immortatlity in each arguement is internally consistant. Each arguement contains three significantly different views of souls, form and immortatlity and each is a refinement of the previous view, rather than a rejection of it. Even the "Phaedro"'s last arguement is shown, however, to be inadaqute. and is shown as a dialectical philosophical converstaiton about immortality of the soul.
目次
- Introduction and statement
- structural and intellectual development from the "Meno" to the "Phaedo" to Books VI and VII of the "Republic"
- the concepts of soul, forms, and immortality in the arguments from recollection, from dualism and from causality in the "Phaedo"
- the argument for immortality from recollection in the "Phaedo"
- the argument for immortality based on dualism
- the argument for immortality based on causality
- conclusion - soul, forms and immortality in the "Phaedo".
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