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"The Ideas of Socrates" offers a unique interpretation of the ideas (forms, eide) in Plato's writings. In this concise and accessible study, Matthew S. Linck makes four major claims. Firstly, the ideas as Socrates discusses them in the "Phaedo", "Parmenides", and "Symposium" are shown to be integral to the person of Socrates as presented in Plato's dialogues. Secondly, Linck argues that if we take Plato's dialogues as an integrated set of writings, then we must acknowledge that the mature Socrates is perfectly aware of the difficulties entailed in the positing of ideas. Thirdly, the book shows that Socrates' recourse to the ideas is not simply an epistemological issue but one of self-transformation. And finally Linck examines how Socrates relates to the ideas in two ways, one practical, the other speculative. As the only group of Plato's narrated dialogues that are not narrated by Socrates, the "Phaedo", "Parmenides", and "Symposium" constitute a unique collection. These three dialogues also contain accounts of Socrates as a young man, and all of these accounts explicitly discuss the ideas."The Ideas of Socrates" serves as a commentary on the relevant passages of these dialogues and goes on to build up an explicit series of arguments about the ideas that will transform the way in which we approach these key texts. This important new book will be of interest to anyone involved in the study of Ancient Philosophy.
Matthew S. Linck is Adjunct Professor of Philosophy at Purchase College, SUNY. He has written and taught widely on Ancient Philosophy.
Introduction; Pythagorean Overture; Chapter One: Phaedo; I. Blindness; II. Anaxagoras; III. Socrates' Second Sailing; Chapter Two: Parmenides; IV. Socrates and Zeno; V. Socrates' Ideas; VI. The Challenge of Parmenides; VII. Ideas and the One; Chapter Three: Symposium; VIII. Erotic Ascent; IX. The In-Between; X. The Genealogy of Eros, or The Philosopher; XI. Possession and Generation. XII. Eros and Ideas; Chapter Four: Phaedo; XIII. Safety; XIV. Soul and Ideas; Concluding Remarks; Bibliography; Notes.
'This is a beautifully written book that offers a powerful picture of the education of Socrates by creatively bringing together three dialogues that are not often associated with one another--the Phaedo, the Parmenides, and the Symposium.'