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Description
This introduction to Plato's dialogues and his writing is ideal for those new to his work, giving historical context to his ideas.
'Christopher Rowe's Plato, ahead of its time when first published, is highly welcome in a new reprint. Rowe faces from the start the point that the reader of Plato's dialogues is encountering a challenging form of philosophy, one which demands both intellectual rigour and personal response, one which challenges the reader both to systematize the ideas in different dialogues and to do justice to them in their distinct dramatic settings. It invites us to shared inquiry rather than deference to established positions, and this clear and subtle introduction will draw the beginner into fruitful engagement with Plato's many ideas.'- Julia Annas, University of Arizona
'... compels the reader to engage with the actual text and thus gain an appreciation of the Socratic method of shared enquiry.' - Margaret Buckley, Classics Ireland
Table of Contents
Preface to the Second Edition
1. Plato and Socrates
2. The Dialogues and the Dialogue Form
Euthyphro
Symposium
Statesman
3. On 'Forms'
Early and Middle Dialogues
The Parmenides and After
Postscript
4. Knowledge, Pleasure and the Good
Protagoras
Gorgias
Republic
Philebus
5. State and Individual
Republic
After the Republic
6. Poets, Orators and Sophists
On the Poets
On Rhetoric
On the Sophists
7. On the 'Soul'
8. On the Natural World
9. The 'Unwritten Doctrines'
10. Plato and the Thought of his Time
Epilogue: Plato and the Twentieth Century
Bibliography
Indexes
Product details
| Published | 26 Feb 2004 |
|---|---|
| Format | Paperback |
| Edition | 2nd |
| Extent | 240 |
| ISBN | 9781853996627 |
| Imprint | Bristol Classical Press |
| Dimensions | 215 x 140 mm |
| Series | BCPaperbacks |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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This book can be highly recommended as one of the clearest and most concise introductions in English to the full range of Plato's dialogues and the ideas explored in them. While giving priority to a critical engagement with individual works, it also provides guidance on the historical context in which Plato's thinking developed.
Stephen Halliwell, University of St Andrews, UK
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Christopher Rowe's Plato, ahead of its time when first published [in 1984] is highly welcome in a new reprint. From the start, Rowe establishes that the reader of Plato's dialogues encounters a challenging form of philosophy, one which demands both intellectual rigor and personal response, one which challenges the reader both to systematize the ideas in different dialogues and to do justice to them in their distinct dramatic settings. [This book] invites us to shared inquiry rather than deference to established positions, and this clear and subtle introduction will draw the beginner into fruitful engagement with Plato's many ideas.
Julia Annas, University of Arizona, USA
-
... compels the reader to engage with the actual text and thus gain an appreciation of the Socratic method of shared enquiry.
Margaret Buckley, Classics Ireland
ONLINE RESOURCES
Bloomsbury Collections
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