Details
Title | On the good life: thinking through the intermediaries in Plato's Philebus |
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Creators | Ionescu Cristina |
Collection | Электронные книги зарубежных издательств ; Общая коллекция |
Subjects | PHILOSOPHY / Ethics & Moral Philosophy ; EBSCO eBooks |
Document type | Other |
File type | |
Language | English |
Rights | Доступ по паролю из сети Интернет (чтение, печать, копирование) |
Record key | on1105037554 |
Record create date | 6/19/2019 |
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- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- I. The Unity of the Philebus: Metaphysical Assumptions of the Good Human Life
- The Dialectical Method and the Fourfold Structure of Reality
- Using the Method and the Fourfold Model to Analyze Pleasure and Knowledge
- II. The Placement of Pleasure and Knowledge in the Fourfold Articulation of Reality
- The Placement of Pleasure and Knowledge on the Fourfold Metaphysical Map
- The Relation between Pleasure and Knowledge in Light of Their Placement on the Metaphysical Map
- III. Hybrid Varieties of Pleasure: True Mixed Pleasures and False Pure Pleasures
- Distinct Criteria for Classifying Pleasures: Truth/Falsehood and Purity/Impurity
- Hybrid Pleasures
- Can Mixed Pleasures Be True?
- Can Pure Pleasures Be False?
- Why Hybrid Pleasures Matter
- IV. The Nature of Pleasure: Absolute Standards of Replenishment and Due Measure
- Pleasure as Perceived Replenishment of Some Lack
- False Pleasures of Anticipation (36c–40e)
- Absolute Standards of Replenishment and Due Measure
- Pleasure as Perceived Replenishment of Some Lack
- V. Pleasures of Learning and the Role of Due Measure in Experiencing Them
- Aporia and the Purity of our Pleasures of Learning
- False and Impure Pleasures of Learning Alongside True and Pure Ones
- Mixed Pleasures of Learning
- False Pleasures of Learning
- The Role of Due Measure in Experiencing Pleasures of Learning
- VI. Plato’s Conception of Pleasure Confronting Three Aristotelian Critiques
- Aristotle’s View of Pleasure in the Nicomachean Ethics
- A Platonic Response to Aristotle’s Critique of Pleasure as Genesis and as Replenishment of a Lack
- Appendix. The Philebus’s Implicit Response to the Aporiai of Participation from the Parmenides
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Primary Sources
- Secondary Sources
- Index