Thursday, October 24, 2019
Platos Dialectical Cut in Socrates Soul in The Being of the Beautiful
Plato's Dialectical Cut in Socrates' Soul in The Being of the Beautiful                  Within the spectrum of the political realm, one of the most  important philosophical questions arises, "What is the best regime?" It is  obvious that the best regime is one of complied consent. There still seems  to be difficulty in deciding the best means to the desired end. Politics,  the ruling force, operates in the realm of opinions.  Its counterpart,  philosophy, is an attempt to replace opinions about political things.  This  "political science" is the process of acquiring political knowledge for the  guiding of political life.  The transformation from opinions to knowledge  is through the dialectic method.  This "political science" is not without  its problems.  It is plagued by relativism and nihilism.  These problems  tend to make politics unreceptive to philosophy.  What philosophy is is  best seen in a confrontation between the philosopher and the city. It is by  no small coincidence that these two conflicting views are seen in different  characters in The Being of the Beautiful.  The obvious question now becomes  "Why does Plato make a dialectical cut in Socrates' soul between Theaetetus  and Young Socrates?"     In answering this question it becomes central to  assume that the being of the beautiful is not contained in one character,  and for that matter, may not be a character at all.  It is crucial then to  take up the characteristics of both Theaetetus and Young Socrates in  relation to what the beautiful is.  In so doing, it will provide the basis  for political knowledge. To begin, Theaetetus is a youth just returned from  battle. War, being the harshest of all teachers places one under the duress  of necessity. This is a fo...              ...nd this. He  says that "all has been said in a measured way... but this is hard to take  in" (Statesman, 293e).  The Stranger explains that the rule of law is for  one class and is corrupt, imperfect and seditionary. Through the  questioning of the laws, the foundations of the one are seen. Politics and  philosophy are not natural enemies.  Both Theaetetus and Young Socrates  understand the ideas to some extent. The goal now is to make each receptive  to the other.  Both make distinctions between men and gods.  They can each  understand the concept that something merely "is". Within each character  separately a vice is seen but when combined dialectically, the possibility  of a true political philosophy is possible.  Perhaps Socrates sees in both  of them the idea of the philosopher and he wants to see it generated as  proof of a permanent condition of human nature.                        
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