Plato Complete Works?

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I would start with Plato’s Republic, then move on to St Augustine of Hippo.
 
I’m looking to begin reading Plato’s works. I’ve been looking to buy this book: Plato Complete Works (amazon.com/Plato-Complete-Works/dp/0872203492/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1489768839&sr=8-1&keywords=plato+complete+works), but its like $60! :mad:

Is it worth it to get the whole set, or will I get enough of Plato’s philosophy from a few of his dialogues? Thanks
If you go on Amazon’s Kindle store, you can find several different Complete Works sets, of which the most expensive is $2.99. If you don’t have a Kindle device, there is a free Kindle Reader that you can download on your computer.
 
I’m looking to begin reading Plato’s works. I’ve been looking to buy this book: Plato Complete Works (amazon.com/Plato-Complete-Works/dp/0872203492/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1489768839&sr=8-1&keywords=plato+complete+works), but its like $60! :mad:

Is it worth it to get the whole set, or will I get enough of Plato’s philosophy from a few of his dialogues? Thanks
The shelves of your local library will be wellstocked with Plato’s works. I don’t know if I started with the dialogues, the Republic. I remember the Idea of a chair, something about shadows in caves. Forms. I would recommend a good mainstream book about Plato first. Then you will be able to decide what to read of his works in a much more informed, confident way. Plus you’ll save $60. I do use libraries for just these situations. Where you don’t want the book for life. Maybe buy something you read of his later - that you really enjoy and will reread. I think everyone should have a good knowledge of Plato and Aristotle. Greek philosophers.
 
I’ve read the Republic and the Symposium, and that was enough for me
 
You might want to look for used books. Sometimes I can find them real cheap online.
 
I even find used books for less than a $1 then one pays media mail shipping…
 
I’m looking to begin reading Plato’s works. I’ve been looking to buy this book: Plato Complete Works (amazon.com/Plato-Complete-Works/dp/0872203492/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1489768839&sr=8-1&keywords=plato+complete+works), but its like $60! :mad:

Is it worth it to get the whole set, or will I get enough of Plato’s philosophy from a few of his dialogues? Thanks
I think it would be best to dissect this question on the basis of what interests you about Platos philosophy in the first place.

Several of those “Complete Works” editions have far more accurate translations and commentary by some of the best academics in the field of Platonic studies. But that may be a little too intensive for a first time reader.

Keeping your interest of Plato in mind and how his work effected our Church throughout the ages, you might get the most out of a sequence involving

Euthyphro
Apology
Phaedo
Meno
Republic

The first two dialogues gives you a brief taste of his early work and his adoration of Socrates.

The rest move into the realms of Metaphysics, Epistemology, and political philosophy.

It’s the first two subjects that had the most effect on Graeco-Roman paganism, Christianity, Judaism, and even Islam.
 
There’s a glut of Plato textbooks out there that will give you contexts and such to the dialogues too. They should be pretty cheap. I’d add that to your search.
 
Plato was, after Socrates, the first great teacher of philosophy. He inspired Aristotle to be even greater than he was as a philosopher, if not as a teacher. The Platonic method is what people call it when you examine a problem to its very roots by asking questions and then testing every answer to every question. There’s hardly any skill more useful to a philosopher than the talent for analytics.

That said, I don’t think Plato gives us such much of substance as he gives of method.

This was Thomas Jefferson’s view of Plato too, when in old age he went back to read the Republic and pronounced it sheer foolishness (or words to that effect) all the way through.
 
That said, I don’t think Plato gives us such much of substance as he gives of method…
Would you care to elaborate on that? I mean in terms of practical answers, I’d agree - but then again most philosophers don’t.

But if your talking about answers in general - doctrines or some such, then that becomes a much more difficult assessment.

You ever read Plato’s Phaedrus - his dialogue about writing? He praised Oral communication above the written word as a medium of philosophical discourse. Authors of text cannot adapt their points to the level of the audience they interact with nor can they answer criticisms or take comments.

The written word is merely a sign or a symbol to jog the memory of those who already know but have forgotten. Literary work is merely play, the task of the true philosopher remains in interacting with his/her students.

I found that position to be very odd given the fact I was reading a dialogue! But a few friends were able to help me put it together over time

1.) the written word receives the same amount of antipathy as art does for Plato because they are Images. If things in the world are already Shadows of the Forms, than Images are Shadows of those Shadows.

2.) I thought he was being what do your UK cousins cal it - “cheeky” when he said words are for those who already know. But it was pointed out to me that this refers specifically to the epistemological take found in his Meno. The dialogue illustrates an idea that human beings never really learn, but rather -recollect- knowledge that was previously ours in some previous pre-existent state.

3.) th existence of his “unwritten” doctrine. Aristotle makes reference to in passing in his physics and metaphysics about Platos unwritten teachings but never goes into detail.

A student of Aristotle, Aristoxenus, mentions a discussion with his master where Aristotle related a public discussion Plato gave “On the Good” to his fellow Athenians. It was possibly the most direct Plato had ever been - filled with mathematical and astronomical information , the discussion apparently went over the heads of his audience who were expecting a far more conventional speech on what goodness was.

Plato is difficult to interpret because in a sense, he has made himself to be that way. its been pointed out to me on multiple occasions that because Plato wrote dialogues as opposed to a Treatises, he never actually tells us directly what he as an -author- believes - we are forced to try and discern that from what his characters are talking about and the subtext of the discussion.

In the case of your Thomas Jefferson example, I’m not surprised that was his reaction to the Republic…if he thought the Republic was meant to be about political philosophy exclusively.

Think about how that dialogue started, and the direction it veered into?

One might be tempted to think, maybe he can’t stay on topic - but square that away against his last dialogue - the Laws. From beginning to end, that is a work on political philosophy that’s also less ideal, and a lot more practical.

For whatever reason, Plato seems to hate giving direct answers. It might have to do with those tidbits in the Meno, Theatetus, and the Republic. He seems to think that some people are more “awake” than others - more receptive to understanding philosophy than the masses.

In a sense, the dialogues serve a multifunction

1.) Entertainment
2.) Training Tool
3:) Test to Weed out People

…dependent on the audience reading it.
 
In a sense, the dialogues serve a multifunction

1.) Entertainment
2.) Training Tool
3:) Test to Weed out People

…dependent on the audience reading it.
Yes to all that.

Plato in the dialogues was better at teaching how to be a philosopher than at teaching philosophy. This may be why the poet Dante referred to Aristotle, rather than to Plato, as the “Master of all who know.”

Now Aristotle teaches us more philosophy, but (except for his work in logic, which few people have read and fewer have understood) is not so good as Plato at teaching us how to think through the marvelous medium of Socrates.

Thomas Aquinas quotes Aristotle far more often than Plato. Yet his method of reasoning, carefully studied, shows that he adopted the Socratic style of dialectic rather than the professorial style of Aristotle.
 
Yes to all that.

Plato in the dialogues was better at teaching how to be a philosopher than at teaching philosophy. This may be why the poet Dante referred to Aristotle, rather than to Plato, as the “Master of all who know.”

Now Aristotle teaches us more philosophy, but (except for his work in logic, which few people have read and fewer have understood) is not as good as Plato at teaching us how to think through the marvelous medium of Socrates.

Thomas Aquinas quotes Aristotle far more often than Plato. Yet his method of reasoning, carefully studied, shows that he adopted the Socratic style of dialectic rather than the professorial style of Aristotle.
I would urge novices in philosophy to start with Plato and end with Aristotle as a correction of the extravagant deductions of Plato especially in the areas of metaphysics and politics.
 
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