xxx
All posts by Preceptor
2022 | Political Philosophy in Gulliver’s Travels: Shocked by The Just Society
xxx
2022 | Completely Free: The Moral and Political Vision of John Stuart Mill
xxx
2022 | Joy and Laughter in Nietzsche’s Philosophy: Alternative Liberatory Politics
2022 | Joy and Laughter in Nietzsche’s Philosophy: Alternative Liberatory Politics
2022 | Kant, Liberalism, and the Meaning of Life
2022 | Kant, Liberalism, and the Meaning of Life
2022 | Women’s International Thought: Towards a New Canon
2022 | Women’s International Thought: Towards a New Canon
2022 | Plato – Laws; C.D.C. Reeve (Translator)
2022 | Plato – Laws; C.D.C. Reeve (Translator)
Plato on the Unity of the Virtues: A Dialectic Reading (2022)
Jenks, Rod
Rowman & Littlefield
Pages: 128
Blurb
Plato, in the Protagoras, suggests that the virtues are profoundly unified yet also distinct. In Plato on the Unity of the Virtues: A Dialectic Reading, Rod Jenks argues that the way in which virtues are both one and many is finally ineffable. He shows how Plato countenances ineffability throughout his corpus. Jenks’s interpretation of Protagoras accounts for the otherwise-inexplicable inability of both Socrates and Protagoras to identify the bone of contention between them. Not only can the thesis not be argued for; it can’t even be properly stated. In this book, Jenks shows how the long exegesis on the Simonides poem is philosophically relevant. Further, he shows that both the parts-of-the-face analogy and the gold analogy are inadequate, arguing that Plato intends them to be so. Jenks explains why the unity thesis is supported by what most scholars agree are terrible arguments: that the virtues are both one and many. He explains why, despite the unity claim being profoundly elusive, Plato believes it to be crucial that we come to appreciate how virtue, which really does have parts, can also be profoundly one.