Description |
1 online resource |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references and index. |
Summary |
"This book has the form of a text commentary on one of Plato's so-called Socratic dialogues, the Charmides. After a comprehensive introduction, the commentary proceeds closely following Plato's text, quoting sections of the Charmides in translation, and discussing in detail the passages quoted. The primary task of the analysis is to track the argument, from the early definitions of sôphrosynê (temperance) suggested by Charmides to the deeply puzzling question whether a kind of self-knowledge identified by Critias as 'science of science' is possible or, conceding that it is, whether the greatly beneficial virtue of sôphrosynê is the same thing as the 'science of science. In parallel to the argument, the commentary also pursues historical and literary themes, notably the development of the characters of Charmides and Critias and the utilisation of the historical subtext by Plato for dramatic and philosophical purposes. The commentary tries to pull together the different strands of the dialogue, show how they evolve, and argue that they form an attractive and coherent whole. The book has twelve chapters, plus an Appendix containing a new translation of the dialogue, a bibliography, and indices"-- Provided by publisher. |
Note |
Description based on online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on March 02, 2022). |
Contents |
Cover -- Half-title page -- Title page -- Copyright page -- Contents -- Preface and Acknowledgements -- Chapter 1 Introduction -- Chapter 2 The Prologue (153a1-159a10) -- Chapter 3 Charmides' First Definition of Sôphrosynê: Temperance Is a Kind of Quietness (159b1-160d4) -- Chapter 4 Charmides' Second Definition: Temperance Is a Sense of Shame (160d5-161b4) -- Chapter 5 Charmides Abandons the 'Best Method': The Third Definition -- Temperance Is 'Doing One's Own' (161b4-162b11) |
|
Chapter 6 Enter Critias: The Third Definition Revisited -- Temperance Is the Doing or Making of Good Things (162c1-164d3) -- Chapter 7 Critias' Speech: Temperance Is Knowing Oneself (164d4-165c4) -- Chapter 8 Socrates and Critias Debate the Technê Analogy: From 'Knowing Oneself' to 'the Knowledge of Itself' (165c4-166e3) -- Chapter 9 Critias' Final Definition: 'Temperance Is the Science of Itself and the Other Sciences' or 'the Science of Science' (166e4-167a8) -- the Third Offering to Zeus (167a9-c8) -- Chapter 10 Can There Be an Epistême of Itself?: The Argument from Relatives (167c8-169c2) |
|
Chapter 11 The Argument from Benefit (169c3-175a8) -- Chapter 12 The Epilogue (175a9-176d5) -- Appendix: Charmides, or On Temperance: A Peirastic Dialogue -- Bibliography -- Index |
Local Note |
Cambridge University Press Cambridge Open Access Books and Elements |
Subject |
Plato. Charmides.
|
|
Charmides (Plato) (OCoLC)fst01356314
|
|
Ethics -- Early works to 1800.
|
|
Knowledge, Theory of -- Early works to 1800.
|
|
PHILOSOPHY / History & Surveys / Ancient & Classical.
|
|
Ethics. (OCoLC)fst00915833
|
|
Knowledge, Theory of. (OCoLC)fst00988194
|
Genre/Form |
Early works. (OCoLC)fst01411636
|
Other Form: |
Print version: Tsouna, Voula. Plato's Charmides Cambridge, United Kingdom ; New York, NY, USA : Cambridge University Press, 2022 9781316511114 (DLC) 2021035319 |
ISBN |
9781009036610 electronic book |
|
1009036610 electronic book |
|
1009041908 electronic book |
|
9781009041904 (electronic book) |
|
9781316511114 hardcover |
|
9781009005319 paperback |
|