ABSTRACT

This second of two volumes on the Greeks by Rush Rhees takes up the questions bequeathed by the previous volume. If reality does not have the unity of a thing, can it have any kind of unity at all? The alternative seems to be that reality has the unity of a form. In this volume Rhees brings the perspective of a modern Wittgensteinian philosopher to bear on the dialogues of Plato. In his treatment of the Georgias and the Symposium Rhees emphasizes Socrates' claim that it is important to seek understanding although one cannot say, in the form of a theory or philosophical thesis, what that understanding amounts to. In considering the Phaedo, Theaetetus, Parmenides and Timaeus, Rhees pursues these questions in a way which relates them to live issues concerning the relation between logic and discourse. Rhees shows that Plato's Forms can neither be thought of by analogy with 'ultimate' particles in physics, nor as fixed concepts that determine what can and cannot be said. Finally, D. Z. Phillips includes two treatments by Rhees of the Republic separated by fifteen years. In the first he criticises Plato for a fixed view that an order predetermines and makes possible growth in understanding, showing how this is the very antithesis of growth. In the second he returns to the tension in Plato's thought between 'answerability to reality' and the view that understanding and growth can only be achieved through a seeking in dialogue. Rhees concludes that language is not a collection of isolated games, rather we speak in the course of lives that we lead and what we say has its meaning from the place it occupies in the course of a life.

chapter 1|8 pages

Rhetoric and Discourse

chapter 2|8 pages

Desires and Understanding

chapter 3|8 pages

Morality, Language and Convention

chapter 4|4 pages

Punishment, Law and Understanding

chapter 5|8 pages

Socratic Paradoxes

part |2 pages

Part 2: Symposium

chapter 6|10 pages

Enquiry, Beauty and Begetting

chapter 7|8 pages

Love

part |2 pages

Part 3: Phaedo

chapter 8|12 pages

Forms

chapter 9|6 pages

Becoming

chapter 10|10 pages

The Soul and the Body

chapter 11|12 pages

The Immortality of the Soul

part |2 pages

Part 4: Republic

chapter 12|8 pages

The Notion of Political Wisdom

chapter 13|4 pages

Independence and Human Relations

chapter 14|10 pages

Education

chapter 15|10 pages

Justice

chapter 16|8 pages

Poetry and Philosophy

chapter 17|18 pages

Dialectic

chapter 18|6 pages

Philosophy and Contemplation

part |2 pages

Part 5: Parmenides

chapter 19|8 pages

Language and Reality

chapter 20|12 pages

The Reality of Things

chapter 21|10 pages

The Possibility of Discourse

part |2 pages

Part 6: Theaetetus

chapter 22|4 pages

Knowledge and Sensation

chapter 23|4 pages

Sense and Thought

chapter 24|4 pages

Knowledge and Error

part |2 pages

Part 7: Sophist

chapter 25|8 pages

The Dialectician and the Sophist

chapter 26|8 pages

Logic and its Application

part |2 pages

Part 8: Timaeus

chapter 27|6 pages

A Limited Account?

chapter 28|4 pages

Space and Time

chapter 29|6 pages

The Life of the Soul

chapter 30|6 pages

The World Soul