Socratic Political Philosophy in Xenophon's Symposium
American Journal of Political Science, Vol. 54, No. 1, Pg. 140-152, 2009.
Thomas L. Pangle
This interpretative
commentary recovers the largely overlooked significance of a work that
illuminates, by portraying in a subtle comic drama, the new perspective
on existence, the new way of life, that Socrates introduced in and
through his founding of political philosophy. The famous "problem of
Socrates" as a turning point of world history (Nietzsche) remains a
cynosure of controversy and puzzlement. How did Socrates understand the
character of, and the relation between, civic virtue and his own
philosophic virtue? What is the meaning of Socratic "eros"? What kind
of educative influence did Socrates intend to have, on and through his
varied followers and associates? And what diverse effects did he
actually have? Xenophon's Symposium, viewed in
the context of his other writings, affords a playful, but thereby
deeply revealing, perspective—from the viewpoint of a slightly
skeptical intimate.
Read the article.
(Something interesting I found)Posted: Friday, February 12, 2010
by
nick stock
Filed under: philosophy, justice, ethics, behavior, morality, history, moral philosophy, virtue, character, wisdom, self-control