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Plato’s Philebus, Part 2: Does the Universe Have a Soul and Reason?

Plato’s Philebus, Part 2: Does the Universe Have a Soul and Reason?

FromPlato's Pod: Dialogues on the works of Plato


Plato’s Philebus, Part 2: Does the Universe Have a Soul and Reason?

FromPlato's Pod: Dialogues on the works of Plato

ratings:
Length:
100 minutes
Released:
Feb 8, 2023
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

Where does the human soul come from, if not the universe of which we are part? The question that Socrates poses relates to his assertion that everything comes to be from a cause, as he and Protarchus search for the causes of the soul’s pleasure in things that in time neither are, nor ever were, nor ever will, be. In the second of three meetings on Plato’s Philebus, members of the Toronto, Calgary, and Chicago Philosophy Meetup groups met on January 29, 2023 to consider the unlimited nature of pleasure within the limits of becoming, and the role of reason in bringing harmony to the good life. We explored the distinction between memory, which is what the soul experiences together with the body, and recollection which the soul later experiences on its own, and the importance of the soul’s capacity to divide a thing’s general form into its many unities until it finds the “common element”. Where does reason find the common element – perhaps in the middle of every thing?
Released:
Feb 8, 2023
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (59)

Welcome to Plato's Pod, a bi-weekly podcast of a group discussion on the dialogues of Plato. The discussion is held through Meetup.com by the Toronto Philosophy and Calgary Philosophy groups and anyone interested in participating, whether to learn about Plato or to contribute to the dialogue, is welcome to join with no experience required! The podcast is hosted by amateur philosopher James Myers and inquiries can be e-mailed to dialoguesonplato@outlook.com. Wherever we go in our discussions we gain knowledge from each other’s perspectives, and for the increase in knowledge we invite everyone to add their voice to the dialogue. Plato, without a doubt, would have imagined no better way than in dialogue for knowledge – the account of the reasons why – to find its home.