Myth, dialogue and the allegorical interpretation of Plato
Myth, dialogue and the allegorical interpretation of Plato
Date
2013-06
Authors
Benitez, Eugenio
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Flinders University Department of Language Studies - Modern Greek
Abstract
From the late Classical period until the Nineteenth Century, Plato was admired for his
inspiration and vision, rather than for his theories and argumentation. Then with the
advent of analytic philosophy in the Twentieth Century, the pendulum swung hard in
the other direction. Plato’s myths were largely ignored. The drama of his dialogues was
considered insignificant. The theory of forms and the theory of recollection (as a gloss
on immortality) became the pillars of Platonism, and the journals became filled with
careful, logical analyses of Platonic principles, theories, and hypotheses. Recently even
mainstream Plato scholars have tried to redress the overemphasis on Platonic theory,
but they have limited themselves mostly to arguing that image, myth, and characterisation
are important to the interpretation of Plato in addition to concepts, theories, and
dialectic. This paper argues that myth and dialogue play a much more central role in
Platonic philosophy than is currently accepted. There is evidence that Plato treats the
dialogues themselves as framing myths, within which all action and dialogue is treated
as mimesis, rather than as direct presentation of Plato’s logoi. If this is correct, then
each of Plato’s works is organised around the representation of a comprehensive poetic
vision not stated in, but rather only through, the action of the dialogue.
Description
Keywords
Greek research,
Greece,
Australia
Citation
Benitez, E., 2013. Myth, dialogue and the allegorical interpretation of Plato. In M. Tsianikas, N. Maadad, G. Couvalis, and M. Palaktsoglou (eds.) "Greek Research in Australia: Proceedings of the Biennial International Conference of Greek Studies, Flinders University June 2011", Flinders University Department of Language Studies - Modern Greek: Adelaide, 1-15.