Abstract: In the Philebus, Socrates constructs a dialectical argument in which he purports to explain to Protarchus why the pleasure that spectators feel when watching comedy is a mixture of pleasure and pain. To do this he brings in phthonos (malice or envy) as his prime example (47d-50e). I examine the argument and claim that Socrates implicitly challenges Protarchus’ beliefs about himself as moderate and self-knowing. I discuss two reasons to think that more is at stake in the argument than the mixed pleasure and pain of comic malice
The argument in Plato\u27s Philebus presents three successive formulations of the hedonist principle...
My focus here is the discussion between Critias and Socrates regarding the message of the oracle at ...
In this paper I aim to show that the restoration model of pleasure as we find it in Plato’s Gorgias,...
Abstract: In the Philebus, Socrates constructs a dialectical argument in which he purports to explai...
At Apology 33c Socrates explains that "some people enjoy … my company" because "they … enjoy hearing...
In Plato's dialogues, the Phaedo, Laches, and Republic, Socrates warns his interlocutors about the d...
In this paper I explore the ethics of laughing at people. I argue that for Plato laughter plays an i...
The weight of the evidence is heavily in favor of the antihedonist reading of the Protagoras. It is ...
Central to Plato\u27s conceptualization of the nature of pleasure is an engagement with visual image...
The essays presented in this thesis are all concerned in some way with Plato's views on pleasure, Ho...
What is paradoxical about the Socratic paradoxes is that they are not paradoxical at all. Socrates f...
The Philebus is devoted to the question what constitutes the good for a human being. Although Socrat...
This paper evaluates the arguments presented regarding the interpretation of false pleasures in Plat...
This paper considers Plato’s argument in Philebus 53c-54d for the conclusion that pleasure is not an...
Stokes provides a close reading of the arguments in Plato\u27s Protagoras, focusing especially on So...
The argument in Plato\u27s Philebus presents three successive formulations of the hedonist principle...
My focus here is the discussion between Critias and Socrates regarding the message of the oracle at ...
In this paper I aim to show that the restoration model of pleasure as we find it in Plato’s Gorgias,...
Abstract: In the Philebus, Socrates constructs a dialectical argument in which he purports to explai...
At Apology 33c Socrates explains that "some people enjoy … my company" because "they … enjoy hearing...
In Plato's dialogues, the Phaedo, Laches, and Republic, Socrates warns his interlocutors about the d...
In this paper I explore the ethics of laughing at people. I argue that for Plato laughter plays an i...
The weight of the evidence is heavily in favor of the antihedonist reading of the Protagoras. It is ...
Central to Plato\u27s conceptualization of the nature of pleasure is an engagement with visual image...
The essays presented in this thesis are all concerned in some way with Plato's views on pleasure, Ho...
What is paradoxical about the Socratic paradoxes is that they are not paradoxical at all. Socrates f...
The Philebus is devoted to the question what constitutes the good for a human being. Although Socrat...
This paper evaluates the arguments presented regarding the interpretation of false pleasures in Plat...
This paper considers Plato’s argument in Philebus 53c-54d for the conclusion that pleasure is not an...
Stokes provides a close reading of the arguments in Plato\u27s Protagoras, focusing especially on So...
The argument in Plato\u27s Philebus presents three successive formulations of the hedonist principle...
My focus here is the discussion between Critias and Socrates regarding the message of the oracle at ...
In this paper I aim to show that the restoration model of pleasure as we find it in Plato’s Gorgias,...