Plato and Platonism

audiobook

Plato and Platonism

by Walter Pater

EN·~7 hours

Chapters

Description

The opening chapters trace the roots of philosophical thought, insisting that no doctrine springs fully formed from a vacuum. By likening the emergence of ideas to natural growth, the author shows how concepts such as reminiscence, perpetual flux, and induction echo earlier poetic and pre‑philosophical instincts. Against this backdrop, Plato is presented not as a solitary creator but as a masterful synthesizer who gathered and reshaped the scattered insights of the Ionians, Eleatics, and even distant cultures.

The book then turns to Plato’s doctrine of motion, exploring how his dialogues weave together inherited theories and his own methodological innovations. Readers are guided through the Timaeus and Parmenides, where the author reveals the way Plato catalogues earlier physical and metaphysical models while probing their limits. This approach invites listeners to appreciate the continuity of philosophical inquiry and to recognize the subtle shift from old forms to the new, cohesive structure that Plato fashions.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~7 hours (442K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2003-05-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Walter Pater

Walter Pater

1839–1894

Best known for shaping the ideals of aestheticism, this English essayist and critic wrote with unusual care about art, literature, and the pleasures of style. His work helped define the late Victorian idea of “art for art’s sake” and went on to influence writers including Oscar Wilde.

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