Gorgias by
PlatoMy rating:
2 of 5 starsMen do bad when they do what they merely
think best, rather than
what they most deeply desire.
That seems to be the central point of this long dialogue.
The age-old question is:
how to get men to follow their true Will (i.e. Self, rather than ego).
Does the dialogue answer it?
The answer it gives appears to be:
Engage in the combat of life, live as well as you can, and then, after death, you will attain the Islands of the Blessed, and not the realm of the wretched, Tartarus.
But that doesn’t answer the question of how to distinguish between the desires of ego, and the true Will!!!
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Published on
February 12, 2021 14:09
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Tags:
anaximander, aristotle, desire, dialogue, ego, gorgias, greek, heraclitus, how-to-live, parmenides, philosophy, plato, self, socrates, will, willpower