苏格拉底的梭罗遗产

IF 0.5 3区 历史学 0 CLASSICS
HELIOS Pub Date : 2015-09-22 DOI:10.1353/HEL.2015.0014
Lucas Fain
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First, I want to demonstrate that a psychoanalytic approach to the history of philosophy not only is plausible, but that by virtue of its insight into the wishes and fantasies that motivate human behavior, it can help us to understand how eros intervenes to motivate the Platonic account of the Socratic unity of happiness and philosophy. Where the historical significance of this account is at stake, we shall have to investigate both the prehistory of the Socratic tradition and its major connection to a Platonic account of the eros for philosophy. Hence my second aim: to demonstrate the central importance of Plato's Symposium in this psycho-historical drama. My argument is not simply that the Symposium is amenable to psychoanalytic interpretation, as readers like Jacques Lacan (1991 [1957]) and Jonathan Lear (1999) have already demonstrated. 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To be clear: I am not arguing that either Solon or Herodotus is the sole antecedent to the Socratic tradition, nor that one cannot find older or more diverse sources for the constellation of themes that link Herodotus to Plato through what I shall call the Solonian legacy in Socrates. Rather, my argument is concerned to show that a certain collection of themes converge in the figure of Solon, and that by virtue of their transformation in the Symposium, it is possible to consider both Plato's indebtedness to the Solonian teaching, as well as the specific terms of his divergence. For introductory purposes, I cite four fundamental themes that define the appearance of Solon's legacy. (3) 1. A tension between olbos and eudaimonia in the text of Herodotus, and a related connection between happiness and seeing the whole, which anticipates the valorization of eudaimonia as the highest expression of philosophy in Plato. 2. A transformation in the relation between happiness and death from Solon to Socrates. Whereas Solon commands us to call no one happy until dead, the practice of dying or being dead is itself the expression of happiness for Plato's Socrates. 3. A consideration of jealousy as an impediment to happiness. Whereas the jealousy of the gods points, for Solon, to the fluctuations of fortune that ruin human happiness, in the Socratic teaching human happiness requires a special kind of endurance with respect to those same dire elements. Coupled with the teaching of Diotima, this endurance will define human happiness in terms of friendship with the gods. 4. 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引用次数: 1

摘要

但在他死之前,等一等,不要说他幸福,但要说他幸运。从精神分析的角度来看,哲学史是什么样子的?在这篇文章中,我建议考虑哲学史上的一个特定时刻,即爱神在从希罗多德探究到柏拉图哲学的历史过渡中的介入。如果精神分析对我们理解哲学史的方式产生了影响,那么它对苏格拉底开创的哲学传统的爱欲意义又有什么启示呢?问这个问题,我有两个目的。首先,我想证明,用精神分析的方法研究哲学史不仅是合理的,而且由于它对激发人类行为的愿望和幻想的洞察,它可以帮助我们理解爱欲是如何介入的,从而激发柏拉图式的关于苏格拉底式幸福与哲学统一的描述。在这种描述的历史意义岌岌可危的地方,我们必须调查苏格拉底传统的史前史,以及它与柏拉图的哲学性爱描述的主要联系。因此,我的第二个目标是:证明柏拉图的《会饮篇》在这部心理历史剧中的核心重要性。我的观点不是简单地认为《会饮篇》可以接受精神分析的解释,就像雅克·拉康(1991[1957])和乔纳森·李尔(1999)等读者已经证明的那样。(2)相反,我的观点是,精神分析为理解哲学爱欲的起源提供了强有力的词汇,《会文集》同样是阐明苏格拉底哲学史前史的关键资源,正是因为它对哲学爱欲的描述可以追溯到希罗多德对梭伦在古代关于幸福意义的争论中所扮演角色的调查。简而言之,我的观点是,哲学的爱欲来源于人性的诱惑动力,而精神分析的诱惑理论是唯一能够在《会饮篇》中详细阐述哲学诱惑的理论——正是因为精神分析和柏拉图的描述共享相同的基本结构。需要澄清的是:我并不是说梭伦或希罗多德是苏格拉底传统的唯一先驱,也不是说人们找不到更古老或更多样化的来源,可以把希罗多德和柏拉图联系起来,通过苏格拉底身上的梭罗遗产。更确切地说,我的论点是要表明,在梭伦的形象中,某些主题的集合汇聚在一起,并且由于它们在《会饮篇》中的转变,我们有可能考虑柏拉图对梭伦教义的亏欠,以及他的分歧的具体条款。出于介绍的目的,我引用了四个基本主题来定义梭伦遗产的外观。(3) 1。在希罗多德的文本中,快乐和快乐之间的紧张关系,以及快乐和看到整体之间的相关联系,这预示着快乐作为柏拉图哲学的最高表达的价值。从梭伦到苏格拉底,幸福与死亡关系的转变。梭伦命令我们说,没有人在死之前是幸福的,而对柏拉图笔下的苏格拉底来说,死亡或死亡的实践本身就是幸福的表达。认为嫉妒是幸福的障碍。在梭伦看来,诸神的嫉妒指向毁灭人类幸福的命运的波动,而在苏格拉底的教导中,人类的幸福需要一种特殊的忍耐来面对这些可怕的因素。再加上狄奥提玛的教导,这种忍耐将以与神的友谊来定义人类的幸福。4. 这句话引用了梭伦著名的训诫,即即使变老也要继续学习。…
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Solonian Legacy in Socrates
[TEXT NOT REPRODUCIBLE IN ASCII] But before he is dead, wait, and do not yet call him happy, but fortunate. --Solon (1) Prologue What does the history of philosophy look like from the perspective of psychoanalysis? In the present essay, I propose to consider a specific moment in the history of philosophy, namely, the intervention of eros in the historical transition from Herodotean inquiry to Platonic philosophy. If psychoanalysis makes a difference as to how we understand the history of philosophy, what can it tell us about the significance of eros for the tradition of philosophy initiated by Socrates? In asking this question, my aim is twofold. First, I want to demonstrate that a psychoanalytic approach to the history of philosophy not only is plausible, but that by virtue of its insight into the wishes and fantasies that motivate human behavior, it can help us to understand how eros intervenes to motivate the Platonic account of the Socratic unity of happiness and philosophy. Where the historical significance of this account is at stake, we shall have to investigate both the prehistory of the Socratic tradition and its major connection to a Platonic account of the eros for philosophy. Hence my second aim: to demonstrate the central importance of Plato's Symposium in this psycho-historical drama. My argument is not simply that the Symposium is amenable to psychoanalytic interpretation, as readers like Jacques Lacan (1991 [1957]) and Jonathan Lear (1999) have already demonstrated. (2) Rather, my argument is that psychoanalysis offers a powerful vocabulary for understanding the genesis of philosophical eros, and that the Symposium is likewise a key resource for illuminating the prehistory of Socratic philosophy precisely because its account of the eros for philosophy is traceable to the Herodotean inquiry concerning Solon's role in an ancient quarrel about the meaning of happiness. My argument, in short, is that the eros for philosophy has its source in an all too human dynamic of seduction, and that the psychoanalytic theory of seduction is uniquely capable of elaborating the account of philosophical seduction in the Symposium--precisely because the psychoanalytic and Platonic accounts share the same fundamental structure. To be clear: I am not arguing that either Solon or Herodotus is the sole antecedent to the Socratic tradition, nor that one cannot find older or more diverse sources for the constellation of themes that link Herodotus to Plato through what I shall call the Solonian legacy in Socrates. Rather, my argument is concerned to show that a certain collection of themes converge in the figure of Solon, and that by virtue of their transformation in the Symposium, it is possible to consider both Plato's indebtedness to the Solonian teaching, as well as the specific terms of his divergence. For introductory purposes, I cite four fundamental themes that define the appearance of Solon's legacy. (3) 1. A tension between olbos and eudaimonia in the text of Herodotus, and a related connection between happiness and seeing the whole, which anticipates the valorization of eudaimonia as the highest expression of philosophy in Plato. 2. A transformation in the relation between happiness and death from Solon to Socrates. Whereas Solon commands us to call no one happy until dead, the practice of dying or being dead is itself the expression of happiness for Plato's Socrates. 3. A consideration of jealousy as an impediment to happiness. Whereas the jealousy of the gods points, for Solon, to the fluctuations of fortune that ruin human happiness, in the Socratic teaching human happiness requires a special kind of endurance with respect to those same dire elements. Coupled with the teaching of Diotima, this endurance will define human happiness in terms of friendship with the gods. 4. A reference to Solon's famous injunction to continue learning even while growing older. …
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HELIOS
HELIOS CLASSICS-
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