Pedagogy in the Myth of Plato's "Statesman:" Body and Soul in Relation to Philosophy and Politics

History of Philosophy Quarterly 11 (3):253 - 268 (1994)
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Abstract

Because the young Socrates has presuppositions typical of a mathematician about the independence of the mind from the body, he has to be led to a fuller appreciation of the human soul, i.e., embodied intelligence, in order to understand statesmanship. The Eleatic Stranger thus tells a myth about an age where men age backwards, are born out of the earth, and are cared for by shepherd/gods. This affords the opportunity to think quite radically about how the body shapes the soul and thus affects not only physical life, but also theoretical life and consequently both politics and philosophy

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Scott Hemmenway
College of Charleston

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