Pleasure and Illusion: False Pleasure in Plato's "Philebus"

Dissertation, The Ohio State University (1992)
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Abstract

The dissertation focuses on Plato's view in the Philebus that pleasure can be evaluated in respect of truth or falsity. My approach is unique in that I give a unifying account of a number of distinct cases of false pleasure. A central conclusion is that the idea behind the false pleasures doctrine is that the existence of certain pleasures depends upon their connection with illusion. I reject the view that false anticipatory pleasures are meant to be considered representationally false. I offer an interpretation which employs the partially normative notion of a pleasure's lacking its proper object

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