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Plato's anti-hedonism and the Protagoras
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ISBN: 1316255344 1316234533 1316236420 1316253449 1316249662 1316251551 1107624657 1107110610 1316247767 1107046653 131624587X 9781316247761 9781107110618 9781107624658 9781107046658 9781316251553 9781107624658 Year: 2015 Publisher: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press,

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Abstract

Plato often rejects hedonism, but in the Protagoras, Plato's Socrates seems to endorse hedonism. In this book, J. Clerk Shaw removes this apparent tension by arguing that the Protagoras as a whole actually reflects Plato's anti-hedonism. He shows that Plato places hedonism at the core of a complex of popular mistakes about value and especially about virtue: that injustice can be prudent, that wisdom is weak, that courage is the capacity to persevere through fear, and that virtue cannot be taught. The masses reproduce this system of values through shame and fear of punishment. The Protagoras and other dialogues depict sophists and orators who have internalized popular morality through shame, but who are also ashamed to state their views openly. Shaw's reading not only reconciles the Protagoras with Plato's other dialogues, but harmonizes it with them and even illuminates Plato's wider anti-hedonism.

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