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Plato's Universe (2005)

by Gregory Vlastos

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Through this book another Jessie and John Danz Lecturer speaks to the people and scholars of the world, as he has spoken to his audiences at the University of Washington and in the Pacific Northwest community.
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“The renewed availability of Vlastos’s book to today’s scholars and students is truly important, in several respects. The clarity of Vlastos’s argumentation, his historical knowledge, and his familiarity with the text enable us to make contact once again with one of Plato’s works in which little interest has been shown in the English-speaking world since the Second World War: the Timaeus. They also enable us to see that in this work, Plato pursued in an original way the research on nature and the cosmos that had been inaugurated in Greece a few centuries before him.
What is more, the life and work of Vlastos constitute a particularly interesting testimony to recent history, as far as the links between religious convictions and positivistic thought, and hermeneutics and analytic philosophy are concerned. All these aspects make this new edition of Plato’s Universe a most welcome addition to both Platonic studies and the history of 20th-century scholarship.”

—Luc Brisson,
National Council for Scientific Research, France
  jennneal1313 | Jun 17, 2007 |
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In English 'cosmos' is a linguistic orphan, a noun without a parent verb. Not so in Greek which has the active, transitive verb, 'kosmeo': to set in order, to marshal, to arrange.
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Through this book another Jessie and John Danz Lecturer speaks to the people and scholars of the world, as he has spoken to his audiences at the University of Washington and in the Pacific Northwest community.

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A distinguished Platonic scholar discusses the impact of the Greek discovery of the "cosmos" on man's perception of his place in the universe, describes the problems this posed, and interprets Plato's response to this discovery.

Starting with the Presocratics, Vlastos describes the intellectual revolution that began with the cosmogonies of Thales, Anaximander, and Anaximenes in the sixth century B.C. and culminated a century later in the atomist system of Leucippus and Democritus. What united these men was that for all of them nature remained the inviolate, all-inclusive principle of explanation, precluding any appeal to a supernatural cause or ordering agency.

In a detailed analysis of the astronomical and physical theories of the Timaeus, Vlastos demonstrates Plato's role in the reception and transmission of the discovery of the new conception of the universe. Plato gives us the chance to see that movement from a unique perspective: that of a fierce opponent of the revolution who was determined to wrest from its brilliant discovery, annex its cosmos, and redesign it on the pattern of his own idealistic and theistic metaphysics.

This book is a reprint of the edition published in 1975 by the University of Washington Press. It includes a new Introduction by Luc Brisson.
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