In the ancient world they would have been spoken, but that doesn't mean that's the best way to receive them. I think my own feeling is the ideal way to engage with the dialogues is to read them and then talk about them with people. If it's truly a conversational form, we could listen to them, you could teach your class by having people listen to a podcast of credo and Socrates, Phaedrus and Socrates.
Is a written dialogue the best way to learn from philosopher Agnes Callard?
If so, what does that say about philosophy? Is Plato’s Symposium about love or mere intoxication? If good people lived forever, would they be less bored than the bad people? Should we fear death? Is parenting undertheorized? Must philosophy rely on refutation? Should we read the classics? Is Jordan Peterson’s moralizing good? Should we take Socrates at his word? Is Hamlet a Cartesian? Are we all either Beethoven or Mozart people? How do we get ourselves to care about things we don’t yet care about? To what should we aspire to?
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Recorded March 22nd, 2018 Other ways to connect