

037: How to Find Eternal Beauty - Plato
Lessons from ‘Symposium’ by Plato
Plato was an ancient Greek philosopher, a student of Socrates, and a teacher of Aristotle. His works laid the foundational stones of Western philosophy and science
The "Symposium" is one of Plato's most famous dialogues, set during a banquet attended by a group of notable Athenian men. The dialogue is a series of speeches the participants give, each extolling the nature and virtues of Eros (Love).
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Shownotes
00:00 - Introduction
01:45 - Excerpt from ‘Symposium’ by Plato
05:44 - What’s happening in the Symposium
06:50 - Are you not whole until you find your other half?
10:10 - Why Socrates thinks everyone is wrong about love
11:15 - Phaedrus’s notion of self-sacrificial love
13:10 - Different types of love
15:20 - Socrates correcting Agathon on Eros
21:10 - Love is of something that you’re desire
25:18 - Love in on continuum ferrying between the immortal and mortal realm
28:50 - How Diotima initiates Socrates through the ladder of love
42:10 - The Beautiful and Tao
44:00 - The Beautiful makes life meaningful, become a philosopher
47: 15 - Humans seek immortality, true immortality is found in birthing virtues
50:48 - Challenges