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Informationen zum Autor John Sallis is Frederick J. Adelmann Professor of Philosophy at Boston College. He is author of more than 20 books, including The Figure of Nature and The Return of Nature . Klappentext [Being and Logos is] a philosophical adventure of rare inspiration. . . . Its power to illuminate the text . . ., its ecumenicity of inspiration, its methodological rigor, its originality, and its philosophical profundity--all together make it one of the few philosophical interpretations that the philosopher will want to re-read along with the dialogues themselves. A superadded gift is the author's prose, which is a model of lucidity and grace." --International Philosophical Quarterly John Sallis's luminous reading of six major Platonic dialogues--Apology, Meno, Phaedrus, Cratylus, Republic, and Sophist--weaves discussion of dramatic and mythical aspects together with basic philosophical issues. Being and Logos fundamentally reorients our reading and understanding of the platonic dialogues. This new edition of this classic of philosophical interpretation augments the Collected Writings of John Sallis, published by Indiana University Press. Inhaltsverzeichnis Preface to the First Edition Preface to the Second Edition Introduction Section 1. On Reading Plato Section 2. The Questions: Philosophy, Logos, Being Section 3. The Way of Platonic Dialogue: Preliminary Reflections Part One. Socratic Logos Chapter I. Provocations of Socratic Logos: Apology of Socrates Section 1. The Prologue to the Apology (17 a - 19 a) Section 2. The Way of Socrates Section 3. Service to Apollo (10 d - 24 b) Section 4. Socrates and the City (24 b - 42 a) Chapter II. Ignorance and Recollection: Meno Section 1. Meno (70 a - 79 e) Section 2. Meno and Socrates (79 e - 86 d) Section 3. Meno and Anytus (86 d - 96 d) Section 4. Meno, Socrates, Anytus (96 d - 100 c) Chapter III. Beyond the City: Phaedrus Section 1. The Setting (227 a - 230 e) Section 2. The Three Speeches (230 e -2 57 b) Section 3. The Perfection of Speech (257 b - 279 c) Postscript to Part One. The Way of Platonic Dialogue: Further Reflections Part Two. Being and Logos Chapter IV. Logos and Its Parts: Cratylus Section 1. The Problem of Names (383 a - 384 c) Section 2. The Art of Naming (384 c - 390 e) Section 3. Human Names and Divine Names (390 e- 397 a) Section 4. The Etymological Comedy (397 a - 421 c) Section 5. Imitation (421 c - 427 e) Section 6. Cratylus (427 e - 437 d) Section 7. Names and Things (437 d - 440 e) Chapter V. The Upward Way: Republic Section 1. Down to Piraeus (Book I) Section 2. The City and the Soul (Book II - Book V, 473 c) Section 3. The Philosopher (473 c- 507 b) Section 4. The Good (507 b - 509 c) Section 5. The Divided Line (509 d - 511 e, 521 c - 535 a) Section 6. The Cave (514 a - 521 b) Chapter VI. The Way of Logos: Sophist Section 1. In Search of the Sophist (216 a - 232 a) Section 2. The Problem of Being and Non-Being (232 a - 251 a) Section 3. Being and Non-Being (251 a - 259 d) Section 4. The Community of Being and Logos (259 d - 268 d) Postscript. The Way of Platonic Dialogue Indexes ...