TY - JOUR
T1 - Cosmic mathematics, human erōs
T2 - A comparison of Plato's Timaeus and Symposium
AU - German, Andy
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Royal Society of Chemistry. All rights reserved.
PY - 2020/12/1
Y1 - 2020/12/1
N2 - In her 2014 monograph, Sarah Broadie argues that Timaeus's cosmology points to a radical Platonic insight: the full rationality of the cosmos requires the existence of individualized, autonomous, and finite beings like us. Only human life makes the cosmos truly complete. But can Timaeus do full justice to the uniquely human way of being and hence to his own insight? My paper argues that he cannot and that Plato means for us to see that he cannot, by showing how Timaeus treats a famous Platonic theme: eros. Timaeus describes human perfection as assimilation to the mathematical proportions of the cosmos, but by comparing Timaeus with the Symposium I show that, given his deeply mathematized conception of reason, Timaeus cannot provide what Diotima can: a phenomenologically satisfactory account of how we come to identify ourselves with this perfection. Such identification is a transformation in our self-understanding explicable only because of the desirous and reflexive character of the soul. Expressing this character, however, requires combining the mathematical with a poetic, or even mantic, register. Only these sensibilities together grant access to Plato's cosmology in its fullness.
AB - In her 2014 monograph, Sarah Broadie argues that Timaeus's cosmology points to a radical Platonic insight: the full rationality of the cosmos requires the existence of individualized, autonomous, and finite beings like us. Only human life makes the cosmos truly complete. But can Timaeus do full justice to the uniquely human way of being and hence to his own insight? My paper argues that he cannot and that Plato means for us to see that he cannot, by showing how Timaeus treats a famous Platonic theme: eros. Timaeus describes human perfection as assimilation to the mathematical proportions of the cosmos, but by comparing Timaeus with the Symposium I show that, given his deeply mathematized conception of reason, Timaeus cannot provide what Diotima can: a phenomenologically satisfactory account of how we come to identify ourselves with this perfection. Such identification is a transformation in our self-understanding explicable only because of the desirous and reflexive character of the soul. Expressing this character, however, requires combining the mathematical with a poetic, or even mantic, register. Only these sensibilities together grant access to Plato's cosmology in its fullness.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85113823241&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.5840/ipq20201120156
DO - 10.5840/ipq20201120156
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85113823241
SN - 0019-0365
VL - 60
SP - 373
EP - 391
JO - International Philosophical Quarterly
JF - International Philosophical Quarterly
IS - 4
ER -