Abstract

The paper presents a study on the presence of Homer in Plato’s Philebus. After a brief summary of the dialogue and after indicating a couple of implicit references to Homer to be found in the Platonic text (like the figure of Aphrodite and the image of the journey of Ulysses), the work focuses on analysing the two single explicit appearances of Homer in Plato’s Philebus. The first one in Philebus 47e, corresponding to the 18th book of the Iliad (108-109); the second one in Philebus 62d corresponding to the fourth book of the Iliad (450-456). The paper analyses these references in detail, examining Platoʹs use of the Homeric poems and analysing their significance, often hidden, in the dialogue as a whole. The analysis also shows the importance of the equivalences between Homer and Plato, that is, the similar or dissimilar treatment that they make of some important issues, like the description of human emotions, the confrontation between gods and men or the search for truth.

Highlights

  • L’escrit presenta un estudi de la presència d’Homer en el Fileb de Plató

  • PARAULES CLAU: Plató, Homer, Sòcrates, Fileb, Odissea, Ilíada In Plato’s Philebus, Socrates is presenting to the reader a reflection about the best possible life; the dialogue, in its description of human nature, delves into the manifold of experiences of pleasure and pain and elevates toward the contemplation of reason as the source of order both in human life and in the cosmos

  • There are in Plato around 150 direct references to the work of Homer, in Plato Philebus we find, as we have said, two of them

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Summary

Introduction

L’escrit presenta un estudi de la presència d’Homer en el Fileb de Plató. Després d’un breu resum del diàleg i d’indicar un parell de referències implícites a Homer que es troben en el text platònic (com la figura d’Afrodita i la imatge del viatge d’Ulisses), el treball se centra en analitzar les dues aparicions explícites d’Homer en el diàleg, les quals remeten a la Ilíada.

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