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The Musical Structure of Plato's Dialogues.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: Oxford : Taylor & Francis Group, 2014Copyright date: ©2011Edition: 1st edDescription: 1 online resource (337 pages)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781317547983
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: The Musical Structure of Plato's DialoguesDDC classification:
  • 184
LOC classification:
  • B395 .K466 2014
Online resources:
Contents:
Cover -- Half Title -- Series Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Dedication -- Table of Contents -- Preface -- Abbreviations -- 1. The nature and history of philosophical allegory -- 1.1 Rehabilitating ancient ways of reading -- 1.2 Allegory, Socrates and Plato -- 1.3 Symbols, reserve and Pythagoreanism -- 1.4 Persecution and the politics of allegory in classical Athens -- 1.5 Plato and Pythagoreanism: two puzzles -- 1.6 The allegorical Plato in history -- 1.7 Methodological precedent: early Christianity -- 1.8 Methodological precedent: Renaissance Platonism -- 2. Introducing the dialogues' musical structure -- 2.1 Structuring a dialogue -- 2.2 Ancient Greek music: three key ideas -- 2.3 Plato's symbolic scheme -- 2.4 Harmony and consonance, disharmony and dissonance -- 2.5 Sevenths and mixture -- 2.6 Guide to the strongest evidence -- 2.7 Methodology for line-counting -- 2.8 Canons of criticism -- 2.9 Responses to possible objections -- 3. Independent lines of evidence -- 3.1 Simple, objective measurements -- 3.2 Parallel passages at the same relative location -- 3.3 Ranges of positive and negative concepts -- 3.4 Preview of the musical structure in the Republic -- 3.5 A control: falsifiability and the pseudo-Platonica -- 4. An emphatic pattern in the Symposium's frame -- 4.1 A theory of music -- 4.2 Recurring clusters of features in the frame -- 4.3 A new kind of commentary -- 5. Making the Symposium's musical structure explicit -- 5.1 Phaedrus -- 5.2 Pausanias -- 5.3 Eryximachus -- 5.4 Aristophanes -- 5.5 Agathon -- 5.6 Socrates and Diotima -- 5.7 Alcibiades -- 6. Parallel structure in the Euthyphro -- 6.1 The same scale and the same symbolic scheme -- 6.2 Guide to the strongest evidence -- 6.3 The sevenths -- 6.4 The connection to music -- 6.5 Another kind of evidence: parallels between dialogues -- 6.6 The Euthyphro is not aporetic.
6.7 Marking the notes -- 7. Extracting doctrine from structure -- 7.1 Aristotle on virtues and means -- 7.2 Stichometry and the divided line -- 7.3 Reading the dialogues in parallel -- 7.4 The logic of the argument and its consequences -- 8. Some implications -- 8.1 Summary of the case -- 8.2 Interpreting the dialogues -- 8.3 Problems with anonymity and intentionality -- 8.4 Interpreting Plato, Pythagoras and Socrates -- 8.5 History of music and mathematics -- 8.6 History of literature and literary theory -- 8.7 Ancient book production, papyrology, textual studies -- 8.8 The forward path -- Appendix 1: More musicological background -- Appendix 2: Neo-Pythagoreans, the twelve-note scale and the monochord -- Appendix 3: Markers between the major notes -- Appendix 4: The central notes -- Appendix 5: Systematic theory of the marking passages -- Appendix 6: Structure in Agathon and Socrates' speeches -- Appendix 7: Euripides and line-counting -- Appendix 8: Data from the Republic -- Appendix 9: OCT line numbers for the musical notes -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index.
Summary: Argues that Plato's dialogues have an unsuspected musical structure and use symbols to encode Pythagorean doctrines. This title shows that Plato gave his dialogues a similar, hidden musical structure. It begins with an introduction to Plato's symbolic schemes and the role of allegory in ancient times.
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Cover -- Half Title -- Series Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Dedication -- Table of Contents -- Preface -- Abbreviations -- 1. The nature and history of philosophical allegory -- 1.1 Rehabilitating ancient ways of reading -- 1.2 Allegory, Socrates and Plato -- 1.3 Symbols, reserve and Pythagoreanism -- 1.4 Persecution and the politics of allegory in classical Athens -- 1.5 Plato and Pythagoreanism: two puzzles -- 1.6 The allegorical Plato in history -- 1.7 Methodological precedent: early Christianity -- 1.8 Methodological precedent: Renaissance Platonism -- 2. Introducing the dialogues' musical structure -- 2.1 Structuring a dialogue -- 2.2 Ancient Greek music: three key ideas -- 2.3 Plato's symbolic scheme -- 2.4 Harmony and consonance, disharmony and dissonance -- 2.5 Sevenths and mixture -- 2.6 Guide to the strongest evidence -- 2.7 Methodology for line-counting -- 2.8 Canons of criticism -- 2.9 Responses to possible objections -- 3. Independent lines of evidence -- 3.1 Simple, objective measurements -- 3.2 Parallel passages at the same relative location -- 3.3 Ranges of positive and negative concepts -- 3.4 Preview of the musical structure in the Republic -- 3.5 A control: falsifiability and the pseudo-Platonica -- 4. An emphatic pattern in the Symposium's frame -- 4.1 A theory of music -- 4.2 Recurring clusters of features in the frame -- 4.3 A new kind of commentary -- 5. Making the Symposium's musical structure explicit -- 5.1 Phaedrus -- 5.2 Pausanias -- 5.3 Eryximachus -- 5.4 Aristophanes -- 5.5 Agathon -- 5.6 Socrates and Diotima -- 5.7 Alcibiades -- 6. Parallel structure in the Euthyphro -- 6.1 The same scale and the same symbolic scheme -- 6.2 Guide to the strongest evidence -- 6.3 The sevenths -- 6.4 The connection to music -- 6.5 Another kind of evidence: parallels between dialogues -- 6.6 The Euthyphro is not aporetic.

6.7 Marking the notes -- 7. Extracting doctrine from structure -- 7.1 Aristotle on virtues and means -- 7.2 Stichometry and the divided line -- 7.3 Reading the dialogues in parallel -- 7.4 The logic of the argument and its consequences -- 8. Some implications -- 8.1 Summary of the case -- 8.2 Interpreting the dialogues -- 8.3 Problems with anonymity and intentionality -- 8.4 Interpreting Plato, Pythagoras and Socrates -- 8.5 History of music and mathematics -- 8.6 History of literature and literary theory -- 8.7 Ancient book production, papyrology, textual studies -- 8.8 The forward path -- Appendix 1: More musicological background -- Appendix 2: Neo-Pythagoreans, the twelve-note scale and the monochord -- Appendix 3: Markers between the major notes -- Appendix 4: The central notes -- Appendix 5: Systematic theory of the marking passages -- Appendix 6: Structure in Agathon and Socrates' speeches -- Appendix 7: Euripides and line-counting -- Appendix 8: Data from the Republic -- Appendix 9: OCT line numbers for the musical notes -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index.

Argues that Plato's dialogues have an unsuspected musical structure and use symbols to encode Pythagorean doctrines. This title shows that Plato gave his dialogues a similar, hidden musical structure. It begins with an introduction to Plato's symbolic schemes and the role of allegory in ancient times.

Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.

Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2024. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.

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