Publication:
Sex, wealth, and courage: kinds of goods and the power of appearance in plato's protagoras

dc.contributor.departmentDepartment of Philosophy
dc.contributor.kuauthorStorey, Damien
dc.contributor.schoolcollegeinstituteCollege of Social Sciences and Humanities
dc.date.accessioned2024-11-10T00:12:39Z
dc.date.issued2018
dc.description.abstractI offer a reading of the two conceptions of the good found in Plato’s Protagoras: the popular conception—‘the many’s’ conception—and Socrates’ conception. I pay particular attention to the three kinds of goods Socrates introduces: (a) bodily pleasures like food, drink, and sex; (b) instrumental goods like wealth, health, or power; and (c) virtuous actions like courageously going to war. My reading revises existing views about these goods in two ways. First, I argue that the many are only ‘hedonists’ in a very attenuated sense. They do not value goods of kind (b) simply as means to pleasures of kind (a); rather, they have fundamentally different attitudes to (a) and (b). Second, the hedonism that Socrates’ defends includes a distinction between kinds of pleasures: (a) bodily pleasures and (c) the pleasures of virtuous actions. This distinction between kinds of pleasures—some that do and some that do not exert the ‘power of appearance’—allows Socrates to address one of the central beliefs in the popular conception of akrasia, namely that it involves a special kind of unruly desire: non-rational appetites for pleasures like food, drink, or sex. Socrates replaces the motivational push of non-rational appetites with the epistemic pull of the appearance of immediate pleasures like food, drink, and sex.
dc.description.indexedbyScopus
dc.description.issue2
dc.description.openaccessYES
dc.description.publisherscopeInternational
dc.description.sponsoredbyTubitakEuN/A
dc.description.volume38
dc.identifier.doi10.5840/ancientphil201838224
dc.identifier.issn0740-2007
dc.identifier.quartileN/A
dc.identifier.scopus2-s2.0-85066154165
dc.identifier.urihttps://doi.org/10.5840/ancientphil201838224
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14288/17679
dc.keywordsPlato
dc.language.isoeng
dc.publisherPhilosophy Documentation Center
dc.relation.ispartofAncient Philosophy
dc.subjectPhilosophy
dc.titleSex, wealth, and courage: kinds of goods and the power of appearance in plato's protagoras
dc.typeJournal Article
dspace.entity.typePublication
local.contributor.kuauthorStorey, Damien
local.publication.orgunit1College of Social Sciences and Humanities
local.publication.orgunit2Department of Philosophy
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