Your videos have given me a great deal of illumination on the platonic dialogues. I know it’s not always apparent what happens once our efforts are out there in the ether, but I just wanted to let you know that you are one of my go to teachers and are truly appreciated. Thank you for the good work.
0:00 *What Is Temperance?* (Sofrasune?) 0:41 1. To behave in an orderly and quiet way. Carry oneself with deportment 2:35 Better not to be orderly or quiet at times (In Battle for example) 4:29 2. Modest, against doing shameful acts, self-controlled 6:17 Internal Being 7:25 3. Do your own job But Workers do others business 10:31 4. Knowingly Do Good Works/Do Good Things 11:50 5. Self Knowledge 6. The Knowledge of Itself 13:05 Being aware of self-control. Self Knowledge. Self-Awareness
Love your work Professor, thank you for posting these in an anxiety-ridden-boredom period in time. Those term's seem paradoxical, unless you walk outside amongst the general public! lol
Thanks for your great work on UA-cam. May you please add automatic subtitles in your old videos? Specifically, in the serie "Analytic Tradition". This will help me a lot.
Is there a third video where he explores this more? What about the issue of temperance being beneficial and knowledge of good and evil being beneficial? What about the abrupt ending of this Dialogue? Anyone know a good breakdown from someone else?
Update for anyone confused in the future: His video "Plato on knowledge of knowledge" is the ending analysis. I had assumed this was about the Theaetetus.
How can temperance be aware of itself? This would suggest that temperance has an existence that is external to the perceiver. Temperance was just hanging about somewhere until someone tripped over it? Or, is this a metaphysical explanation? I'm sure that Freud would argue that being overly temperate leads directly to neurosis, but that's different argument. Thank you for doing this!
Your videos have given me a great deal of illumination on the platonic dialogues. I know it’s not always apparent what happens once our efforts are out there in the ether, but I just wanted to let you know that you are one of my go to teachers and are truly appreciated. Thank you for the good work.
0:00 *What Is Temperance?* (Sofrasune?)
0:41 1. To behave in an orderly and quiet way. Carry oneself with deportment
2:35 Better not to be orderly or quiet at times (In Battle for example)
4:29 2. Modest, against doing shameful acts, self-controlled
6:17 Internal Being
7:25 3. Do your own job
But Workers do others business
10:31 4. Knowingly Do Good Works/Do Good Things
11:50 5. Self Knowledge
6. The Knowledge of Itself
13:05 Being aware of self-control. Self Knowledge. Self-Awareness
Appreciate you doing these videos for me to watch in quarantine! Thanks from Australia
Great, great video. Thank you!!
Thank you very much for dedicating your time to explain us these concepts.
Enjoyed the discussion and especially the background information as someone that didn't learn this in school
Love your work Professor, thank you for posting these in an anxiety-ridden-boredom period in time. Those term's seem paradoxical, unless you walk outside amongst the general public! lol
Thanks for your great work on UA-cam. May you please add automatic subtitles in your old videos? Specifically, in the serie "Analytic Tradition". This will help me a lot.
Could you possibly go over the Companions In Guilt argument and the main objections to it ?
Is there a third video where he explores this more? What about the issue of temperance being beneficial and knowledge of good and evil being beneficial? What about the abrupt ending of this Dialogue? Anyone know a good breakdown from someone else?
Update for anyone confused in the future: His video "Plato on knowledge of knowledge" is the ending analysis. I had assumed this was about the Theaetetus.
@@kylehiggins3097 me too so I just looked past it, thank you.
How can temperance be aware of itself? This would suggest that temperance has an existence that is external to the perceiver. Temperance was just hanging about somewhere until someone tripped over it? Or, is this a metaphysical explanation?
I'm sure that Freud would argue that being overly temperate leads directly to neurosis, but that's different argument.
Thank you for doing this!