Cambridge University Press, 2000. — 323 p. — ISBN: 0-511-03520-9.
This book explores the complex relationship between myth and philosophy in writings by Greek intellectuals between the late sixth and mid fourth centuries BC. It shows how Plato and other philosophers used myth to express philosophic problems and traces a tradition of strictly rational and philosophical myth through two centuries
AcknowledgementsIntroduction
Theoretical issuesTextualisation and the rise of philosophy
From
mythos to
logosSome theoretical implications
Some PresocraticsThe exclusionary gesture: Xenophanes, Herakleitos, and Empedokles
Allegory and rationalisation
Parmenides
The sophists and their contemporariesPhilology and exegesis
Mythological displays
The Protagoras: Platonic myth in the makingProtagoras’ ‘Great Speech’
Why
mythos? Structure and assumptions
Sokrates and Prometheus
Conclusion: Sophistic versus Platonic myth
The range of Platonic mythProblems of vocabulary, problems of selection
Categories of Platonic myth
Exhortation, play, and childishness
Myth and the limits of language
Plato: myth and the soulThe
GorgiasThe
PhaedoThe
RepublicThe
PhaedrusPlato: myth and theoryThe philosophical life and its mythological battles
Mythos and theory
Construction and reception in the
Timaeus and
CritiasConclusion: was the myth saved?
Bibliography
Index of passages cited
General index