Table Of ContentPhilosophy as Drama 
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Philosophy as Drama 
 Plato’s Th  inking through Dialogue 
      Hallvard    Fossheim ,   Vigdis   Songe-M ø ller and  
 Knut    Å gotnes      
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  First published in Great Britain 2019 
    
 Copyright © Hallvard Fossheim, Vigdis Songe-Mø  ller, Knut  Å gotnes and 
contributors, 2019 
    
 Hallvard Fossheim, Vigdis Songe-Mø  ller and Knut Å   gotnes have asserted their right 
under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988, to be identifi ed as 
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Contents 
 List of Contributors  vii 
 A note on transcribed Greek versus Greek fonts  xi 
 Preface  xiii 
   Introduction   Knut  Å gotnes, Hallvard Fossheim and Vigdis Songe-M ø ller   1 
 Part 1 Genre and the Philosophical Dialogue 
 1  Th e Whole Comedy and Tragedy of Philosophy: On Aristophanes’ 
Speech in Plato’s S ymposium    Drew A. Hyland   15 
 2  A Praise of the Philosophical Written Speech? Ethics and 
Philosophical Progression in Plato’s  Symposium    Elena Irrera   29 
 3  Socrates’ Appeals to Homer’s Achilles in Plato’s A  pology of Socrates  
and  Crito    Hayden W. Ausland   51 
 4  Plato’s Ring of Gyges and  Das Leben der Anderen  
 Jacob Howland   79 
 Part 2 Virtue and Soul- shaping 
 5  Plato’s Inverted Th eatre: Displacing the Wisdom of the Poets 
 Paul Woodruff    95 
 6  Gods, Giants and Philosophers: On Being, Education and 
Dialogue in Plato’s S ophist  245e6-249d5   Jens Kristian Larsen   107 
 7   Philotimia . On Rhetoric, Virtues and Honour in the S ymposium  
 Knut  Å gotnes   123 
 Part 3 Reason and Irrationality 
 8  Th e Signifi cance of the Ambiguity of Music in Plato 
 Kristin Sampson   143 
 9  Pleasure, Perception and Images in Plato  C  ynthia Freeland   161 
 10  Th e Limits of Rationality in Plato’s  Phaedo  
 Hallvard Fossheim   179 
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Contents
 Part 4 Place and Displacement 
 11  Place (t opos ) and Strangeness (a topia ) in the P  haedrus  
 Erlend Breidal   191 
 12  Hunt: Method and Metaphor. A Reading of the  Sophist  
216a1-226a6  G  ro R ø rstadbotten   209 
 13  Plato’s S ophist : A Diff erent Look  J ohn Sallis   231 
 Index  241
List of Contributors          
  Hayden W. Ausland  is Professor of Classics at the University of Montana. His 
publications include: ‘Socrates in the Early Nineteenth Century, Come to Be Young and 
Beautiful’, forthcoming in B  rill’s Companion to the Reception of Socrates ; ‘Th e Treatment 
of Virtue in Plato’s Protagoras’, in  Plato’s Protagoras. Essays on the Confrontation of 
Philosophy and Sophistry  (2017); ‘Th e Decline of Political Virtue in R  epublic  8–9’, 
 Proceedings of the Boston Area Colloquium in Ancient Philosophy  (2013); ‘Socratic 
Induction in Plato and Aristotle’, in D  ialectic and Dialogue. Th e Development of Dialectic 
from Plato to Aristotle  (2012); ‘Pro ë mial Prolepsis in Plato’s Politeia’, S ymbolae Osloenses  
(2008). 
  Erlend Breidal  has been a philosophy teacher at the University of Bergen for more 
than a decade and wrote a PhD on Plato in 2015, entitled Th  e Intermediate Being of 
Socratic Philosophy and its Suppression in Plato’s  Th eaetetus, Sophist, and Statesman. 
  Hallvard Fossheim  is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Bergen. He has 
published widely on Plato and Aristotle, focusing much of his work on their moral 
psychology, with inquiries into questions of motivation, interaction and identity. He 
also has interests in virtue ethics and research ethics, as well as questions of dialectic 
and dialogue. He has recently co- edited the anthology Th  e Quest for the Good Life: 
Ancient Philosophers on Happiness  (2015). 
  Cynthia Freeland  is Professor Emerita of Philosophy at the University of Houston. She 
is past president of the American Society for Aesthetics (2015–17). Her publications 
include articles and books on ancient philosophy, feminist theory, fi lm theory and 
aesthetics. Her book B  ut Is It Art?  (2001) has been translated into fi ft een languages. Her 
most recent book was P ortraits and Persons  (2010). 
  Jacob Howland  is McFarlin Professor of Philosophy at the University of Tulsa. His 
research focuses on ancient Greek philosophy, history, epic and tragedy; the Hebrew 
Bible and the Talmud; Kierkegaard; and literary and philosophical responses to the 
Holocaust and Soviet totalitarianism. His books are G  laucon’s Fate: History, Myth, and 
Character in Plato’s Republic  (2018); P  lato and the Talmud  (Cambridge University 
Press, 2011); K  ierkegaard and Socrates: A Study in Philosophy and Faith  (2006); Th  e 
Paradox of Political Philosophy: Socrates’ Philosophic Trial  (1998); and Th  e Republic: Th e 
Odyssey of Philosophy  (1993 and 2004). 
  Drew A. Hyland  is Charles A. Dana Professor Emeritus at Trinity College in Hartford, 
CT. He has also taught graduate courses at University of Toronto, Th e New School for 
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viii List of Contributors
Social Research, Boston University, and Suff olk University. His major research areas are 
Ancient Greek Philosophy, nineteenth and twentieth century European philosophy, 
and philosophy of sport. Among his major publications are F initude and Transcendence 
in the Platonic Dialogues  (1995),  Questioning Platonism: Continental Interpretations of 
Plato  (2004), and P  lato and the Question of Beauty  (2008). 
  Elena Irrera  is Senior Research Fellow in Political Philosophy at the University of 
Bologna. She is also member of Instituto ‘Lucio Anneo S é neca’ of Universidad Carlos 
III de Madrid. Her research interests concern aspects of ancient philosophy and 
contemporary political thought. Her publications include two books: I l bello come 
causalit à  metafi sica in Aristotele  (Beauty as Metaphysical Causation in Aristotle, 2011) 
and  Sulla bellezza della vita buona. Fini e Criteri dell’agire umano in Aristotele  (On the 
Beauty of the Good life. Aims and Criteria of Human Agency in Aristotle, 2012), as well 
as several articles on Plato’s and Aristotle’s political thought. 
  Jens Kristian Larsen  is a Marie Sk ł odowska-Curie Fellow at the University of Bergen. 
His primary area of research is ancient philosophy, with a particular emphasis on 
Socratic philosophy and Plato. He also works on the reception of themes from ancient 
philosophy in the phenomenological tradition and is currently co- editing an anthology 
focused on this reception. His most recent published papers are ‘Measuring Humans 
Against Gods: On the Digression of Plato’s Th  eaetetus ’ (2019), ‘By What Is the Soul 
Nourished? On the Art of the Physician of Souls in Plato’s P  rotagoras ’ (2017), and ‘Plato 
and Heidegger on Sophistry and Philosophy’ (2016). 
  Gro R ø rstadbotten  teaches philosophy at the Department of Philosophy, University of 
Bergen, Norway. She is the co- author of the books T  idslinjer  (Time Lines, 2008) and 
 Fortiede alternativer  (Silenced Alternatives, 2015). Her most recent articles are ‘Turning 
Towards Philosophy: A Reading of P  rotagoras  309a1-314e2’, in  Plato’s Protagoras. 
Essays on the Confrontation of Philosophy and Sophistry  (2017) and ‘Socrates’s Telling of 
the Truth: A reading of the Apology 17a1-35d9’, in R  eadings of Plato’s Apology of 
Socrates. Defending the Philosophical Life , (2018). 
  John Sallis  is Frederick J. Adelmann Professor of Philosophy at Boston College. He has 
also  held  Chairs  at  Pennsylvania  State  University, Vanderbilt  University,  Loyola 
University of Chicago, and Duquesne University. He is the author of more than twenty 
books; among the most recent are L ogic of Imagination  (2012),  Senses of Landscape  
(2015), Th  e Figure of Nature  (2016) and  Th e Return of Nature  (2016). His books have 
been translated into many languages including French, German, Spanish and Chinese. 
  Kristin Sampson  is Associate Professor at the Department of Philosophy at the 
University of Bergen, Norway. She is working mainly within the areas of ancient Greek 
philosophy and feminist philosophy, with a special focus on Plato and early Greek 
thinking previous to him. Her later publications on Plato include articles on the S ophist  
(2015), the P  rotagoras  (2017), and the A  pology  (2018).
List of Contributors ix
  Vigdis Songe-Mø l ler  is Professor Emerita at the Department of Philosophy at the 
University of Bergen, Norway. Her area of research is ancient Greek philosophy, 
especially the pre-Socratics and Plato, and Greek tragedy, as well as contemporary 
feminist philosophy. She is the author of  Philosophy Without Women. Th e Birth of 
Sexism in Western Th ought  (2002) and co- author of S exuality, Death and the Feminine. 
Philosophies of Embodiment  (2010). 
  Paul Woodruff   teaches philosophy and classics at the University of Texas at Austin. He 
has been working on ancient and modern theories of the virtues. His best- known book 
is  Reverence: Renewing a Forgotten Virtue  (2nd edition, 2014). He has recently edited a 
volume of essays by philosophers on Oedipus in the plays of Sophocles. 
  Knut  Å gotnes  is Associate Professor Emeritus at the University of Bergen. His main 
interests are Plato and Aristotle, especially the dramatic form of Plato’s dialogues and 
his ethics. Recent papers are ‘Plato’s Socrates in the Apology: Speaking in Two Voices’ 
in  Readings of Plato’s Apology of Socrates. Defending the Philosophical Life  (2018), and 
‘Socrates’ Sophisticated Attack on Protagoras’ in  Plato’s Protagoras. Essays on the 
confrontation of Philosophy and Sophistry  (2017).