Ant,
If I may jump in for a second, In my reading, the sophists thought of excellence
as a practice, an activity. Like dance or athletics. Something that really could
not be taught but developed through practice and guidance, an action of being.

Plato, I believe, asked where the idea of excellence originates, how does one
know what excellence is? He thought the concept of excellence preceded the
act. Keeping in mind Plato was influenced by Parmenides, He considered the
concept of excellence or the good as more real than the act which was subject to
change and interpretation.
Enter Aristotle who clarifies the sitituation by stating that why the idea of 
the good
is more permanent is because the good is an idea understood universally but to 
under
stand what was good was an arguent made from the particular expereince to a 
universal
understanding. Aristotle disagreed with Plato in that he believed the material 
world is what gives
rise to ideas about it.
Aristotle was the one who equated the good with what is "true" and truth
is a sort of sameness with being like what "is". 

-Ron


________________________________
From: Ant McWatt <[email protected]>
To: moq discuss <[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, May 20, 2009 4:45:29 PM
Subject: [MD] MD Plato's Good vs. Pirsig's Quality


DMB said May 20th 2009:

Funny thing is, I'd just finished a 15 page term paper comparing Plato's Good 
and Pirsig's Quality. (Among other things, we read the Republic, where the 
allegory of the cave serves as one of three analogies for the Good.) So I was 
just covering the same ground for my Plato class. It was no trick at all to see 
that both terms are central in their own context. It could just be a reflection 
of the reading list for this particular course and there is a ton of Plato I 
haven't read but it's my impression that you can [not] tell a story about Plato 
without including the Good. Same with Pirsig and his Quality. They'd both tell 
you their central term refers to the source and substance of everything. If 
they were excluded, I wouldn't know how to say anything of any substance about 
either of them...


Ant McWatt just had to ask:

Dave,

>From your reading of the Republic and other research for your Plato/Pirsig 
>term paper, do you think Plato considered the Good as primarily static (as per 
>the other Forms) or essentially Dynamic (on the lines of DQ)? 

Moreover, did you discover anything else particularly significant in this 
Good/Quality comparison?  

Best wishes,

Anthony




.


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