dmb,

You should have an answer to my question right there in your notes.  As a 
wannabe scholar you can expect to be challenged by those much more 
knowledgeable and brighter than me.  Your statements should be supportable, not 
in the realm wishful thinking.  Look up the word paraphrase; it doesn't mean 
blarney.


Marsha

---

Hi dmb,

On Oct 8, 2012, at 9:15 AM, david buchanan <[email protected]> wrote:

> 
> Is Philosophy better than Art?
> 
> If you believe Plato, then the answer is “yes”. If all of philosophy is a 
> footnote to Plato, then the artists have been subordinated to the 
> philosophers for about 25 centuries. According to Plato’s Republic, 
> especially the last section, the artists present a danger to society and to 
> your soul. Two of my favorite thinkers disagree with Plato and Socrates on 
> this point. Friedrich Nietzsche and Robert Pirsig both make a case that there 
> is something terribly wrong with this Platonic legacy. In one of Nietzsche’s 
> earliest works, The Birth of Tragedy, he asks us to consider the consequences 
> of the Socratic idea that virtue is knowledge, that all sins arise from 
> ignorance, and only the virtuous are happy. As a consequence, Nietzsche says, 
> the “virtuous hero must henceforth be a dialectician” because virtue and 
> knowledge are necessarily connected such that “Truth” is the highest good.


I'm really curious, and I'm sure you made notes as you were putting this paper 
together  In the last sentence above where did you get the "because virtue and 
knowledge are necessarily connected such that “Truth” is the highest good."   I 
take it that it was paraphrasing Nietzsche, but from where?  It is quite an 
interesting statement for Nietzsche to make, and  I'd like to read the 
statement in it's original context.   Thanks.  


Marsha



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