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PHI366   Plato's Symposium   (20 credits)

 
Year Running: 2016/2017
Credit level: F6
Pre-requisites   No
Co-requisites   No
Pre Uni Qualification   No

Description

The Symposium is a vivid, funny and moving dramatic dialogue in which a wide variety of characters - orators, doctor, comic poet, tragic poet, soldier-cum-statesman, philosopher and others - give widely differing accounts of the nature or erotic love (eros) at a banquet. Students should be willing to engage in close textual study, although no previous knowledge of either ancient philosophy or ancient Greek is required. We will be exploring the origins, definition, aims, objects and effects or eros, and asking whether it is viewed as a predominantly beneficial or harmful force. Are some manifestations or eros better than others? Is re-channelling either possible or desirable, and if so, how and in what contexts? What happens to eros if it is consummated? We will in addition explore the issues that the dialogue raises about relations between philosophy and literature, and the influence it has had on Western thought (e.g. Freud). The edition we will use is Rowe, C . J., 1998, Plato Symposium. Oxford: Aris and Phillips Classical texts.

 

Reading List


Please click here for reading list.
 

Teaching Methods

Delivery Type Hours
Independent 166.5
Lecture 22.0
Seminar 11.0
Tutorial 0.5
 

Methods of assessment

Assessment Type Duration % of formal assessment Semester
Course Work 0.0 50 % S2
Exam 2.0 50 % S2
 

Teaching methods and assessment displayed on this page are indicative for 2023-24.