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Index
Title Page
Copyright
Contents
Preface
List of Tables
Abbreviations
I Volumes from the Critical Edition of Schleiermacher’s Works (KGA)
II Cited Works
1 Introduction: Schleiermacher’s Plato
1.1 Schleiermacher’s Achievement
1.2 The Question: Schleiermacher and Plato
1.3 Thesis and Approach of Schleiermacher’s Plato
1.4 The Decade of Plato in Schleiermacher’s Life
1.4.1 Exile in Stolp, Pomerania (1802 – 1804)
1.4.2 Academic Life in Halle (1804 – 1807)
1.5 On Texts, Translations, and Editions
2 Schleiermacher’s Platons Werke and Its Legacy
2.1 Introduction
2.2 Conception of the Plato Project
2.3 Central Themes in Schleiermacher’s “General Introduction”
2.3.1 Internal Method
2.3.2 Plato as Artist
2.3.3 The Dialogue Form
2.3.4 The Authenticity and Order of the Dialogues
2.4 Controversial Issues in the Introductions
2.4.1 Placement of the Phaedrus
2.4.2 The Ordering and Chronology of the Dialogues
2.4.3 The Validity of the Esoteric Tradition
2.5 Concluding Remarks
3 Practicing on Plato: Interpretation, Socratic Clues, and the Emergence of Schleiermacher’s Hermeneutics
3.1 Introduction
3.2 The New Criticism and the Plato Renaissance
3.3 The Phaedrus: Socratic Clues and Hermeneutical Principles
3.4 Principles for Determining Authenticity of Plato’s Dialogues
3.5 Principles for Ordering Plato’s Dialogues
3.5.1 Provisional Whole: A Trilogy of Trilogies
3.5.2 The Pedagogical Progression of Ideas
3.5.3 The Two Series: Ethics and Physics
3.6 Concluding Remarks: The Interpreter as Artist
4 Reading Plato’s Dialectics: Schleiermacher’s Insistence on Dialectics as Dialogical
4.1 Introduction
4.2 Basic Interpretive Principles in the “General Introduction”
4.3 The First Trilogy and the Method of Philosophy
4.4 The Trilogy at the Center and the Object of Philosophy
4.5 An Inconclusive Concluding Trilogy
4.6 Concluding Remarks: From Reading Plato’s Dialectics to Lecturing on Dialectics
5 Schleiermacher’s Christmas Dialogue as Platonic Dialogue
5.1 Introduction
5.2 The Phaedrus and the Opening Scene of the Christmas Dialogue
5.2.1 Gifts
5.2.2 Conversation
5.2.3 The ‘Seeds’
5.2.4 Impulse and Method
5.3 The Symposium and the Women’s Stories
5.3.1 Ernestine’s Story
5.3.2 Agnes’s Story
5.3.3 Karoline’s Story
5.4 The Republic and the Men’s Speeches
5.5 Josef’s Unsaying
5.6 Concluding Remarks
6 The Presence of Plato in the Speeches (1806), Part 1: Revising, Reconceiving, and Recasting
6.1 Introduction
6.2 Re-Writing as Spiritual Exercise: Holding together Theory and Praxis in the Speeches
6.2.1 The Two Impulses (Triebe)
6.2.2 Rhetorical Shifts
6.2.3 Intuition as the ‘Hinge’ of the Argument
6.3 Revised Block No 1: A New Three of Thinking, Doing, and Feeling
6.3.1 A More Complex Typology
6.3.2 Acting: Life and Art
6.3.3 Thinking About Nature—and About Human Nature
6.4 Revised Block No 2: “Contemplation is Essential to Religion”
6.4.1 Appearances, Education, and the Higher Nature of Knowing
6.4.2 The Science of Being, the Infinite, and Contemplation
6.4.3 Plato’s Middle Dialogues on the Infinite and the Finite
6.4.4 Plato’s Middle Dialogues on Contemplation
6.4.5 Return to the Science of Being in Revised Block No 2
6.4.6 The Science of Acting and Piety
7 The Presence of Plato in the Speeches (1806), Part 2: Being, Non-Being, and Intuition
7.1 Introduction
7.2 Revised Block No 3: “… go and learn it from your Socrates”
7.2.1 Socratic Ignorance, Being and Non-Being
7.2.2 Platons Werke: The Sophist on Being and Non-Being
7.2.3 The Second Speech and the Sophist: The Two Series, Physics and Ethics
7.2.4 Intuition and the Unity of Theory and Praxis, Reason and Nature
7.3 Revised Block No 4: “the original relation of feeling and intuition”
7.3.1 The Replaced 1799 Version: Intuition as the “Hinge” of the Second Speech
7.3.2 Contemplation and the Innermost Sanctuary of Life, Redux
7.3.3 The “Original Relation of Feeling and Intuition”
7.3.4 Intuition in Platons Werke and the Second Speech
7.3.5 The Three Series and Their Association
7.3.6 Religion and Contemplation
7.4 Concluding Remarks on the Speeches (1806) and the Introductions
8 Conclusion: Schleiermacher’s Plato
Bibliography
1 Primary Sources
German Editions of Schleiermacher’s Texts Cited
English Translations of Schleiermacher’s Texts Cited
English Translations of Plato’s Dialogues
2 Secondary Sources
Index
Notes
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