Keywords
Lysis
Friendship
How to Cite
Abstract
Plato's Lysis is an often overlooked dialogue, with only a few recent noteworthy efforts by scholars to penetrate its teaching. Because of the difficult text and contradictory statements, a cohesive interpretive structure is necessary to understand Plato's social and political teachings within the Lysis. With a focus on the character Hippothales and the lessons provided, the broader Socratic understanding of friendship can be derived. This paper presents an interpretation of Plato's understanding of friendship as a rejection of friendship based upon utility and an acceptance of friendship based upon mutual love of what is akin by nature to the good. The consequence of this lesson shows that true friendship is extremely rare and cannot alone be the basis of a political regime.
Similar Articles
- John von Heyking, “Had Every Athenian Citizen Been a Socrates” , The Political Science Reviewer: Vol. 46 No. 1 (2022): Symposium on Political Theology
- Jeremy Seth Geddert, Plato as Choirmaster , The Political Science Reviewer: Vol. 45 No. 1 (2021): Symposium: Music in Plato's Political Thought
- John von Heyking, S. F. McGuire, Barry Cooper, David J. Walsh, Thierry Gontier, John von Heyking's The Form of Politics: Aristotle and Plato on Friendship , The Political Science Reviewer: Vol. 42 No. 2 (2018): Symposium: The Political Thought of Robert Nisbet
- Rachel Alexander Cambre, Women and the Virtue of Friendship in Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics , The Political Science Reviewer: Vol. 47 No. 2 (2023): The Future Before Us: Early Career Women in Political Theory and Constitutional Studies
- Michael Davis, Seth Benardete’s Second Sailing , The Political Science Reviewer: Vol. 32 (2003): A Symposium on Bertrand de Jouvenel
- Raúl Rodríguez, Taming the Savage Beast , The Political Science Reviewer: Vol. 48 No. 1 (2024): Essays
- Alexander Orwin, City, Poetry, and Song , The Political Science Reviewer: Vol. 47 No. 1 (2023): Political Theory and Economics, and other Essays
- John Boersma, "Two Going Together” , The Political Science Reviewer: Vol. 45 No. 1 (2021): Symposium: Music in Plato's Political Thought
- Sophie Pangle, Plato on the Subversion of Law in Homeric Poetry , The Political Science Reviewer: Vol. 45 No. 1 (2021): Symposium: Music in Plato's Political Thought
- Catherine Craig, Sara MacDonald, Wit’s Justice in Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics , The Political Science Reviewer: Vol. 44 No. 1 (2020): Symposium: Wit in the History of Political Thought
You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.
Most read articles by the same author(s)
- Harvey Flaumenhaft, Hamilton on The Foundation of Government , The Political Science Reviewer: Vol. 6 (1976): Reviews
- Paul Norton, The Three Elites of C. Wright Mills , The Political Science Reviewer: Vol. 11 (1981): Reviews
- William Allen, The Constitutionalism of The Federalist Papers , The Political Science Reviewer: Vol. 19 (1990): Symposium: <em>The Federalist</em>
- Gordon Lloyd, The Intellectual Socialism of John Kenneth Galbraith , The Political Science Reviewer: Vol. 10 (1980): Reviews
- Joel D Wolfe, Varieties of Participatory Democracy and Democratic Theory , The Political Science Reviewer: Vol. 16 (1986): In Memoriam and Reviews
- Thomas Molnar, Is Technology Ideological? The Other Face of Politics , The Political Science Reviewer: Vol. 18 (1988): Reviews
- Richard B Friedman, What Is a Non-Instrumental Law? , The Political Science Reviewer: Vol. 21 (1992): Symposium: Morality, Politics, and Law in the Thought of Michael Oakeshott
- David Schaefer, Shadia Drury’s Critique of Leo Strauss , The Political Science Reviewer: Vol. 23 (1994): Essays
- Edward J Erler, Public Policy and the “New Equality” , The Political Science Reviewer: Vol. 8 (1978): Reviews
- Gregory Bruce Smith, Cacophony or Silence , The Political Science Reviewer: Vol. 18 (1988): Reviews