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64Play and Erotic Voyeurism in the Locus Amoenus of Plato’s PhaedrusAncient Philosophy 45 (2): 395-414. 2025.I argue that the Boreas and Oreithyia myth’s locus amoenus setting introduces two central concepts: play (paidia) and danger within the apparent idyll. As Plato further develops the setting of Socrates and Phaedrus’s locus amoenus, he draws out distinctly Platonic versions of these two ideas focused on spending one’s leisure time in a way that pleases the gods and hence assures the soul’s ascension to the realm of the divine.
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96Disaster DialoguesAmerican Association of Philosophy Teachers Studies in Pedagogy 8 111-112. 2023.
Providence, Rhode Island, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
3 more
| Plato: Philosophical Method |
| Plato: Why Dialogues? |
| Plato: Myths |
| Plato: Dialectic |
| Plato: Elenchos |
| Plato: Rhetoric |
| Plato: Aesthetics |
| Plato: Imitation |