A Lively Afterlife and Beyond : The Soul in Plato, Homer, and the Orphica

The NeoPlatonist Olympiodorus claims that “Plato borrows everywhere from Orpheus”, but many of the afterlife ideas which Plato is supposed to have drawn from “Orphism” come not from the Orphica, but from the broader mythological tradition. Even those elements which Plato did draw from the Orphica or...

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Main Author: Radcliffe G. Edmonds III
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Société d’Études Platoniciennes 2014-12-01
Series:Études Platoniciennes
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/etudesplatoniciennes/517
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spelling doaj-22947e1d92c347bf929b092f620787ef2020-11-25T02:18:42ZdeuSociété d’Études PlatoniciennesÉtudes Platoniciennes2275-17852014-12-011110.4000/etudesplatoniciennes.517A Lively Afterlife and Beyond : The Soul in Plato, Homer, and the OrphicaRadcliffe G. Edmonds IIIThe NeoPlatonist Olympiodorus claims that “Plato borrows everywhere from Orpheus”, but many of the afterlife ideas which Plato is supposed to have drawn from “Orphism” come not from the Orphica, but from the broader mythological tradition. Even those elements which Plato did draw from the Orphica or similar sources, however, he transformed in significant ways to suit his philosophical purposes in the particular dialogue. I first examine the idea, which appears in many different sources from the earliest evidence, of a lively afterlife, an idea that differs from the epic vision of Homer where poetic glory provides the only meaningful form of life after death. Nevertheless, a differentiated afterlife with judgement, complex geography, and rewards and punishments was a widespread and generally accepted idea, which Plato manipulates in various ways in different dialogues. By contrast, other ideas of the relation of the soul to the body, such as the soul entombed in the body or the process of reincarnation, appear marked, in the evidence of Plato and others, as extra-ordinary and unfamiliar ideas, which Plato again transposes to fit his arguments in the dialogue.http://journals.openedition.org/etudesplatoniciennes/517lively afterlifePlatoOrphicareincarnationtranspositionsepic glory
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Radcliffe G. Edmonds III
spellingShingle Radcliffe G. Edmonds III
A Lively Afterlife and Beyond : The Soul in Plato, Homer, and the Orphica
Études Platoniciennes
lively afterlife
Plato
Orphica
reincarnation
transpositions
epic glory
author_facet Radcliffe G. Edmonds III
author_sort Radcliffe G. Edmonds III
title A Lively Afterlife and Beyond : The Soul in Plato, Homer, and the Orphica
title_short A Lively Afterlife and Beyond : The Soul in Plato, Homer, and the Orphica
title_full A Lively Afterlife and Beyond : The Soul in Plato, Homer, and the Orphica
title_fullStr A Lively Afterlife and Beyond : The Soul in Plato, Homer, and the Orphica
title_full_unstemmed A Lively Afterlife and Beyond : The Soul in Plato, Homer, and the Orphica
title_sort lively afterlife and beyond : the soul in plato, homer, and the orphica
publisher Société d’Études Platoniciennes
series Études Platoniciennes
issn 2275-1785
publishDate 2014-12-01
description The NeoPlatonist Olympiodorus claims that “Plato borrows everywhere from Orpheus”, but many of the afterlife ideas which Plato is supposed to have drawn from “Orphism” come not from the Orphica, but from the broader mythological tradition. Even those elements which Plato did draw from the Orphica or similar sources, however, he transformed in significant ways to suit his philosophical purposes in the particular dialogue. I first examine the idea, which appears in many different sources from the earliest evidence, of a lively afterlife, an idea that differs from the epic vision of Homer where poetic glory provides the only meaningful form of life after death. Nevertheless, a differentiated afterlife with judgement, complex geography, and rewards and punishments was a widespread and generally accepted idea, which Plato manipulates in various ways in different dialogues. By contrast, other ideas of the relation of the soul to the body, such as the soul entombed in the body or the process of reincarnation, appear marked, in the evidence of Plato and others, as extra-ordinary and unfamiliar ideas, which Plato again transposes to fit his arguments in the dialogue.
topic lively afterlife
Plato
Orphica
reincarnation
transpositions
epic glory
url http://journals.openedition.org/etudesplatoniciennes/517
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